The NCAA has adopted rules governing NIL and NIL Collectives. You can find guidance at Interim Name, Image and Likeness, Policy Guidance Regarding Third Party Involvement and Institutional Involvement in a Student-Athlete’s NIL Activities. To help student-athletes navigate the NIL environment, the NCAA introduced NCAA NIL Assist, a NIL platform in collaboration with Teamworks, to serve as a centralized source for student-athletes to understand and make informed decisions about NIL.
Collectives come in various forms, but the most common are marketplace collectives, donor-driven collectives, and dual collectives. Marketplace collectives are organizations that create a meeting place for athletes and businesses to connect and create opportunities. Donor-driven collectives pool together booster and supporter funds and create opportunities for athletes to give money back to them. Dual collectives have features of both.
While many NIL collectives have been formed as for-profit entities, others have been formed as nonprofits. Numerous nonprofit collectives have, in turn, sought and obtained Internal Revenue Code (IRC) § 501(c)(3) tax exempt status from the IRS, which potentially allows donors to receive a tax deduction for their contribution to the collective.