Florida is in the top 10 for both total NIL/revenue sharing and football-only investment. All that is missing is a General Manager and a good football coach to spend that money wisely.
| Rank | School | Total NIL (Collective) | Revenue Sharing (University Cap) | Football-Only Investment | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Texas | $22.2 M | $20.5 M | ≈ $37.5 M | ~95% of NIL + 75% of rev share to football |
| 2 | Ohio State | $20.2 M | $20.5 M | ≈ $35.7 M | 90%+ NIL to football |
| 3 | LSU | $20.1 M | $20.5 M | ≈ $35.5 M | 90–92% NIL + 75% rev share; Kiffin $25–30 M pool |
| 4 | Georgia | $18.3 M | $20.5 M | ≈ $33.7 M | Consistent top-3 football spend |
| 5 | Texas A&M | $17.2 M | $20.5 M | ≈ $32.7 M | Heavy transfer portal focus |
| 6 | Florida | $15.9 M | $20.5 M | ≈ $30.8–31.3 M | 85–88% of Florida Victorious + 75% rev share |
| 7 | Michigan | $16.3 M | $20.5 M | ≈ $31.0 M | Strong but slightly less football-centric |
| 8 | Alabama | $15.9 M | $20.5 M | ≈ $30.8 M | Stable post-Saban |
| 9 | Clemson | $15.2 M | $20.5 M | ≈ $30.4 M | Rising fast |
| 10 | Oregon | $15.0 M | $20.5 M | ≈ $30.2 M | Phil Knight money |
| 11 | USC | $12–15 M | $20.5 M | ≈ $27.8–30.0 M | House of Victory tripled in 2025; still catching up |
| 12 | Tennessee | $14.0 M | $20.5 M | ≈ $29.5 M | Rapid riser |
| 13 | Penn State | $13.0 M | $20.5 M | ≈ $28.5 M | Steady growth |