What Is Changing?
Under the new Division I age-based eligibility rule, student-athletes who meet all eligibility requirements and enter college no later than the academic year after their 19th birthday generally will have up to five years of eligibility. While some have referred to this as the NCAA “5 for 5” rule, that is not accurate. The age-based rule actually centers on a student-athlete’s age and when the student enrolls full time in college, and it does not guarantee five years for all student-athletes, particularly those who delay enrollment.
The previous rules included several elements that required more tracking for student-athletes and their schools, including athletics redshirts, delayed enrollment and other sport-specific rules, seasons of competition, and waiver opportunities. The new age-based rule replaces those variables with one consistent eligibility period.
Key Shift
| Previous Eligibility Rule | New Age-Based Eligibility Rule |
|---|---|
| Counted seasons of competition. | Based on a continuous five-year eligibility period. |
| Included multiple waiver options. | Uses limited exceptions written into the rules. |
| Could vary by sport or circumstance. | Applies a consistent framework across all Division I sports. |
How the Five-Year Eligibility Period Works
A student-athlete’s five-year eligibility period begins with the earlier of these two events:
- Initial full-time college enrollment: The academic term when the student-athlete first enrolls full time and attends class at any college or university, including a domestic institution, international institution or junior college.
- Age-based trigger: The start of the regular academic year immediately following the student-athlete’s 19th birthday, if the student-athlete turns 19 years old before Sept. 1.
For an individual who turns 19 years old on or after Sept. 1, the period of eligibility begins at the start of the subsequent academic year, unless the individual enrolls full time in college earlier.
Once the five-year period starts, it runs continuously. It does not pause because a student-athlete does not compete, transfers, sits out, changes teams or takes time away from participation, meaning student-athletes, coaches and athletics departments no longer have to track athletic “redshirts.”
Other eligibility rules – including academic and other athletics-related rules – will still apply, meaning a student-athlete may be inside the five-year eligibility period and still be ineligible for other reasons.
Rules and Waivers Being Eliminated
The new age-based rule removes several eligibility rules and waiver categories from the Division I Manual.
Rules being eliminated include:
- Seasons of competition.
- Athletics redshirt rules.
- Delayed enrollment rules.
- Sport-specific enrollment timelines.
- Academic nonqualifier season limitations.
Waiver categories being eliminated include:
- Medical hardship waivers.
- Extension-of-eligibility waivers.
- Season-of-competition waivers.
- Athletics activity waivers.
- Delayed enrollment waivers.
Exceptions Under the New Model
The age-based rule still includes a limited number of exceptions:
Military Service, Religious Missions and Similar Service Commitments
Time spent in active-duty military service, on an official religious mission or in a similar service commitment may be excluded from the five-year period if the student-athlete does not participate in organized competition during that service.
If the student-athlete competes during the service period, the exception does not apply.
Pregnancy Exception
A pregnant student-athlete may pause the eligibility period for the duration of the actual period during which the individual cannot compete. Supporting medical documentation is required.
Transition Rules: Who Is Affected?
The transition to the age-based rule will depend on the student-athlete’s status and enrollment timeline.
| Group | How eligibility will be reviewed |
|---|---|
| Student-athletes who used their final season of competition (under previous rules) during 2025-26. | No additional eligibility. |
| Current student-athletes with eligibility remaining (under previous rules) after the 2025-26 academic year. | Either the previous rules OR the new age-based rule, whichever is most beneficial to the student-athlete. |
| Prospects who initially enroll full time at any college or university during 2026-27. | Either the previous rules OR the new age-based rule, whichever is most beneficial to the student-athlete. |
| Prospects who initially enroll full time at any college or university in fall 2027 or later. | The age-based rule only. |
What This Means for Prospective Student-Athletes
Prospective student-athletes should pay close attention to both age and enrollment timing. Delaying college enrollment beyond age 19 may reduce the amount of Division I eligibility available.
The new age-based rule is more predictable, but it is also less flexible. Eligibility will be based on defined rules and limited exceptions, rather than case-by-case waiver decisions. Remember that other academic and athletics eligibility rules still apply.
Key takeaway: Plan your college enrollment timeline carefully, especially if you are considering a gap year, delayed enrollment or another nontraditional path after high school.
What This Means for Current Student-Athletes
Current student-athletes who did not exhaust their eligibility or seasons of competition in the 2025-26 academic year will receive the better outcome under either the previous rules or the new age-based rule. Schools will be responsible for evaluating each current student-athlete’s circumstances and applying the rule that serves each individual best.
However, student-athletes who continue under the previous rules will not have future waiver opportunities to gain additional eligibility through eliminated waiver categories.
What This Means for Coaches and Schools
For coaches, the new age-based rule should make roster planning more predictable. There will be less need to track redshirts, seasons of competition and waiver possibilities.
For schools and compliance staff, the transition period will require careful review. Schools will need to evaluate current student-athletes, educate coaches and student-athletes, coordinate with the NCAA Eligibility Center when appropriate, and apply the correct rule during the transition.
In the long term, the age-based rule is expected to reduce waiver processing, limit appeals and create a more consistent eligibility system across Division I.
Role of the NCAA Eligibility Center
The NCAA Eligibility Center will administer and certify the period of eligibility for students enrolling in fall 2026 and beyond. This work will be done in addition to academic and athletics initial eligibility certification. The Eligibility Center plans to have information regarding the age-based rule available in student accounts in early August.
NCAA schools will still have responsibilities. They must report discrepancies, provide updated information, advise current student-athletes and certify eligibility alongside the Eligibility Center.
Bottom Line
The Division I age-based eligibility rule shifts eligibility from a season-based and waiver-driven system to a time-based system with few exceptions.
The new rules are designed to provide greater clarity, consistency and predictability for student-athletes, families, coaches, compliance staff and schools.
In short, eligibility will be determined by clear rules, not by exceptions.