If you're earning NIL money, you're probably getting real money for the first time in your life — and nobody handed you a manual. This is that manual. We'll keep it simple, skip the jargon, and use real dollar examples so everything is easy to picture. You do not need any money experience to follow this.
This page is the big-picture map. Each section links to a detailed guide if you want to go deeper.
1. Taxes come first
Here's the trap that catches almost every athlete: when you have a normal job, your employer quietly takes taxes out before you ever see your paycheck. With NIL money, nobody does that for you. The full amount lands in your account looking like it's all yours — but a chunk secretly belongs to the government, and the bill comes later.
NIL income also makes you "self-employed" in the eyes of the IRS, which adds a self-employment tax most athletes never see coming, and you may need to pay taxes four times a year instead of once.
Dig deeper: Do college athletes pay taxes on NIL money? · How much to set aside · Quarterly estimated taxes
2. Don't pay huge fees
This is where athletes quietly lose the most money. A financial advisor who charges "1% a year" sounds cheap. It isn't. That 1% comes off your entire balance every year, forever — including money that would have kept growing.
Over a lifetime, a 1% fee can cost an athlete who starts investing young $300,000–$500,000+. Same investments. The only difference is the fee.
The good news: you can usually skip it. Learn the magic phrase "fee-only fiduciary" and you'll know how to hire help the right way — or do it yourself for almost nothing.
Dig deeper: Do I need a financial advisor? · How advisor fees really work
3. Build a simple foundation
Before you invest a dollar, build a base that keeps you steady when life gets bumpy:
- An emergency fund — start with $1,000, build toward 3–6 months of expenses.
- A high-yield savings account — same safety as a normal bank, but it actually pays you interest. This is where your emergency fund and tax money should live.
- Kill high-interest debt — credit card debt grows faster than any investment, so wipe it out first.
Dig deeper: High-yield savings accounts explained · Budgeting on irregular income
4. Invest the simple, boring way
Forget stock-picking and hot tips. The approach that quietly beats most professional money managers is boring: own a tiny piece of thousands of companies at once through an index fund, hold it inside a Roth IRA so the growth is tax-free, add money automatically every month, and leave it alone for years.
Dig deeper: How to invest your NIL money · What is an index fund? · Roth IRA for athletes
5. Protect yourself
Money attracts people. The more visible you are, the more come. Watch for the classic scam signals — guaranteed returns, urgency, and unsolicited DMs — and have a plan for the harder situations, like friends and family who want a piece, or a contract you don't fully understand.
Dig deeper: NIL money scams · Friends & family who want money · How to read an NIL contract · Should you form an LLC?
Your year-one plan, in order
- Set aside 30% for taxes the day money arrives.
- Build a $1,000 starter emergency fund in a high-yield savings account.
- Pay off high-interest (credit card) debt.
- Grow the emergency fund toward 3–6 months of expenses.
- Open a Roth IRA and start automatic monthly investing in a low-cost index fund.
- Protect yourself — scam rules, contract reviews, the magic question.
New to all this? Start with what to do with your first NIL check, and avoid the biggest NIL money mistakes.
Frequently asked questions
Do you pay taxes on NIL money?
Yes. NIL income is taxable and nobody withholds taxes for you, so set aside roughly 25–35% of every payment (use 30% as a safe default) and be ready for quarterly estimated payments.
Do college athletes need a financial advisor?
Most don't. A simple do-it-yourself approach works for the majority of athletes, and a 1% annual fee can cost hundreds of thousands over a lifetime. If you do hire help, use a fee-only fiduciary paid a flat or hourly rate.
What should I do with my first NIL check?
Set aside about 30% for taxes, wait 30 days before any big purchase, build a starter emergency fund, pay off high-interest debt, then start investing in a Roth IRA with low-cost index funds.
This guide is educational and is not personalized financial, tax, or legal advice. Tax figures and limits change and vary by person and state — confirm current details with a licensed professional. Investing involves risk, including possible loss of principal.