EO-14400
Urgent National Action To Save College Sports
- Signed
- Apr 3, 2026
- Published
- Apr 9, 2026
Federal Register: 2026-06961
Source: Federal Register.
Federal Leverage to Regulate College Athletics Rules and Finances
What it does
This order directs federal contracting and grant-making agencies to treat violations of NCAA (or equivalent governing body) rules on eligibility, transfers, revenue-sharing, and athlete payments as potential grounds for suspending or debarring universities from federal contracts and grants. It also directs the Attorney General to challenge state laws that conflict with those governing-body rules under the Commerce Clause or Contracts Clause, and asks the FTC to enforce existing law against bad-faith athlete agents. The order takes effect August 1, 2026, and encourages Congress to pass permanent legislation.
Who benefits
Student-athletes in women's sports and Olympic/non-revenue sports whose programs could lose funding in an uncapped spending environment. Smaller or mid-major universities that cannot compete in an unregulated financial arms race. Student-athletes who gain guaranteed medical coverage for athletics-related injuries. Athletes who benefit from a national agent registry and commission caps. Universities with large federal research portfolios that gain a clearer compliance framework. Fans and communities whose local programs might otherwise be financially destabilized.
Who is affected
Football and men's basketball players whose earning potential through NIL collectives and pay-for-play arrangements could be capped or restricted. Universities in states that passed athlete-friendly NIL laws, which could be challenged or preempted. NIL collectives, boosters, and third-party businesses that currently pay athletes above what the order defines as fair market value. States whose legislatures passed laws giving their universities a competitive recruiting advantage. Athlete agents who could face new federal registration requirements and commission limits. Universities that currently use federal grant or contract funds in ways that may be reclassified as impermissible under the order's definitions.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current patchwork of state NIL laws and court rulings has created an unregulated financial arms race that threatens to eliminate women's and Olympic sports programs, which depend on revenue generated by football and basketball. They contend the president has clear authority under the Spending Clause and the Take Care Clause to condition federal contracts and grants on responsible financial conduct, and that using federal leverage to enforce uniform national rules is the only practical solution while Congress has failed to act.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that using the threat of losing federal research and education grants — funds entirely unrelated to athletics — to coerce universities into adopting specific sports governance rules amounts to unconstitutional spending-power coercion under South Dakota v. Dole's "germaneness" requirement. They contend the order effectively delegates federal regulatory authority to a private body (the NCAA or its successor) without congressional authorization, and that the major-questions doctrine under West Virginia v. EPA requires explicit congressional approval before the executive branch can restructure a multi-billion-dollar industry through agency guidance alone.
Constitutional basis
Executive orders rest on constitutional authority or statutory delegation. This summary describes the legal grounding cited or implied by the order.
The order invokes the president's Article II Take Care Clause authority (Art. II, §3) to direct executive agencies in their contracting and grant-making decisions, relying on the federal government's Spending Clause power (Art. I, §8, cl. 1) to attach conditions to federal funds. It also invokes the Commerce Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 3) and the Contracts Clause (Art. I, §10, cl. 1) as the basis for the Attorney General to challenge conflicting state laws, and cites 15 U.S.C. §45 (FTC Act) and 15 U.S.C. §§7801–7807 (Sports Agent Responsibility and Trust Act) as statutory authority for FTC enforcement actions.