Wyoming's NIL program operates in a unique market with strong oil and gas industry donor ties.
Football under Jay Sawvel is estimated at $4-5M for 2025-26.
Wyoming NIL Spending — $9M Est. 2026

Estimated NIL Spend
$9M
2025–26 est.
Top Sport
Football
$6.5M
Wyoming's NIL program operates in a unique market with strong oil and gas industry donor ties.
Football under Jay Sawvel is estimated at $4-5M for 2025-26.
The $9M figure above combines two sources permitted under the House v. NCAA settlement: Wyoming's direct revenue-share allocation and third-party collective deals funded by boosters, alumni, and corporate sponsors. We compile it from publicly disclosed contracts, collective funding announcements, athletic department reporting, and cross-referenced industry valuations, with Football the largest single-sport allocation at $6.5M.
Wyoming is estimated to spend $9M on NIL in the 2025–26 athletic year, including revenue-sharing allocations and third-party collective deals. This ranks #104 nationally among Division I programs.
Wyoming competes in the Mountain West at the G5 level.
Football is Wyoming's top NIL-funded sport with approximately $6.5M in estimated 2026 spending.
Wyoming's $9M NIL budget can be compared against every Mountain West program and all 357 Division I schools on The Sideline's NIL Tracker.
Wyoming's NIL budget combines two sources: the school's direct revenue-share allocation (capped at roughly $20.5M industry-wide following the House settlement) and third-party collective deals funded by boosters, alumni, and corporate sponsors.
Create a free account to share intel, analysis, and insights on this program's NIL situation.
Alabama won the 2017 national title on a second-and-26 touchdown pass in overtime.
Stack Wyoming against any other program — side-by-side NIL spend by sport.
Compare NowFree Weekly Newsletter
Every Sunday — top stories, transfer portal moves, NIL headlines, and the week's biggest plays. No spam, just sports.
Delivered every Sunday. Unsubscribe anytime.