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Takeaways
- The NCAA has implemented severe automatic penalties for Division I programs that circumvent the Transfer Portal process.
- The penalties apply to any transfer on or after 02.25.26.
- Designed to provide immediate accountability, the penalties apply across all sports.
On April 1, 2026, the NCAA Division I Cabinet approved automatic penalties for “ghost transfers” — any program that signs a transfer student-athlete, adds them to a roster, or permits them to participate in athletically related activities before entering the NCAA Transfer Portal. The penalties apply across all Division I sports.
According to the NCAA, immediately upon a violation, an institution will automatically be subject to:
- A suspension of the applicable head coach for 50% of the season. Prohibiting all coaching, recruiting, and administrative duties during the suspension period.
- A fine equal to 20% of the sport’s budget will be imposed on the institution. The fine applies regardless of whether the applicable head coach remains employed.
These approved penalties are slightly modified from the emergency legislation proposed by the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision Oversight Committee on Feb. 25, 2026. The adopted penalties modify the head coach suspension to a percentage of the season, rather than a specific number of games. The modification allows the penalty to easily scale across sports. The Cabinet declined to impose any proposed roster penalties, however.
The quickness of adopting these penalties (five weeks from proposal) stems from concerns over changing transfer rules and allegations of tampering. According to Vanderbilt Football Head Coach Clark Lea, these penalties provide immediate accountability and are “a necessary step to address a critical roster management issue facing our sport and to protect the integrity of football’s transfer window.”
These penalties are designed to close the ghost transfer loophole not previously prohibited by NCAA rules and had been exploited in prior transfer cycles.
According to Cabinet Chair Josh Whitman, “This change addresses gaps in the transfer and tampering policies that have allowed for abuse, but we acknowledge that there is more work to do.”
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