How to Sell Your NCAA Settlement Payments for Immediate Cash?

📅 Updated June 2026
⏱ 8-10 min read
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Winning a settlement from the NCAA felt like justice. But for many athletes, the next question is:
What do you do when the money comes in pieces or spread over years, and your life needs it now?
That is the reality for thousands of athletes receiving payments under the NCAA settlement in House v. NCAA. The timeline is just not always practical.
This guide explains how selling your NCAA settlement payments works, what the numbers actually look like, what a court will want to know, and what you should watch for before signing anything.
This article is general information only. It is not legal, tax, or financial advice.
What's in this guide
- Quick Facts: The House v. NCAA Settlement
- Who Qualifies for Back-Pay Damages?
- What Does It Mean to Sell Your Payments?
- Selling vs. Keeping: A Straight Comparison
- Can You Sell Only Part of Your Payments?
- How the Process Works: Step by Step
- What Will the Court Look At?
- What Documents Should You Prepare?
- How to Compare Offers
- Watch Out for These Red Flags
- What About Taxes?
- A Decision Checklist
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Final Thoughts
Quick Facts: The House v. NCAA Settlement
The New Hampshire Legislature created the YDC Claims Administration and Settlement Fund under RSA 21 M:11 a to compensate former residents for sexual abuse, other abuse, and isolated confinement connected to YDC facilities.
Here is the bigger picture as of current public reporting.
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Case name | House v. NCAA |
| Settlement amount | Approximately $2.8 billion |
| Court approval | October 7, 2024, U.S. District Court, Northern District of California |
| Presiding judge | Judge Claudia Wilken |
| Who can receive back pay | Former and current Division I athletes who competed between 2016 and 2024 |
| What back pay covers | Lost NIL compensation, broadcast rights revenue, and videogame likeness |
| Back pay payout period | Paid out over approximately 10 years |
| Revenue sharing (ongoing) | Schools may pay current athletes up to ~$20–22 million per year |
| Eligible sports | All Division I sports, though damages vary by sport and conference |
| Payment administrator | Settlement claims administrator appointed by the court |
The settlement resolved a long-running antitrust dispute over the NCAA’s restrictions on athlete pay. It did not create a one-time payout. Most back-pay damages are distributed in structured installments, which is exactly why some athletes are exploring whether they can access their share sooner.
Cash Your NCAA Payments With MySettlement
Who Qualifies for Back-Pay Damages?
Not every former college athlete automatically receives money. Eligibility depends on several factors.
You may qualify if you:
- Competed at a Division I school between 2016 and 2024
- Were on a roster in a sport covered by the settlement
- Filed a valid claim before the claims deadline
- Received notice from the settlement administrator
Damages vary based on:
- Which sport did you play
- Whether your school’s conference generated broadcast revenue
- How many years have you competed
- Whether your name, image, or likeness was used commercially
If you received a settlement notice or have already been assigned a payment amount, you are already in the system. The question now is whether you want to receive that money on the schedule set by the settlement, or as a lump sum sooner.
What Does It Mean to Sell Your Payments?
Selling your NCAA settlement payments means transferring your right to receive future payments to a buyer, in exchange for a smaller lump sum today.
You are not borrowing money. You are not taking a loan. You are permanently transferring ownership of those future payments. The buyer pays you now and collects the payments when they arrive.
Here is a simple example of how the numbers work:
| Future Payments You Sell | Total Future Value | Lump Sum Example | Payments You Keep |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 annual payments of $8,000 | $24,000 | ~$16,000–$18,000 today | All remaining payments |
| 5 annual payments of $8,000 | $40,000 | ~$25,000–$30,000 today | Any payments not sold |
| All remaining payments | Depends on your schedule | Depends on your quote | None |
These are illustrative figures only. Your actual offer depends on your specific payment schedule, timing, the buyer’s discount rate, and state court requirements.
The gap between what you receive and what you give up is called the discount. It exists because a dollar paid today is worth more than a dollar paid several years from now, and because the buyer incurs legal costs, timing risk, and administrative costs through the court process.
Selling vs. Keeping: A Straight Comparison
| Selling Your Payments | Keeping Your Payments | |
|---|---|---|
| Cash available | Now, as a lump sum | Over time, in installments |
| Total amount received | Less than face value | Full scheduled amount |
| Best for | Urgent financial needs, debt elimination, investment | Those who can wait and want maximum value |
| Court involvement | Yes, required | No |
| Flexibility after | None of the sold payments | Full control |
| Credit score needed | Usually not a factor | Not applicable |
Neither option is automatically better. It depends entirely on your situation.
Selling may make sense if:
- You are carrying high-interest debt that is costing you more than the discount
- You have an urgent expense – medical, housing, family
- You want to invest the lump sum in something with meaningful returns
- You are starting a business and need capital now
- You want full control over your money rather than waiting years
Keeping your payments may be better if:
- You can manage your current expenses without the lump sum
- The offer feels too low relative to what you are giving up
- You want a reliable annual income stream
- You have dependents who depend on future payments
- You are being rushed or pressured into a decision
Can You Sell Only Part of Your Payments?
Yes, and this is often the smarter starting point.
A partial sale means you sell only some of your future payments, say, the next two or three years’ worth, while keeping the rest. This gives you immediate cash while leaving future income intact.
Partial sale options typically include:
- Selling a fixed number of future payments (e.g., the next 3 annual payments)
- Selling a specific dollar amount from your payment stream
- Selling a percentage of each future payment
Courts often view partial sales more favorably, because you are not surrendering your entire payment stream. Ask any buyer whether a partial sale is possible before assuming you have to sell everything.
How the Process Works: Step by Step
Selling structured settlement payments is a legal process. It cannot be completed in a day, and any company that suggests otherwise is not being straight with you.
| Step | What Happens | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Gather your documents | Collect your settlement notice, payment schedule, and award amount | The buyer needs exact figures to make an offer |
| 2. Request quotes | Contact one or more buyers for pricing | Comparing offers gives you negotiating power and may be required by the court |
| 3. Review the offer | Examine the net lump sum, discount rate, and which payments are being sold | The headline number and the net number are not always the same |
| 4. Get independent advice | Speak with an attorney, financial adviser, or tax professional | Many state laws require that you be informed of this right |
| 5. Sign the transfer agreement | Formally agree to the terms with the buyer | Read everything. Do not sign what you do not understand |
| 6. Court petition is filed | The buyer petitions the appropriate court to approve the transfer | No transfer is legally effective until a judge approves it |
| 7. Court hearing | A judge reviews whether the deal is in your best interest | The court may ask about your reasons, dependents, and whether you compared offers |
| 8. Funds are paid | After court approval, the buyer pays the lump sum | The buyer then receives the sold payments going forward |
Typical timeline: 45 to 90 days from signed agreement to cash in hand. This varies by state and court schedule.
What Will the Court Look At?
A judge is not simply stamping paperwork. The court’s job is to make sure the transfer is genuinely in your best interest.
Questions the court may consider:
- Why do you need the lump sum?
- Do you understand what future payments you are giving up?
- Do you have dependents who rely on this income?
- Did you compare more than one offer?
- Did you review the discount rate?
- Did you speak with an independent professional?
- Are the fees transparent and clearly disclosed?
- Are you making this decision freely, without pressure?
The structured settlement laws in most states, which have adopted some version of the federal Structured Settlement Protection Act, require courts to find that the transfer is in your best interest before approving it. This is a protection for you, not a bureaucratic hurdle.
One point that catches people off guard: some courts actively consider whether you compared competing offers. If you only contacted one company, that can work against you at the hearing.
What Documents Should You Prepare?
| Step | What Happens | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Gather your documents | Collect your settlement notice, payment schedule, and award amount | The buyer needs exact figures to make an offer |
| 2. Request quotes | Contact one or more buyers for pricing | Comparing offers gives you negotiating power and may be required by the court |
| 3. Review the offer | Examine the net lump sum, discount rate, and which payments are being sold | The headline number and the net number are not always the same |
| 4. Get independent advice | Speak with an attorney, financial adviser, or tax professional | Many state laws require that you be informed of this right |
| 5. Sign the transfer agreement | Formally agree to the terms with the buyer | Read everything. Do not sign what you do not understand |
| 6. Court petition is filed | The buyer petitions the appropriate court to approve the transfer | No transfer is legally effective until a judge approves it |
| 7. Court hearing | A judge reviews whether the deal is in your best interest | The court may ask about your reasons, dependents, and whether you compared offers |
| 8. Funds are paid | After court approval, the buyer pays the lump sum | The buyer then receives the sold payments going forward |
Keep copies of everything. Confirm all agreements in writing.
How to Compare Offers
Two companies can quote you very different lump sums for the same payment stream. The headline number is not always the real number.
| Question to Ask Every Buyer | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| What is the net amount I receive after all deductions? | Fees and court costs can reduce the real payout significantly |
| Which specific payments am I selling? | Know exactly what you are giving up |
| What is the discount rate? | This is the actual cost of getting cash now |
| Are court costs included or deducted from my payout? | Extra deductions can quietly reduce your offer |
| Can I sell fewer payments instead of all of them? | A smaller sale may be all you actually need |
| How long does court approval typically take in my state? | Important if you have an urgent need |
| What happens if the court denies the petition? | Know your options before you start |
| Do I need to attend the court hearing? | Requirements vary by state |
| Can I cancel before the court approves? | Understand your rights before signing |
| How long have you been purchasing structured settlement payments? | Experience matters in a niche legal process |
A simple rule: compare net cash received, not company branding or marketing promises.
Watch Out for These Red Flags
Not every company operating in this space deserves your trust.
Be careful if a company:
- Pressures you to sign immediately or creates false urgency
- Refuses to explain the discount rate clearly
- Is vague about what fees will be deducted from your payout
- Suggests the court approval process is optional or can be skipped
- Tells you not to consult an attorney
- Will not put the full terms in writing before asking for a signature
- Pushes you to sell every payment rather than exploring a partial sale
- Cannot answer basic questions about timelines, fees, or the court process
A legitimate buyer will be patient, clear, and will never discourage you from getting a second opinion.
What About Taxes?
Tax treatment of structured settlement payments can be complex, and the NCAA settlement involves multiple categories of damages.
Generally, under IRS rules, compensation received for personal physical injuries or physical sickness may be excluded from gross income. However, portions related to lost NIL income, broadcast rights, or other economic damages may be treated differently.
Do not guess on this. Ask a qualified tax professional to review your specific award documents and, if you are selling, the transfer agreement as well. A payment buyer should not give you tax advice unless they are a licensed tax professional.
A Decision Checklist
Use this before you move forward with anything.
| Question | Yes / No |
|---|---|
| Do I know exactly which payments I am selling? | |
| Do I know the net lump sum I will receive, after all fees? | |
| Have I compared at least two or three offers? | |
| Do I understand the discount rate? | |
| Have I asked about court costs and whether they are deducted? | |
| Have I spoken with an attorney or financial adviser? | |
| Do I have a clear plan for how I will use the lump sum? | |
| Will I still have sufficient future income after selling? | |
| Have I understood the tax question? | |
| Am I making this decision calmly, without feeling rushed? |
If you cannot answer yes to most of these, pause. That pause can save you thousands of dollars.
Frequently asked questions
Can I sell my NCAA House settlement payments?
If your payments qualify as structured settlement payment rights under your state’s laws, yes. You will need to go through a court approval process, and the buyer will need to review your specific payment schedule and settlement documents.
Will I get the full value of my future payments?
No. A buyer offers a discounted lump sum. You trade a larger total future amount for a smaller amount available today. The difference depends on the discount rate, the payment timeline, and the buyer.
Does my credit score matter?
Usually not significantly. The buyer is primarily evaluating your payment schedule and the legal structure of your settlement, not your personal credit history.
Is court approval always required?
For structured settlement transfers, yes — in virtually every state that has adopted the Structured Settlement Protection Act. Any buyer who suggests court approval is not needed should be treated with serious caution.
How long does the process take?
Most transfers take between 45 and 90 days from the time you sign the transfer agreement to when you receive your lump sum. Timing varies based on your state’s court schedule and how quickly documents are prepared.
Can I sell only some of my payments?
Yes. Partial sales are common and often worth exploring first. You may sell a specific number of future payments while keeping the rest.
What if the court denies the petition?
The transfer does not go through. You keep your future payments. Ask your buyer about this scenario and what the process would look like if it happens.
Can I get a quote without committing to anything?
Yes. A reputable buyer will provide a free, no-obligation quote. You are not required to proceed unless and until you sign a transfer agreement and the court approves it.
Final thoughts
The House v. NCAA settlement exists because athletes fought for recognition that their time, talent, and likeness had real value. That money is yours.
What you do with it, whether you wait for the scheduled payments or access some of it as a lump sum today, is a decision only you can make. Neither choice is wrong on its own. What matters is that you make it with full information, after comparing your options, and without anyone pushing you toward something that does not actually fit your life.
At MySettlement.org, we have spent over 25 years helping people navigate exactly these decisions. If you want to understand what your payments are worth today, we can give you a free, no-obligation quote and walk you through every step of the process, clearly, patiently, and without pressure.
This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Consult a qualified professional before making any decisions about your settlement payments.
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