An NIL deal is a contract — a legally binding promise. The brand wrote it, and they wrote it to protect themselves, not you. That doesn't make it shady; it makes it normal. Your job is to actually read it and understand what you're agreeing to before your signature locks it in. Here's how to do that without a law degree.
The four things to check in every NIL contract
1. Exclusivity — who can't you work with now?
Exclusivity means you agree not to work with competing brands. Sign with one energy drink, and you may be blocked from every other drink deal for the life of the contract.
Exclusivity isn't automatically bad — but it has real value, so you should be paid more for it. A $2,000 deal that locks you out of an entire category for a year might cost you a $5,000 deal you can't take later. Always find the exclusivity clause and ask: "What am I giving up by signing this?"
2. Length — how long are you locked in?
How long does this run? A one-post deal is simple. A multi-year commitment is a different animal. Look for the term (the length), and look for how you can get out — can you cancel, and what happens if you do? A short, well-paid deal is usually safer than a long one that traps you.
3. Rights — what can they do with your name and image?
NIL stands for name, image, and likeness — so this is the heart of it. The contract will spell out how the brand can use your name, photos, and videos:
- Where? Social media only, or also billboards, TV, packaging?
- For how long? Some deals let a brand use your image forever, even after the deal ends ("in perpetuity"). That's a big deal — watch for it.
- Do they own the content? If you make a video, can you still use it on your own page?
4. Your obligations — what do you actually have to do?
Flip it around: what are you on the hook for? Count the deliverables. Three Instagram posts? Two appearances? A certain number of stories per month? Be sure you can realistically do it all on top of your season and school. Missing your obligations can mean not getting paid — or worse, owing money back.
- "In perpetuity" — they can use your image forever.
- Auto-renewal — the deal renews itself unless you cancel by a deadline.
- Vague pay terms — when and how do you actually get paid? Get a number and a date.
- Morality clauses that are broad enough to cancel your pay over almost anything.
- You owe money back if you don't perform — understand exactly when that triggers.
Your quick NIL contract checklist
Before you sign anything, run through this:
- ☐ How much am I getting paid, when, and how (cash, product, both)?
- ☐ Exclusivity — what brands or categories does this block me from?
- ☐ Length — when does it end, and how do I get out?
- ☐ Rights — how, where, and for how long can they use my name and image?
- ☐ Obligations — exactly what do I have to deliver, and can I realistically do it?
- ☐ Auto-renewal or "in perpetuity" language — is it in there?
- ☐ Compliance — does this follow my school's and conference's NIL rules?
- ☐ Review — has someone who knows contracts looked at it?
Want this as a one-pager you can keep on your phone? Grab the free NIL checklist.
When to get help (and why it's worth it)
You can read a small, simple deal yourself. But the moment a contract is more than pocket change, runs multiple years, or you don't fully understand it, get a professional review before signing.
A contract is a promise with teeth. Reading it carefully — or having a pro read it — is the cheapest protection you'll ever buy.
Protect yourself beyond the paperwork
Contracts are one piece of staying safe with NIL money. Also learn to spot NIL money scams, handle friends and family who want money, and see the full picture in the complete guide to NIL money. And remember every deal is taxable income — here's how NIL taxes work.
Frequently asked questions
What should I look for in an NIL contract?
Check four things first: exclusivity (does it stop you from working with competitors?), length (how long are you locked in?), rights (how can they use your name and image, where, and for how long?), and your obligations (what exactly do you have to deliver?). For any meaningful deal, get it reviewed by someone who knows contracts before you sign.
Should I have a lawyer review my NIL contract?
For anything more than pocket change, yes. A short paid review is far cheaper than being stuck in a bad multi-year deal. Many schools and athletic departments also offer NIL contract review resources, so ask there first — it may be free.
What does exclusivity mean in an NIL deal?
Exclusivity means you agree not to work with competing brands. For example, signing with one energy drink may block you from any other drink deal for the length of the contract. Exclusivity isn't automatically bad, but it has real value, so you should be paid more for giving it up.
This article is educational and is not legal or financial advice. Every contract is different — have a qualified attorney or your school's NIL office review your specific deal before you sign. Tax and NIL rules change and vary by state and school. Investing involves risk, including possible loss of principal.