Monday, May 25, 2026
Law

New Lawsuit Challenges Restrictions on High School NIL Deals, Transfers

A former high school football player filed a class-action lawsuit in California. If successful, it could set a national precedent for NIL and transfer restrictions.

Pacifica's Alijah Royster breaks through the Thousand Oaks defense to score a touchdown during their CIF-SS Division 4 semifinal game at Thousand Oaks on Friday, Nov. 22, 2024. Pacifica won 28-16.
Joe Lumaya/Imagn Images

For more than a decade, the NCAA has faced a mountain of legal challenges to its restrictions on NIL (name, image, and likeness) deals and transfers. The governing body has mostly lost the ability to enforce these rules as a result.

Now, a new lawsuit is taking aim at those same restrictions in high school.

On Monday, a former California high school football and track athlete, Dominik Calhoun, filed a class-action lawsuit against the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) and others saying restrictions on NIL earnings and transfers violated antitrust law. The complaint, filed in the Northern District of California federal court—the same jurisdiction that has heard several major NIL cases against the NCAA—asks for the CIF to change its rules, and for the massive “treble damages” requested in antitrust cases.

“These policies harm the high school student-athletes who create the economic value exploited by the CIF, its Sections, its member schools, and their commercial partners, and constitute unreasonable restraints of trade in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act,” the complaint read.

If successful, the lawsuit could set a national precedent similar to that in college sports: That restrictions on athlete compensation and player movement are largely indefensible in court.

 “This case challenges rules that unfairly prevent high school athletes in California from being compensated for their hard work and the use of their name, image, and likeness—even as others profit from them,” Yaman Salahi, co-lead attorney representing Calhoun, told FOS in a statement. “It’s the logical next step after the reforms inaugurated by successful antitrust litigation on the collegiate level. Corporations see a lot of untapped economic value in high school athletics, and we want to ensure that value is shared equitably with the athletes that create it.” 

Since the NCAA changed its rules to allow college athletes to profit off NIL deals in 2021, a fledgling market for high school NIL deals has materialized across the country. However, high school NIL rules are more piecemeal—with each state federation making its own decisions over whether players could participate. California was the first state to signal it would allow NIL deals—and, as a result, players have cashed in across the state. Nike, for example, inked deals with multiple high-profile high school athletes in 2022, including basketball players Bronny James and JuJu Watkins.

But the lawsuit argues that, while the CIF allows for some types of NIL earnings, it restricts others. For example, players can’t receive deals from the schools themselves (something that college athletes are fighting for in the House v. NCAA lawsuit), or affiliated parties like boosters. There are also restrictions on whether their NIL earnings can be directly related to their participation on high school teams.

The lawsuit argues that it severely restricts the ability for athletes like Calhoun to cash in, given that booster-led NIL deals were a major component of the college market. As evidence, the lawsuit notes Calhoun will play football at Boise State in the fall, and has already signed NIL contracts related to the school and its NIL collective. (The lawsuit also challenges strict rules for how and when players can transfer, and penalties imposed upon them if they do.)

“Collectively, these rules and regulations forbid CIF member schools or CIF Sections from sharing the revenue they receive by licensing their student-athletes’ NIL with those very student-athletes, artificially fixing the price student-athletes are compensated for their NIL at zero,” the complaint read.

A representative for the CIF did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

U.S. Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA) shakes hands with Shanghai Mayor Gong Zheng during a U.S. congressional delegation's visit in Shanghai, China, May 5, 2026.

As SCORE Act Fails Again, a New College Sports Bill May Emerge

On Monday night, House leadership canceled the vote.
Mar 11, 2026; Charlotte, NC, USA; Florida State Seminoles forward Alex Steen (25) reacts with guard Robert McCray V. (6) in the first half at Spectrum Center.

FSU Tests New Revenue Model as Schools Cut Sports

“Cutting sports isn’t part of the equation for us.”
Oct 11, 2025; College Park, Maryland, USA; Nebraska Cornhuskers quarterback Dylan Raiola (15) throws during the second half against the Maryland Terrapins at SECU Stadium.

CSC Wins Key NIL Arbitration in Nebraska Football Case

The case centered around deals offered to 18 football players.
Apr 6, 2026; Indianapolis, IN, USA; Michigan Wolverines head coach Dusty May celebrates with the trophy after defeating the UConn Huskies in the national championship of the Final Four of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium.

Dusty May: Another Men’s Championship Will Cost $10M or More

“We anticipate it to be much greater next year,” May told FOS.

Featured Today

Big Money on the Line on Premier League’s Final Day

Arsenal has won the title, but millions are still at stake.
Texas State mascot
May 22, 2026

Mascot-Reveal Videos Are the Newest College Sports Tradition

Student mascot unmasking videos are going mega-viral.
Charlie Pliner and Nikolas Rohrmann
May 22, 2026

How 2 Brown Undergrads Became Sports Dealmakers

An experimental project turned into a permanent course and business deal network.
May 14, 2026

NFL Rivalries Are Made on the Field, Mocked in Schedule Release Videos

Every year, teams find new ways to one-up themselves (and their rivals).

Padres Star Tatis on Hook for Millions After Legal Setback

A judge ruled the Padres star cannot void an arbitrator’s ruling.
May 19, 2026

Brian Flores Subpoenas Dozens of Teams As NFL Lawsuit Grows

The Vikings assistant is now seeking records from 31 teams.
Mar 16, 2025; Chester, Pennsylvania, USA; Competitive eater Joey Chestnut entertains fans during the game between the Philadelphia Union and Nashville SC at Subaru Park.
May 20, 2026

Nathan’s Hot Dog Contest Won’t Punish Chestnut After Guilty Plea

Chestnut was charged for misdemeanor battery at an Indiana bar.
Sponsored

The Hidden Economy of Race Weekend

Learn more about the Vintage Flying Museum and how Spectrum Business is helping them achieve their business goals while fueling their dreams.
May 18, 2026

Nike Under Fire Amid Growing Wave of Tariff Refund Lawsuits

Adidas and Lululemon also face proposed class actions from consumers.
May 14, 2026

Tennis Lawsuit Sparks Courtroom Fight Over Grand Slam Credentials

Wimbledon and the French Open denied credentials to the PTPA.
May 11, 2026

NBA Cut Out Middleman From Lucrative Emirates Deal: Lawsuit

The NBA denies it had an agreement with Paul Edalat.
Mar 9, 2026; Tuscaloosa, AL, USA; Bowlero has rebranded itself as Lucky Strike. It is in the same location new to the mall on McFarland Blvd.
May 7, 2026

Lawsuit Claims Lucky Strike Built Bowling Monopoly

The company has allegedly caused bowling prices to triple in some cases.