right|200px|NCAA Division I logo

NCAA Division I (D-I) is the highest division of intercollegiate athletics sanctioned by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) in the United States, which accepts players globally. D-I schools include the major collegiate athletic powers, with large budgets, more elaborate facilities and more athletic scholarships than Division II and Division III as well as many smaller schools committed to the highest level of intercollegiate competition.

This level was previously called the University Division of the NCAA, in contrast to the lower-level College Division; these terms were replaced with numeric divisions in 1973. The University Division was renamed Division I, while the College Division was split in two; the College Division members that offered scholarships or wanted to compete against those who did became Division II, while those who did not want to offer scholarships became Division III.

For college football only, D-I schools are further divided into the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), and those institutions that do not have any football program. FBS teams have more players receiving athletic scholarships than FCS teams and until 2024, had minimum game-attendance requirements. The FBS is named for its series of postseason bowl games, with various polls ranking teams after the conclusion of these games, while the FCS national champion is determined by a multi-team bracket tournament.

For the 2020–21 school year, Division I contained 357 of the NCAA's 1,066 member institutions, with 130 in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), 127 in the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), and 100 non-football schools, with six additional schools in the transition from Division II to Division I. There was a moratorium on any additional movement up to D-I until 2012, after which any school that wants to move to D-I must be accepted for membership by a conference and show the NCAA it has the financial ability to support a D-I program.

Finances

Division I athletic programs generated $8.7 billion in revenue in the 2009–10 academic year 10 years ago. Men's teams provided 55%, women's teams 15%, and 30% was not categorized by sex or sport. Football and men's basketball are usually a university's only profitable sports, and are called "revenue sports". From 2008 to 2012, 205 varsity teams were dropped in NCAA Division I – 72 for women and 133 for men, with men's tennis, gymnastics and wrestling hit particularly hard.

In the Football Bowl Subdivision (130 schools in 2017), between 50 and 60 percent of football and men's basketball programs generated positive revenues (above program expenses). However, in the Football Championship Subdivision (124 schools in 2017), only four percent of football and five percent of men's basketball programs generated positive revenues.

In 2012, 2% of athletic budgets were spent on equipment, uniforms and supplies for male athletes at NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision school, with the median spending per-school at $742,000.

In 2014, the NCAA and the student athletes debated whether student athletes should be paid. In April, the NCAA approved students-athletes receiving free unlimited meals and snacks. The NCAA stated "The adoption of the meals legislation finished a conversation that began in the Awards, Benefits, Expenses and Financial Aid Cabinet. Members have worked to find appropriate ways to ensure student-athletes get the nutrition they need without jeopardizing Pell Grants or other federal aid received by the neediest student-athletes. With their vote, members of the council said they believe loosening NCAA rules on what and when food can be provided from athletics departments is the best way to address the issue."

According to the finance section of the NCAA page, "The NCAA receives most of its annual revenue from two sources: television and marketing rights for the Division I Men's Basketball Championship and ticket sales for all championships. That money is distributed in more than a dozen ways — almost all of which directly support NCAA schools, conferences and nearly half a million student-athletes. About 60% of the NCAA's annual revenue — around $600 million — is annually distributed directly to Division I member schools and conferences, while more than $150 million funds Division I championships" (NCAA 2021).

Football conferences

Under NCAA regulations, all Division I conferences defined as "multisport conferences" must meet the following criteria:

  • A total of at least seven active Division I members. However, the NCAA's Grace Period rule (Bylaw 20.02.9.2) allows conferences to operate for up to two years with less than the minimum.
  • Separate from the above, at least seven active Division 1 members that sponsor both men's and women's basketball.
  • Sponsorship of at least 12 NCAA Division I sports.
  • Minimum of six men's sports, with the following additional restrictions:
  • Men's basketball is a mandatory sport, and at least seven members must sponsor that sport.
  • Non-football conferences must sponsor at least two men's team sports other than basketball.
  • At least six members must sponsor five men's sports other than basketball, including either football or two other team sports.
  • Minimum of six women's sports, with the following additional restrictions:
  • Women's basketball is a mandatory sport, with at least seven members sponsoring that sport.
  • At least two other women's team sports must be sponsored.
  • At least six members must sponsor five women's sports other than basketball, with at least two of those five being team sports. If a conference officially sponsors an NCAA "emerging sport" for women (as of 2023–24, acrobatics & tumbling, equestrianism, rugby union, stunt, triathlon, or wrestling), that sport will be counted if five members (instead of six) sponsor it.

FBS conferences

FBS conferences must meet a more stringent set of requirements for NCAA recognition than other conferences:

  • A total of at least eight active FBS members.
  • To be counted toward this total, a school must participate in conference play in at least six men's and eight women's sports, including men's and women's basketball, football, and at least two other women's team sports.
  • Each school may count one men's and one women's sport not sponsored by its primary conference toward the above limits, as long as that sport competes in another Division I conference. The men's and women's sports so counted need not be the same sport.

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

!Conference

!Nickname

!Founded

!Members

!Sports

!Headquarters

!Total<br />NCAA<br />Titles

!Men's<br />NCAA<br /> Titles

!Women's<br />NCAA<br /> Titles

!Co-ed<br />NCAA<br /> Titles

|-

| American Conference ‡

| American

| 1979

| 13

| 19

| Dallas, Texas

| 1

| 1

| 0

| 0

|-

| Division I FBS Independents

| Independents

| –

| 2

| 1

| –

|

|

|

|

|-

| Mid-American Conference ‡

| MAC

| 1946

| 13

| 25

| Cleveland, Ohio

| 4

| 4

| 0

| 0

|-

| Mountain West Conference ‡

| Mountain West

| 1999

| 12

| 19

| Colorado Springs, Colorado

| 21

| 13

| 5

| 3

|-

| Pac-12 Conference ‡

| Pac-12

| 1915

| 2

| 6

| San Ramon, California

| 501

| 309

| 174

| 18

|-

| Southeastern Conference †

| SEC

| 1932

| 16

| 22

| Birmingham, Alabama

| 223

| 118

| 104

| 1

|-

| Sun Belt Conference ‡

| Sun Belt

| 1976

| 14

| 20

| New Orleans, Louisiana

| 29

| 16

| 12

| 1

|}

† "Power Four" conferences that had guaranteed berths in the New Year's Six, the bowl games associated with the College Football Playoff, before the playoff's 2024 expansion to 12 teams<br />

‡ "Group of Six" conferences

;Notes:

FCS conferences

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

!Conference

!Nickname

!Founded

!Football<br>members

!Sports

!Headquarters

|-

| Atlantic Sun Conference

| ASUN

| 1978

| 5

| 21

| Jacksonville, Florida

|-

| Big Sky Conference

| Big Sky

| 1963

| 12

| 16

| Ogden, Utah

|-

| Big South Conference

| Big South

| 1983

| 2

| 19

| Charlotte, North Carolina

|-

| Coastal Athletic Association Football Conference

| CAA Football

| 2007

| 14

| 1

| Richmond, Virginia

|-

| Independents

|

|

| 2

| 1

|

|-

| Ivy League

|

| 1954

| 8

| 33

| Princeton, New Jersey

|-

| Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference

| MEAC

| 1970

| 6

| 14

| Norfolk, Virginia

|-

| Missouri Valley Football Conference

| MVFC

| 1982

| 10

| 1

| St. Louis, Missouri

|-

| NEC

| NEC

| 1981

| 9

| 24

| Somerset, New Jersey

|-

| Ohio Valley Conference

| OVC

| 1948

| 7

| 1

| Brentwood, Tennessee

|-

| Patriot League

|

| 1986

| 8

| 24

| Center Valley, Pennsylvania

|-

| Pioneer Football League

| PFL

| 1991

| 11

| 1

| St. Louis, Missouri

|-

| Southern Conference

| SoCon

| 1921

| 9

| 20

| Spartanburg, South Carolina

|-

| Southland Conference

| SLC

| 1963

| 12

| 17

| Frisco, Texas

|-

| Southwestern Athletic Conference

| SWAC

| 1920

| 12

| 18

| Birmingham, Alabama

|-

| Western Athletic Conference

| WAC

| 1962

| 4

| 20

| Arlington, Texas

|}

;Notes:

<!--

Non-football, multi-sport conferences

Multisport conferences that do not compete in football must still meet the general NCAA Division I requirements regarding the minimum number of men's and women's sports (see above).

!width= |

!width= |Roster limits

!width= |Season

!width= |Most <br> Championships

|-

!|1

| Football

| 1869 (FBS)<br />1978 (FCS)

| 264<br /><small>(138 FBS,<br> 126 FCS)</small>

| 23<br /><small>(10 FBS,<br>13 FCS)</small>

|

| Fall

| Princeton (28)

|-

!|2

| Basketball

| 1939

| 365

| 32

|

| Winter

| UCLA (11)

|-

!|3

| Baseball

| 1947

|align=center| 309

|align=center| 30<!--As of 2027 season—the Big Sky Conference hasn't sponsored baseball since 1974, and the MEAC dropped it after the 2021 season, and the Pac-12 resumes full operation in July 2026.-->

|align=center|

|align=center| Spring

|align=center| USC (12)

|-

!|4

| Soccer

| 1959

| 204

| 23

|

| Fall

| Saint Louis (10)

|-

!|5

| Ice hockey

| 1948

| 65<!--As of 2026–27—unchanged from 2025–26, with Mercyhurst dropping the sport and Tennessee State adding it-->

| 6

|

| Winter

| Denver (10)

|-

!|6

| Lacrosse

| 1971

| 77

| 10

|

| Spring

| Syracuse (10)

|-

!|7

| Volleyball

| 1970

| 30<!--As of 2026–27-->

| 9<!--As of 2026–27-->

|

| Spring

| UCLA (19)

|-

!|8

| Water polo

| 1969

| style="text-align:center;"| 29

| style="text-align:center;"| 4

| style="text-align:center;"|

| style="text-align:center;"| Fall

|align=center| California (14)

|}

Notes:

: The NCAA officially classifies the men's championships in volleyball and water polo as "National Collegiate" championships, that being the designation for championships that are open to members of more than one NCAA division. The ice hockey championship, however, is styled as a "Division I" championship because of the previous existence of a separate Division II championship in that sport.

  • Football — D-I football programs are divided into FBS and FCS. After the settlement of the House v. NCAA legal case took full effect in 2025–26, scholarship limits in all D-I sports were replaced by roster limits, which are now identical in FBS and FCS. The House settlement, by its terms, was binding on the original conference defendants in the case—the "Powet Four" conferences and the Pac-12 Conference, which had "power" status before its 2024 collapse. Other D-I schools and conferences were allowed to opt into the House framework, and most did so. The most notable opt-out was the Ivy League, which maintains its non-scholarship status.
  • Soccer — As of the upcoming 2026 NCAA soccer season (part of the 2026–27 academic year), four of the 10 FBS conferences do not sponsor men's soccer: the Big 12, Conference USA, Mid-American Conference, and the SEC. Several other D-I conferences also do not sponsor the sport: the Big Sky, MEAC, Southland, SWAC, and United Athletic Conference (the last of which replaces the Western Athletic Conference in July 2026). The Mountain West Conference is the most recent conference to add men's soccer; it will sponsor the sport for the first time in the 2026 season. The Western Athletic Conference will not sponsor men's soccer after its rebranding as the UAC.
  • Ice hockey — Almost all D-I ice hockey programs are in the Northeast, the Upper Midwest, or the Colorado Front Range. Only one D-I all-sports conference, the Big Ten, sponsors a men's hockey league. All other conferences operate as hockey-specific leagues. Of the 65 teams that competed in D-I hockey in 2025–26, 18 are otherwise classified as either D-II or D-III; a number of schools from D-II play in D-I ice hockey as the NCAA no longer sponsors a championship in D-II and many have traditional/cultural fan bases that support ice hockey, and the D-III schools were "grandfathered" in to D-I through their having sponsored hockey prior to the creation of D-III.
  • Lacrosse — The vast majority of D-I lacrosse programs are from the Northeast, Southeast, and Mid-Atlantic. Only four D-I programs are not in the Eastern Time Zone: Air Force and Denver on the Colorado Front Range, Marquette in Milwaukee, and Utah.
  • Volleyball — Of the traditional D-I conferences, only the Big West Conference and NEC sponsor men's volleyball, with those conferences respectively adding the sport in 2017–18 and 2022–23. Two of the other three major volleyball conferences, defined in that sport as leagues that include full Division I members, are volleyball-specific conferences; the third is the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation, a multi-sport conference that does not sponsor football or basketball. In addition to the D-I schools, 44 D-II schools competed in the National Collegiate division in 2025–26. Four Division II conferences sponsor the sport—Conference Carolinas, the East Coast Conference, the Great Lakes Valley Conference, and the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference.
  • Water polo — The number of D-I schools sponsoring men's water polo declined from 35 in 1987/88 to 22 in 2010/11, increasing to 29 in 2025–26. No school outside of California has ever made the finals of the championship, and all champions since 1998 have come from one of the four California schools that left the Pac-12 in 2024.

Men's individual sports

The following table lists the men's individual D-I sports with at least 1,000 participating athletes. Sports are ranked by number of athletes.

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align: center"

|-

!width=40|No.

!width=145|Sport

!width=50|Founded

!width=75|Teams (2022)

!width=75|Teams (1982)

| 287

| 230

| +57

| 11,387

| Spring

|-

!|2

| Track (indoor)

| 1965

| 264

| 209

| +55

| 10,369

| Winter

|-

!|3

|align=center| Cross country

| 1938

|align=center | 315

| 256

| +59

|align=center| 5,032

| Fall

|-

!|4

|align=center| Swimming and diving

|1937

|align=center | 130

| 181

| −51

|align=center| 3,826

| Winter

|-

!|5

|align=center| Golf

|1939

|align=center| 292

| 263

| +29

|align=center| 2,958

| Spring

|-

!| 6

|align=center| Wrestling

|1928

|align=center| 76

| 146

| −70

|align=center| 2,665

| Winter

|-

!| 7

|align=center | Tennis

|1946

|align=center| 233

| 267

| −34

|align=center| 2,293

| Spring

|}

D-I college wrestling has lost almost half of its programs since 1982.

Women's team sports

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center"

|-

!width= |No.

!width= 100 |Sport

!width= |Founded

!width= |Teams became an official NCAA championship sport in 2015–16.

  • Two women's sports will hold their first official NCAA championships in 2026–27—acrobatics & tumbling and stunt. In addition to the 11 Division I schools that sponsored the former in 2025–26, 20 D-II and 10 D-III members also did so, and the first NCAA championship will use the National Collegiate format. As of May 2026, the NCAA membership directory does not provide a list of NCAA stunt programs.

Women's individual sports

The following table lists the women's individual D-I sports with at least 1,000 participating athletes. Sports are ranked by number of athletes.

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align: center"

|-

!width=40|No.

!width=145|Sport

!width=75|Teams (2022)

|-

| Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) || All || ESPN, The CW || $3.6B ($240m) ||

|-

| Big 12 Conference || All || Fox, ESPN || $2.6B ($200m) ||

|-

| Southeastern Conference (SEC) || All || ESPN || $2.6B ($205m) ||

|-

| American Athletic Conference || All || ESPN || $910m ($130m) ||

|-

| Mountain West Conference (MW) || All || CBS, Fox || $116m ($18m) ||

|-

| Mid-American Conference (MAC) || All || ESPN || $100m ($8m) ||

|}

Scholarship and roster limits by sport

Old rules pre-July 1, 2025

Through the 2024–25 academic year, the NCAA had limits on the total financial aid each Division I member could award in each sport that the school sponsors. It divided sports that are sponsored into two types for purposes of scholarship limitations:

  • "Head-count" sports, in which the NCAA limits the total number of individuals that can receive athletic scholarships, but allows each player to receive up to a full scholarship.
  • "Equivalency" sports, in which the NCAA limits the total financial aid that a school can offer in a given sport to the equivalent of a set number of full scholarships. Roster limitations may or may not apply, depending on the sport.

The term "counter" was also key to this concept. The NCAA defines a "counter" as "an individual who is receiving institutional financial aid that is countable against the aid limitations in a sport."

The number of scholarships that Division I members could award in each sport is listed below. In this table, scholarship numbers for head-count sports are indicated without a decimal point; for equivalency sports, they are listed with a decimal point, with a trailing zero if required.

{| class="wikitable sortable" style=

|-

!Sport||Men's||Women's

|-

| Acrobatics & tumbling ||style="text-align: center;" | – ||style="text-align: center;" | 14.0

|-

| Baseball ||style="text-align: center;" | 11.7 ||style="text-align: center;" | –

|-

| Basketball ||style="text-align: center;" | 13 ||style="text-align: center;" | 15

|-

| Beach volleyball || style="text-align: center;" | – ||style="text-align: center;" | 6.0