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S. 4668 Senate Sports and Recreation

Protect College Sports Act of 2026

Introduced
Jun 2, 2026
Sponsor
Sen. Cruz, Ted (R-TX)
View on Congress.gov (opens in a new tab)

STAGE 3 OF 8 — CALENDARS AND SCHEDULING

Currently in the Senate. Last action: placed on senate legislative calendar under general orders. calendar no. 449 on Jun 24, 2026.

  1. Senate Introduced in Senate Jun 2, 2026
  2. Senate Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. Jun 2, 2026
  3. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. Ordered to be reported with an amendment in the nature of a substitute favorably. Jun 18, 2026
  4. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. Reported by Senator Cruz with an amendment in the nature of a substitute. Without written report. Jun 24, 2026
  5. Senate Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 449. Jun 24, 2026

Cosponsors

3

Committees

  • Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee
    • Reported By , Jun 24, 2026
    • Markup By , Jun 18, 2026
    • Referred To , Jun 2, 2026

Summary

Protect College Sports Act of 2026This bill establishes requirements for name, image, or likeness (NIL) agreements for college student athletes and provides a limited antitrust exemption for schools and conferences to pool and sell certain college sports media rights. The requirements address elements of the court-approved agreement to settle In re College Athlete NIL Litigation (i.e., House settlement).First, the bill statutorily prohibits institutions, conferences, or interstate intercollegiate athletic associations (e.g., the National Collegiate Athletic Association [NCAA]) from restricting student athletes from entering NIL agreements (subject to specified limitations). Students must report to their institution NIL compensation greater than $600.The bill requires agents to register with a state and caps agent endorsement contract fees at 5%.The bill also provides student athletes with one transfer without losing athletic eligibility and restricts football personnel from becoming the head football coach at a different institution during the same season.Further, the bill prohibits institutions, conferences, or specified entities acting for the benefit of an institution from providing athletes with compensation that circumvents the limit on sharing revenue with student athletes established under the House settlement. The bill also makes the limit permanent and provides for an annual inflation adjustment.Additionally, the bill establishes (subject to specified conditions) a limited antitrust exemption for institutions or conferences that form joint agreements to transfer their sports telecasting rights to a third party. Such an agreement requires participation from at least 75% of the institutions in the Football Bowl Subdivision.

Summary as of: Introduced in Senate

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