
Texas A&M NIL figures nearly tripled from 2024, but highlight spending disparity between men’s, women’s sports
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Diverging Reports Breakdown
Texas A&M NIL figures nearly tripled from 2024, but highlight spending disparity between men’s, women’s sports
Texas A&M’s athletes received a total of $51.4 million in name, image and likeness deals from July 1, 2024 to June 30, 2025. $49.2 million of that went to athletes participating in men’s sports. The Aggies reported just $528,184.86 for women’s sports in that same 2023-24 timeframe.
Texas A&M almost tripled its NIL war chest from 2023-24, when its athletes received $19.4 million. Though there is major disparity in the amounts spent on men’s sports and women’s sports, athletes participating in women’s sports are making more on a yearly basis.
The Aggies reported just $528,184.86 for women’s sports in that same 2023-24 timeframe. The 2024-25 report marks the first time since the NCAA instituted its current NIL policy that female athletes at Texas A&M have made more than $1 million combined.
Of course, there’s no concrete data to suggest that Texas A&M’s numbers are representative of other universities around the nation.
It also remains to be seen how Texas A&M and its fellow institutions that sponsor athletics plan to navigate the revenue-sharing era in the wake of the House v. NCAA settlement, or if the revenue sharing model will lessen the apparent earnings gap between men’s and women’s sports.