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NCAA Eligibility Center
(Formerly the NCAA Clearinghouse)

How to Determine Your NCAA Eligibility

The NCAA Eligibility Center is the arm of the NCAA responsible for determining the academic eligibility and amateurism status for all D1 and D2 student-athletes. Previously, this part of the NCAA was called the NCAA Clearinghouse, but now, the NCAA Clearinghouse and NCAA Eligibility Center are the same process. 

The most important thing to understand as a prospective student-athlete is that the NCAA is there to determine your eligibility, not to provide guidance on how to get or maintain your college eligibility. It is the responsibility of the student-athlete to understand the academic and amateurism requirements and make sure they are on track to meet those requirements with the help of their high school guidance counselor and school administrators.

Impact of COVID-19 on NCAA eligibility: The NCAA Eligibility Center extended its COVID-19 initial eligibility policies for student-athletes who initially enroll full-time during the 2021-22 and 2022-23 academic years. Students who intend to play D1 or D2 sports won’t be required to take the ACT or SAT by the NCAA. Students are also allowed to use pass/fail grades for core courses through the 2021–22 academic year. To keep track of updates that will impact eligibility for current and future recruiting classes, check out the NCAA COVID-19 Response FAQs. NCSA also has information on our coronavirus resources page.

NCAA Eligibility Center checklist

Download your eligibility checklist »

NCAA Certification Account or Profile page: What type of NCAA account is right for you?

If you are actively being recruited at the NCAA D1 or D2 level, or you are very confident you will be competing at that level out of high school, you should register with the NCAA and create a Certification Account. If you aren’t sure of your division level, you should create an NCAA Profile page so you can easily transition to a Certification Account if needed.

What is the purpose of the NCAA Eligibility Center?

For prospective college student-athletes, the NCAA Eligibility Center is the part of the NCAA that will ensure you meet the minimum academic requirements and are considered an amateur athlete. It does this by reviewing your high school transcripts (official copies only), SAT/ACT test scores and reviewing the answers to your amateurism questionnaire. In rare situations, the NCAA will require additional information surrounding your high school classes or athletic competition, but most athletes pass through the NCAA Eligibility Center without incident.

How do I register for the NCAA Eligibility Center?

The NCAA has a very user-friendly website at the NCAA Eligibility Center. Give yourself at least 15-30 minutes to complete the initial registration. Before your register with the NCAA, make sure you have a valid email address you will have access to after high school. If you are creating a Certification Account, you will need a method of payment for the account.

Insider Tip: After creating your account, you will need to have official copies of your high school transcripts (from all schools you attended) and copies of your SAT and/or ACT scores sent to the NCAA.

How do you get an NCAA number?

Go to the NCAA Eligibility Center website and create either a Certification Account or Profile page and complete the initial registration process. Allow at least 15-20 minutes to complete the initial registration.

NCAA Eligibility requirements

How long does the NCAA Eligibility Center take?

You are not officially done with the NCAA Eligibility Center process until you are done with high school and officially declared eligible at your D1 or D2 institution. There are three phases to the NCAA Eligibility Center process you will need to check in to make sure you are on track:

  1. Creating a Certification Account – This should happen your freshman or sophomore year of high school.
  2. Having up-to-date transcripts after your junior year – The NCAA requires prospective D1 athletes to complete 10 core courses before the start of your final semester of high school. 7 of these courses need to be in English, math and natural or physical science. Additionally, your core course GPA will be “locked in” at this time – you won’t be allowed to retake these classes to improve your grades.
  3. Sending in final transcripts and requesting final amateurism certification – After you have completed high school, you will send your final transcripts and request your final amateurism certification.

Insider Tip: If you are enrolling early (common for elite level D1 athletes playing in the fall) or have a unique situation coming out of junior college, your process could be slightly different than the one detailed above. In both of these scenarios, the college that is recruiting you will likely be in touch and providing assistance. The most important thing is that you have a Certification Account, keep it up to date and all of your most recent academic records are on file with the NCAA.

How do I contact the NCAA Eligibility Center?

For students and parents with eligibility questions:

877-262-1492 (toll free)
317-917-6222

NCAA Eligibility Center FAQs

Transcript/Document Mailing Address

NCAA Eligibility Center
Certification Processing
P.O. Box 7110
Indianapolis, IN 46207

Overnight/Express Mailing Address

NCAA Eligibility Center
Certification Processing
1802 Alonzo Watford Sr. Drive
Indianapolis, IN 46202

Customer Service Hours

9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Eastern time
Monday through Friday

Fax number: 317-968-5100
Toll-free phone number (U.S. callers and Canada except Quebec): 877-262-1492

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Get Started for Free!

A profile only takes 60 seconds

Athlete Information

Parent Information

By submitting, you agree to receive personalized follow-up and marketing messages from NCSA by email, phone and automated text. Consent is not a condition of purchase. Standard rates apply.

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