DII Management Council adopts proposal to allow student-athletes, staff to bet on pro sports

Council takes positions on membership-sponsored proposals, advances new operating plan and long-range budget recommendations

Posted on 10/22/25 6:50 PM

The Division II Management Council on Wednesday approved noncontroversial legislation to permit student-athletes and athletics department staff members to bet on professional sports. The rule change required approval by all three divisions and will be effective Nov. 1. It applies to any sports betting activities that occur on or after Nov. 1.

The change was approved by the Division I Cabinet earlier this month and by the Division III Management Council this week.

The NCAA prohibition against betting on college sports — and sharing information about college competitions with other bettors — remains in place. The change also would not impact rules prohibiting advertising and sponsorships associated with sports betting for NCAA Championships.

The council emphasized in approving the rule change that the action is not an endorsement of sports betting, particularly for student-athletes. It further emphasized the importance of schools using harm reduction strategies and resources provided by the Committee on Competitive Safeguards and Medical Aspects of Sports and the Sport Science Institute. The NCAA already engages in significant efforts to provide educational resources available to student-athletes about the impact of sports betting, which are detailed on its sports betting page.

"Our action reflects alignment across divisions while maintaining the principles that guide college sports," said Roberta Page, director of athletics at Slippery Rock and chair of the Division II Management Council. "This change recognizes the realities of today's sports environment without compromising our commitment to protecting the integrity of college competition or the well-being of student-athletes."

Convention proposals

The council took formal positions on the 10 membership-sponsored proposals that will be voted on at the Division II business session of the 2026 NCAA Convention. Those positions are noted below.

Members also reviewed the six governance-sponsored proposals for the 2026 Convention. In particular, the council highlighted a question-and-answer resource recently released on a proposal that would permit Division II student-athletes to participate in up to five seasons of competition during their first 10 semesters or 15 quarters of full-time enrollment. The Management Council also issued a blanket waiver, contingent on the adoption of the proposal, that would permit student-athletes, regardless of sport, who would have used their final season of competition during or at the conclusion of the 2025-26 academic year, to receive athletics aid for the 2026-27 academic year without counting toward team equivalency limits. Relief will only apply if the student-athletes remains at their original institution.

The 16 proposals will be voted on via the division's one-school, one-vote legislative process. For a proposal from the Division II membership to be voted on at an NCAA Convention, it must have at least 15 active Division II schools or two Division II conferences on behalf of 15 or more of their member schools as sponsors.

The council supported the following membership-sponsored proposals:

The council opposed the following membership-sponsored proposals:

The council took no position on the following membership-sponsored proposals:

Division II operating plan and long-range budget

The council recommended the Division IIExecutive Board approve a proposed new six-year operating plan that will be launched at the 2026 NCAA Convention and extend through 2031-32, which aligns with the remainder of the NCAA's current broadcast agreements. The new plan outlines five broad focus areas: academics, athletics, health and wellness, governance, and operations and positioning.

Additionally, the council recommended the Executive Board approve a proposed long-range budget through 2031-32, which was developed specifically to support the new operating plan. In the revised long-range budget for Division II, the division allocated new revenue and reserves to three core areas: championships, revenue distribution and initiatives.

Other items

Make It Yours campaign

Division II staff provided an update on the division's fall marketing campaign that launched Oct. 3 focusing on the Make It Yours brand. The campaign includes a targeted paid media strategy among prospective student-athletes and parents that is aimed at strengthening the perception and understanding of Division II nationally by increasing awareness that the division offers balance between athletics, academics and community engagement. Division II is using paid media on Facebook, Instagram and TikTok; using paid search; utilizing video on YouTube and over-the-top streaming services; and creating geofences around select high school competitions to promote the division to prospective student-athletes and parents.