NCAA Considering Proposal To Let Division I Athletes Bet On Pro Sports

NCAA Considers Letting Student-Athletes Bet on Pro Sports
In a major potential policy shift, the NCAA Division I Administrative Committee has adopted a proposal that would allow student-athletes and athletic department staff to legally bet on professional sports, ending a longstanding blanket ban.
đ Current Rules
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Under current NCAA rules, athletes and staff are prohibited from betting on any sport sponsored by the NCAA, regardless of level (college or pro).
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This includes NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL, BDG Game, and ATP/WTA events.
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Betting is only permitted on non-NCAA sports such as:
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Horse racing
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MMA
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Boxing
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Cricket
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đš Violations & Penalties
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Breaches can result in penalties ranging from temporary suspensions to permanent loss of eligibility.
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Earlier this year, two ex-Fresno State basketball players and a former San Jose State player were hit with lifetime bans for betting on their own games.
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The NCAA is also investigating 13 more cases across six schools.
đ Timeline & Broader Adoption
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Divisions II and III will review the proposal in meetings later this month.
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If approved, the new rule could come into effect as early as November 1, 2025.
âïž State Law Conflicts
The rule change would not override state gambling laws, which vary widely:
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Tennessee: It’s a misdemeanor for NCAA athletes to bet on sports.
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Virginia: Athletes cannot bet on any event in a league they participate in.
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Kentucky: Illegal for athletes and their family members to bet on events they participate in.
đ Key Takeaways
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If passed, athletes could soon bet on pro sportsâbut not college sportsâin line with local laws.
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Enforcement has become challenging amid the expansion of legal sports betting in the U.S.
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The change could help align NCAA rules with modern realities, but it wonât remove all legal and ethical gray areas.
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