Southeastern Conference On July 21, 2021, the
Houston Chronicle reported that
Oklahoma and
Texas had approached the
Southeastern Conference (SEC) about the possibility of joining that league. On July 26, Oklahoma and Texas notified the Big 12 Conference that the two schools did not wish to extend their grant of television rights beyond the 2024–25 athletic year and intended to leave the conference. On July 29, the presidents and chancellors of the 14 SEC members voted unanimously to extend invitations to Oklahoma and Texas, effective in 2025. The two schools eventually reached a buyout agreement with the Big 12 that allowed them to join the SEC in 2024.
Big 12 Conference With the losses of Texas and Oklahoma, the
Big 12 Conference was reduced from 10 to 8 teams. On September 10, the Big 12 announced that
BYU, an
FBS independent and full member of the non-football
West Coast Conference (WCC), along with
American Athletic Conference (The American) members
Cincinnati,
Houston, and
UCF would join the conference no later than 2024–25. At the time of announcement, BYU stated that it would join the Big 12 in 2023. The other three schools entered into negotiations with The American regarding their departure date, and on June 10, 2022, an agreement on a 2023 departure date was announced. On November 2, 2022, ESPN reported that
Gonzaga University athletic director Chris Standiford had met with Big 12 commissioner
Brett Yormark while the
Gonzaga men's basketball team was in the
Dallas area, home to the Big 12 offices, for a scrimmage with
Tennessee. This meeting was reportedly part of discussions regarding a possible Gonzaga move to the Big 12 as a full member without football (Gonzaga has not had a football program since 1941).
Gonzaga men's basketball has become by far the dominant program in the otherwise
mid-major WCC. Going into the 2022–23 season, the Bulldogs had played in every NCAA men's tournament in the 21st century, made national championship games in 2017 and 2021, and had been a top regional seed in four of the previous five NCAA tournaments. Gonzaga, which has been transparent with the WCC about its talks with other conferences, had reportedly also been in membership discussions with the
Pac-12 Conference and the
Big East Conference (the latter a non-football league). Yormark would later confirm that the conference had met with both Gonzaga and
UConn regarding possible membership, but the possible addition of both schools was shelved after the addition of the "Four Corners" Pac-12 members. In late spring 2023, with the Pac-12 Conference still not having finalized a new media rights deal, multiple media reports linked
Colorado, which had left the Big 12 for the then-Pac-10 in 2011, with a potential return to the Big 12. Dennis Dodd of
CBSSports.com reported that Colorado had been in what was described as "substantive" talks with the Big 12. Greg Swaim, an Oklahoma radio host described by the sports and culture news site
OutKick as "very plugged into the Big 12 landscape," reported over the weekend of June 3–4 that he had been told by multiple sources that Colorado and
Arizona were both preparing to join the Big 12. It was also widely rumored that newly hired
football head coach
Deion Sanders and several influential
boosters were pushing for Colorado to return to the Big 12. Speculation about
Colorado's future increased in July. First, in advance of a meeting of Pac-12 chancellors and presidents set for July 20,
Colorado chancellor
Phil DiStefano publicly suggested that conference commissioner
George Kliavkoff provide details on a potential media deal. None were presented, and many within the conference suggested that DiStefano's request was intended to pressure Kliavkoff. After the end of the conference's football media day, which took place the day after the chancellors/presidents meeting, Colorado athletic director
Rick George had to dodge many reporters while exiting the event venue. In the meantime, Big 12 officials had reportedly set a deadline of July 25 for Colorado to make a decision on its conference future. The school's board of regents scheduled two meetings for July 26 and 27 at which a Big 12 move was expected to be on the agenda, and the regents posted an agenda for the latter meeting that indicated that a formal vote of some kind was likely. The Big 12 chancellors and presidents held their own meeting on July 26, with conference expansion reportedly on the agenda, and that body reportedly voted unanimously to approve Colorado should it formally apply for membership. An application was expected after the Colorado regents' meeting the following day. On July 27, Colorado announced it would be returning to the Big 12 after 13 years. In the days after Colorado's announcement, the Pac-12 chancellors and presidents met on August 1, at which time they were presented with the first details of a new media rights deal. This deal was reportedly an exclusively streaming deal with
Apple, with returns based mainly on subscription rates.
Phil Knight, co-founder and retired CEO of
Nike and also an
Oregon alumnus and major donor to both the university and
its athletic program, strongly supported the Apple deal. However, there was an apparent reversal, as the Pac-12 chancellors and presidents called a meeting for the morning of August 4 during which they would accept the Apple deal and sign a grant of rights (GOR), with a 10th school to be added later to replace Colorado. Later reports came out that two schools were to receive invitations if the Pac-12 had entered into the GOR—
San Diego State and
SMU. Then, 10 minutes before the meeting was to start, Washington informed the Pac-12 that it would move to the Big Ten.
Washington football coach
Kalen DeBoer and the university administration were concerned about the prospect that no Pac-12 games would be available on linear television. In October 2023,
The Messenger reported that the Big 12 and Gonzaga had "resumed top-level discussions" regarding a potential move to the conference, possibly as early as 2024–25. Although the Big 12 was dealing with financial and logistical issues surrounding the conference's 2023 and 2024 expansions, the conference presidents and chancellors authorized Yormark to continue discussions with Gonzaga. The following month, the Big 12 announced it would add two women's sports for 2024–25 and beyond—beach volleyball and lacrosse. At the time, the Big 12 had only one member that sponsored each sport—Cincinnati in women's lacrosse and TCU in beach volleyball. However, each of the incoming members for 2024 sponsored at least one of the two sports. Arizona and Utah sponsored beach volleyball, Colorado sponsored women's lacrosse, and Arizona State sponsored both. The conference press release stated that new members would be added in both sports to enable automatic qualification for NCAA tournaments. This came about for lacrosse on February 21, 2024, with the Big 12 adding
Florida,
San Diego State, and
UC Davis as affiliates for the conference's first season. At the time, Florida played women's lacrosse in The American, and the two California schools played that sport in the Pac-12. Also on February 21, the Big 12 also announced that
Old Dominion and
Tulsa, both then housing women's rowing in The American (Old Dominion as an affiliate and Tulsa as a full member), would join the Big 12 for women's rowing in 2024–25. The Big 12 announcement hinted at the departure of women's rowing associates and full SEC members
Alabama and
Tennessee, neither of which was included in the list of Big 12 rowing members for 2024–25. SEC bylaws allow it to hold a championship in any sport sponsored by at least 25% of the full membership. In July 2024, Alabama and Tennessee were joined in the SEC by Oklahoma and Texas, both of which sponsor the sport, and the SEC announced the addition of rowing with the four aforementioned programs on August 23. The Big 12 would reach the required membership level for an eventual automatic berth in the NCAA beach volleyball tournament in 2025–26, when
Boise State,
Florida State, and
South Carolina became affiliates in that sport. On August 23, 2024, reports about Yormark pursuing current
Big East member and football independent
UConn arose, with a meeting scheduled to happen no latter than the following week. However, the report indicated that not all of the conference's presidents and chancellors supported the move, predominately due to the poor performance of the school's football program since its departure from the previous FBS-sponsored
Big East; any expansion requires the approval of at least 12 of the current 16 members. Ultimately, no invitation came.
Big Ten Conference On June 30, 2022, media reports indicated that
UCLA and
USC had started the process of leaving the
Pac-12 Conference for the
Big Ten Conference, with the Big Ten presidents and chancellors having scheduled a meeting that evening to vote on the addition of the two
Los Angeles schools. Shortly after this meeting, the Big Ten and both schools issued statements setting a 2024 entry date, immediately after the then-existing Pac-12 media rights contracts expired. On August 4, 2023,
Oregon and
Washington announced they would leave the Pac-12 to join the Big Ten effective July 1, 2024. In an August 10 interview for an
Ohio State fan forum, the school's athletic director
Gene Smith stated that Fox, the Big Ten's primary media partner, provided extra money to facilitate the addition of Oregon and Washington. According to Smith, Fox agreed to pay $30 to $35 million per year for each of those two schools from their 2024 arrival in the conference through the end of the media deal in the 2029–30 school year. This meant that the 14 existing Big Ten members, plus UCLA and USC (which received full shares from the new media deal upon their arrival in the conference), would see no decrease in payouts during that deal.
Pac-12 Conference Collapse Shortly after Oklahoma and Texas announced their departure for the SEC, Pac-12 commissioner
George Kliavkoff was told by Big 12 commissioner
Bob Bowlsby that the eight remaining Big 12 members were interested in joining the Pac-12. The Pac-12 subsequently formed an expansion committee made up of one official from each of the conference's travel pairings. The first and ultimately only committee meeting ended after only a few minutes when USC president
Carol Folt, who represented the conference's two Los Angeles schools (
UCLA and
USC), objected to adding more teams and expressed surprise the Pac-12 was talking about the subject. Kliavkoff, presumably aware of USC's importance to the conference, did not push back against Folt. UCLA's move to the Big Ten required approval of the
Regents of the University of California, the governing body of the
University of California system. In a move widely viewed as public posturing, the regents threatened to block UCLA's move. Kliavkoff was privately engaged with a group of regents in an effort to work out a deal to keep UCLA in the conference. The regents told Kliavkoff if he could guarantee UCLA a media payout of $52 million a year over the five years of a new Pac-12 media deal—roughly equal to the planned Big Ten payout, less anticipated travel expenses—plus a $15 million payment to the Big Ten to break the school's agreement to join, the regents' vote would be heavily in favor of UCLA staying in the Pac-12. When Kliavkoff presented this offer to the Pac-12 board, interim
Oregon president Patrick Phillips ended the discussion by saying that Oregon did not want to be in a conference in which it made less money than UCLA. In October 2022, the Pac-12's exclusive negotiating window for a new media rights deal with its primary broadcast partner,
Fox, expired without a new deal. ESPN was still interested in partnering with the Pac-12, even without UCLA and USC. Kliavkoff presented the conference chancellors and presidents with an offer of $30 million annually for each member. Internal Pac-12 analysis had indicated that the media rights were worth somewhere in the vicinity of $35 million each, giving the sides room for negotiation. However, an August 2023 report by the
Los Angeles Times revealed that one of the Pac-12 presidents—not identified in the
Times report, but speculated by other outlets to be
Arizona State president
Michael Crow, and later reported by
John Canzano to be
Utah president
Taylor Randall—had worked with a professor on his campus to come up with an estimate of $50 million per school. Kliavkoff presented ESPN with the larger number, which caused ESPN to end negotiations. The Big Ten presidents and chancellors met the following day, reportedly to finalize the addition of Oregon and Washington. The two schools reportedly agreed to accept a reduced payout during their first few years as Big Ten members, possibly as low as 50%—but still more in dollar terms than the reported Pac-12 deal with Apple. On August 4, 2023, Oregon and Washington announced they would join the Big Ten effective with the August 2024 expiration of the Pac-12 media contract. CBS Sports journalist Shehan Jeyarajah added that Stanford had won the
NACDA Directors' Cup, an annual award presented since 1993–94 to the top overall college sports program, 26 times through 2022–23, and that "a number of non-revenue sport opportunities have been created because of the money paid out by being part of a major football league." He also asked a rhetorical question that even for the West Coast schools that joined the Big Ten, "will the insane costs of flying cross-country for routine conference games be a major deterrent to fielding robust athletic departments?" On September 1, 2023, the presidents and chancellors of the
Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) voted to approve California and Stanford as members effective August 2, 2024. This left
Oregon State and
Washington State as the last two Pac-12 members. On the same day that the ACC made its announcement,
American Athletic Conference (now American Conference) commissioner
Mike Aresco, whose conference had evaluated those two schools as potential members, announced that The American would not add any schools in the
Pacific Time Zone. The Pac-12 then scheduled a board meeting for September 13; an email from the conference's general counsel indicated that some kind of vote could be taken. This led Oregon State and Washington State, along with their presidents, to file a civil action in
Whitman County, Washington (where Washington State
is located) on September 8 against the Pac-12 and Kliavkoff, requesting a temporary restraining order against the conference. The filing called for a hearing on the restraining order on September 11. The two schools contend that as the only members that have not announced their departure, their presidents are the only legitimate members of the conference's board of directors. According to a report by ESPN's Pete Thamel, "The essence of Washington State and Oregon State's concerns, if the league's 12 schools formally meet, is that the current members could vote to dissolve or evenly distribute the remaining assets." In the court filing, OSU and WSU pointed out that Pac-12 bylaws state that any member that announces its intent to leave "automatically cease(s) to be a member of the Pac-12 Board of Directors and shall cease to have the right to vote on any matter." The filing added that UCLA and USC were immediately stripped of their board seats and voting rights once they announced their move to the Big Ten. OSU and WSU reportedly wished to use the conference's remaining assets, including the "Pac-12" brand, as a lure for a friendly merger with the
Mountain West Conference. At the September 11 hearing, Whitman County Superior Court Judge Gary Libey granted the restraining order, preventing the full Pac-12 from meeting until the ownership of the league's assets could be determined. A hearing for a preliminary injunction was scheduled for November 14. On October 9,
Washington, acting on behalf of the 10 departing members, filed a motion to intervene in the lawsuit, challenging the grounds for the removal of those members' voting rights and seeking a dismissal of the suit. Before Washington's filing, the sides had entered mediation in an attempt to resolve governance and financial issues outside of the courtroom. The preliminary injunction against the Pac-12 and its departing members was granted at the November 14 hearing, tentatively giving Oregon State and Washington State full control of the Pac-12 assets. Judge Libey issued a stay of his ruling to November 20, with no objection from OSU or WSU, to allow for the departing schools to file appeals. The University of Washington filed an emergency motion with the
Washington Supreme Court two days after the Whitman County hearing, requesting a stay of that court's ruling and the extension of a temporary restraining order, in place since September, that prevented any board action without unanimous consent of all 12 members. The stay was granted, and both sides in the dispute were asked to file briefs regarding the emergency stay no later than November 28, with replies due by December 8. This action was separate from any appeals that UW or any other departing schools could have filed. On December 15, the Washington Supreme Court declined to review the Whitman County decision, which lifted the stay on that decision and gave effective control of the Pac-12 assets to Oregon State and Washington State. Six days later, all 12 schools announced a settlement of the dispute. The departing schools agreed to forfeit an undisclosed portion of 2023–24 revenue distributions and provide "specific guarantees against potential future liabilities," while Oregon State and Washington State retained control of Pac-12 assets and future revenue. Full details of the settlement were expected to be finalized in the coming days. With the failed attempt to keep the conference together as a backdrop, the Pac-12 parted ways with the embattled Kliavkoff, effective February 29, 2024. The University of California Board of Regents panel approved a plan in May 2024 for UCLA to pay $10 million annually to UC Berkeley as compensation for loss in media rights revenue. These payments would subsequently be colloquially referred to as "Calimony".
Rebuilding On September 11, 2024, Yahoo Sports writer Ross Dellenger reported that the Pac-12 was set to enter a rebuilding process by inviting various potential new members, among those being current Mountain West schools
Boise State,
San Diego State,
Fresno State and
Colorado State. The following day, the conference formally announced that the four schools would be joining on July 1, 2026. On September 23, 2024,
Utah State accepted an offer to join the league as its seventh member. This gave the Pac-12 the seven members needed to preserve its official "multisport" status, though one more football member would be needed to preserve FBS status. On that same day,
Memphis,
USF,
UTSA and
Tulane, who were floated as potential Pac-12 expansion targets, declined offers to join the conference and remained committed to the American.
UNLV also declined an offer to join and remained in the Mountain West. On September 24, 2024, the Pac-12 filed a lawsuit against the Mountain West over its 'poaching penalty', which would force the Pac-12 to pay $10 million for each member of the Mountain West that left to join it. The conference called it "anticompetitive" and "unlawful." After discussions with multiple conferences, on October 1, 2024,
Gonzaga announced its departure from the
West Coast Conference for the Pac-12 beginning in 2026. Because Gonzaga does not sponsor a football team, the Pac-12 had to add at least one more full member with a football team to preserve its FBS status. In June 2025, an obscure
Twitter/X account promoting
Texas State (TXST) running back Lincoln Pare as a 2025 Heisman Trophy candidate included a picture from the
Instagram story of
university president Kelly Damphousse that featured two
beavers floating in the
San Marcos River that flows through the university's
home city. The post also included an emoji that hinted at Texas State potentially joining Oregon State (nicknamed Beavers) in the Pac-12. Damphousse then reposted this message on June 10, shortly after a regularly scheduled Pac-12 meeting at which Texas State's Pac-12 candidacy was discussed. This sequence immediately led to speculation that TXST was likely to become the needed eighth full member with football. Shortly after this post, ESPN reported that Texas State was indeed the leading candidate for Pac-12 expansion, stating that "the league's presidents are enamored with a foothold in the state and Damphousse's leadership." Texas State had been seen as a prime Pac-12 candidate for several months. An earlier Twitter/X post by Damphousse in April 2025, which followed speculation that TXST would be willing to accept a reduced media payout to join the Pac-12, hinted at the parameters of a potential offer. In the post, Damphousse commented on his love of
lobster bisque: "People sometimes think that I'd be happy with half a bowl of soup. After all, a cup of soup is better than no soup at all. But for me, it's a full bowl or nothing." Placing this comment in further context, Gonzaga will receive a full share of conference media rights (though not of other football-related revenue) despite not having a football program. Talks between Texas State and the Pac-12 escalated after the conference announced it had extended its then-current media deal with CBS Sports, making the company the anchor partner in a multi-platform package, through 2030–31. On June 25, Texas State informed the SBC that it was expecting a Pac-12 offer, and the Pac-12 had also notified the SBC of its interest in TXST at around that time. On June 27, TXST called a meeting of
its system's board of regents for June 30, during which the Pac-12 offer was accepted and the payment of a $5 million buyout to the school's current home of the
Sun Belt Conference (SBC) was approved. The Pac-12 soon added another baseball member, announcing on August 20 that
Dallas Baptist, an
NCAA Division II member that plays Division I baseball, would leave
Conference USA (CUSA) to become a single-sport member in July 2026. This was soon followed by the addition of
Southern Utah as a women's gymnastics affiliate, also effective in July 2026. TXST's move to the Pac-12 has implications not only for the SBC, but also possibly CUSA and the FCS ranks. In fall 2024, with TXST having discussions with other conferences (notably the MW), the SBC considered several CUSA members as potential replacements, with
Louisiana Tech reportedly emerging as the main candidate. With the SBC being the only FBS conference with football divisions, TXST's departure would create a vacancy in its West Division, already home to two Louisiana schools (
Louisiana and
ULM). Also, according to ESPN, "The Sun Belt's realignment strategy for years has been to double-down on regional rivalries, and Louisiana Tech would fall into that category." In turn, CUSA has started evaluating candidates to replace any departing members, with current FCS program
Tarleton State viewed as the favorite. Two days later, the Pac-12 added four men's wrestling affiliates, all of which had previously been single-sport members of the Big 12—Air Force, North Dakota State, Northern Colorado, and South Dakota State. This move gave the Pac-12 enough members in that sport to ensure an automatic NCAA championship bid, with the nine-member men's wrestling membership being its largest since 2008–09.
Atlantic Coast Conference Prior to the addition of three new members, multiple media reports emerged in May 2023 that seven of the
Atlantic Coast Conference's (ACC) 14 football members—
Clemson,
Florida State,
Miami (FL),
NC State,
North Carolina,
Virginia, and
Virginia Tech—had met with legal teams in recent months to examine the grant of rights (GOR) agreement within the conference's media rights deal. In May 2012, the ACC had signed a 15-year media deal with ESPN, which was extended in 2016 to run through the 2035–36 school year. Under the GOR, if a school leaves the ACC before 2036, all remaining media revenue under the existing broadcast contract would revert to the conference. In March 2023, Florida State athletic director
Michael Alford expressed frustration with the conference's revenue distribution model in a call to ACC commissioner
Jim Phillips, noting that by 2024, each ACC school's share of media revenue would be at least $30 million below those of Big Ten and SEC members. Following the ACC spring meetings later in May 2023, Another aspect of the media deal that would prove important in later expansion discussions is that the contract contains an escalator clause that requires ESPN to increase its payout to the ACC if it expands beyond 14 football members. By 2023, the escalator clause reportedly called for ESPN to pay the ACC an additional $24 million per year per added member. On August 7, following the mass exodus of schools from the Pac-12, media reported that the ACC had started exploring the addition of
California and
Stanford, two of the four schools left behind in the exodus. However, following a conference call of ACC presidents and chancellors on August 9, it was reported that the potential expansion "hit significant roadblocks." The report also confirmed that
Notre Dame, a full but non-football ACC member and thus having voting rights on conference expansion, was strongly pushing for the expansion; significantly,
Stanford is one of the three schools that
Notre Dame football plays every year. By August 11, the potential expansion was described by sources as being "on life support", with
Clemson, Florida State,
NC State, and
North Carolina opposed. ACC bylaws require the approval of 75% of the full members (at the time, 12 out of 15) for any proposed expansion. Despite this, the ACC had not completely ended expansion discussions. On August 23, reports came out that the ACC was seriously considering the addition of not only Cal and Stanford, but also
SMU. At the time, SMU had been in deep discussions with both the Pac-12 and ACC for more than a year, and had also been involved with the Big 12 before that conference lost interest. An ESPN report on August 28 indicated that there was "continued momentum" toward adding all three schools, with one of the four ACC members that had objected to expansion expected to change its vote in the coming days. A conference call involving ACC presidents and chancellors had been scheduled for that day, but was canceled due to a shooting on the North Carolina campus. The conference call was rescheduled for September 1, and the presidents and chancellors voted to approve the addition of all three schools. The two California schools reportedly joined at about 30% of a full share of media rights, while SMU is not taking any conference media revenue for nine years instead of the previously reported seven. In its ACC membership pitch, SMU also offered to serve as a hub for at least some Olympic sports contests involving Cal and Stanford, reducing travel burdens for all other members. Florida State's legal counsel continued to work with an outside law firm to review the ACC GOR. Despite the success initiatives adopted by the conference in August 2023, FSU had continually pushed for unequal revenue distributions based on each school's media value, a concept rejected by the ACC office. The last straw for FSU was seen as the decision of the CFP selection committee to exclude the
unbeaten Seminoles from the 2023 CFP, making them the first and only unbeaten
power conference team to be left out of the CFP during its 4-team era. This culminated in a meeting of the university's board of trustees on December 22 in which the board voted unanimously to sue the ACC to challenge the GOR and its withdrawal fee. The meeting was immediately followed by the filing of a lawsuit in FSU's home of
Tallahassee, in
Leon County Circuit Court. The suit claims that the GOR and withdrawal fee, estimated at the time to be about $120 million, violate Florida laws on restraint of trade, and also alleges financial mismanagement, breach of contract, and failure to perform. FSU became the first university ever to challenge a conference GOR in court. The ACC responded with a countersuit against FSU's governing board in
Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, whose county seat of
Charlotte hosts the conference headquarters. The initial complaint asked the court to uphold the GOR, and asserted that any contractual issues should be heard in the headquarters state. The complaint was later amended to allege that FSU violated the GOR by filing the court challenge, and also asserted that FSU had leaked confidential information, specifically details on the ACC media deal with ESPN, in its Florida filing. On February 16, 2024, the ACC filed a motion to dismiss FSU's suit in Florida. The filing included language that suggested FSU could buy its media rights back from the conference, opening the door to negotiation on the terms of a potential FSU departure from the ACC. In the following month,
Clemson became the second school to challenge the GOR, filing suit in its home jurisdiction of
Pickens County, South Carolina. The complaint alleged that the ACC's exit fees were "unconscionable" and "unenforceable", and claimed that the ACC's view that the GOR gave it ownership of Clemson's media rights was a "nonsensical reading" and "inconsistent with the plain language of that agreement". FSU's suit against the ACC claimed its total costs of departure (exit fee and media revenue) at the time of filing were $572 million. The ACC, Clemson, and FSU announced on March 4, 2025 that they had settled their respective lawsuits. The settlement introduces a new conference revenue sharing model that the ACC calls "brand initiative". TV revenue will be divided 60–40, with the majority going to fund the brand initiative and the rest split evenly among the pre-2024 members. Revenue shares from the brand initiative in each season will be based on total viewership over the preceding five seasons, weighted more heavily toward the most recent years. Also, the conference exit fee was significantly reduced. While the GOR remains in place, the exit fee in 2026 will be set at $165 million, dropping by $18 million each year until reaching $75 million in 2030–31. Any school paying the appropriate exit fee will keep its media rights. Significantly, media rights deals for the Big Ten, Big 12, and the College Football Playoff will come up for renewal at the same time the exit fee drops to $75 million.
American Athletic/American Conference The losses of Cincinnati, Houston, and UCF left the American with 8 remaining schools. After invitations to
Mountain West Conference members
Boise State,
Air Force,
Colorado State, and
San Diego State to join the American were all declined, The American then pivoted to
Conference USA (CUSA) to add 6 of its members on October 21, 2021:
Charlotte,
Florida Atlantic,
UAB,
North Texas,
Rice, and
UTSA. In June 2022, the six schools' entry date of July 2023 was officially confirmed. The additions put The American at 14 members for both football and basketball, with
Navy being a football-only member and
Wichita State being a non-football full member. In May 2022, the AAC announced that the four schools that had remained in CUSA men's soccer after the
Sun Belt Conference took five schools from the CUSA men's soccer league effective with the upcoming 2022 season—
Charlotte,
FIU,
Florida Atlantic, and
UAB—would become men's soccer members in the 2022 season, thus spelling the end of CUSA men's soccer. Of these schools, all but FIU became full members of the AAC in 2023. FIU and Florida Atlantic would also join in women's swimming & diving in July 2022, as did eventual American Conference members North Texas and Rice. To reiterate, the AAC lost
SMU to the ACC effective July 1, 2024, after the ACC voted to admit SMU into the conference on September 1, 2023. Ultimately, the American announced on October 25 that Army would indeed become a football-only member starting in 2024. However, Army's move had unique financial issues of its own. Before being announced as a new football member of the American, Army had a TV contract with
CBS Sports Network (CBSSN) for its home games through the 2028 season, conflicting with the American's broadcast contract with ESPN. The CBSSN contract would remain in place unless the conference or ESPN reached a buyout agreement. Also, Army had over 80 football games scheduled in the coming years, with reported exit fees of over $35 million. The Army program hired a consultant in an attempt to cancel or reschedule as many of the games as possible. Revenue distribution was also a potential issue, as the members that joined in 2023 would not receive a full share of media revenue for several years, though the American had received significant exit fees from the schools that left for the Big 12, and would receive more with SMU's departure. The conference and Army agreed that the Army–Navy Game would continue to be played after the
conference championship game as a non-conference matchup, and the two academies would not play each other prior to the traditional date except in the conference title game. In a change not related to realignment, the conference dropped the word "Athletic" from its name on July 21, 2025, becoming simply the American Conference. The initialism "AAC", which was used more by media than by the conference, was also retired, with "American" becoming the official short form.
Sun Belt Conference The departures of the 6 schools reduced Conference USA's membership from 14 to 8, and sensing the instability of the conference, the remaining members looked to join other conferences. In late October 2021, CUSA members
Southern Miss,
Old Dominion and
Marshall applied and were accepted to the Sun Belt Conference (SBC) to begin play in the 2022–23 season. On November 6, the Sun Belt added
James Madison, a
Colonial Athletic Association member playing FCS football. Due to the Colonial's existing policy of prohibiting departing members from participating in conference tournaments, JMU was slated to play the 2022–23 football season as an
FBS independent with other sports playing as de facto Sun Belt affiliates; full membership would have begun with the 2023–24 season. However, on February 2, 2022, JMU and the Sun Belt announced that JMU would join for all sports sponsored by the conference, including football, on July 1. On February 11, Southern Miss, Old Dominion, and Marshall announced that they too would join the Sun Belt Conference in 2022. However, CUSA had previously indicated on January 20 that it expected all three schools to remain in the league through 2022–23. ESPN journalist
Adam Rittenberg cited an unnamed source regarding this development, "It's not going to be an amicable split. It's gotten ugly, and I assume it's going to get uglier." The source's prediction gained support when Marshall filed suit against CUSA in its
local court in an attempt to force a 2022 move. On March 1, the Sun Belt released its 2022 football schedule with Marshall, Old Dominion, and Southern Miss included, making no mention of the ongoing legal dispute or the possibility that the three schools would not become members for the 2022–23 school year. By the end of that month, the three schools and CUSA reached a settlement that allowed the schools to join the Sun Belt in July 2022. The increase in the SBC football membership led to reports that the conference's two non-football members,
Little Rock and
UT Arlington, would leave the conference; this eventually happened, with Little Rock joining the
Ohio Valley Conference and UT Arlington rejoining the
Western Athletic Conference (WAC), a league in which it had been a member in the
2012–13 school year. A few years later, Little Rock announced it will also join the WAC (now rebranded as UAC), starting in 2026–27 season. After the entry of those schools was pushed forward to July 2022, the SBC announced on April 6, 2022, that men's soccer would be reinstated for 2022–23. The three incoming members, plus existing full members
Coastal Carolina,
Georgia Southern, and
Georgia State, were joined by the
Southeastern Conference and
Big 12 Conference members that sponsor the sport—
Kentucky,
South Carolina, and
West Virginia. Later on, the Sun Belt also announced that future Big 12 member
UCF would join as a men's soccer affiliate upon joining the Big 12 in 2023, effectively creating a "6-4" format of six Sun Belt schools and four schools from the non-sponsoring SEC or Big 12 conferences. The reinstatement of SBC men's soccer left the future of men's soccer in CUSA and the
Mid-American Conference in serious doubt, as the two Georgia schools and West Virginia had been MAC men's soccer members (West Virginia had, however, planned to move that sport to CUSA before the Sun Belt reinstated men's soccer), while Coastal Carolina, South Carolina, and Kentucky had been CUSA men's soccer members. This then left both leagues with only four members in the 2022 season. Additionally, CUSA was set to lose three of its four remaining programs for the following season, with
Charlotte,
Florida Atlantic, and
UAB making their move to The American in 2023. This would leave CUSA with only two institutions that sponsor the sport in 2023:
FIU and
Liberty, the latter of whom would be joining CUSA that season. Due to this, The American decided to admit the existing four CUSA soccer programs to their own league, with all four competing as affiliates in 2022 and FIU continuing as an affiliate after the other schools became full members. For a time, Liberty was left without a conference for its own program, but it would join the newly formed
Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) men's soccer league in time for the 2023 season. Chicago State ended up becoming an all-sports
independent. At the end of the 2022 season, the MAC discontinued men's soccer as a sponsored sport, having failed to find the sixth member needed to maintain its automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. Of the four full MAC members that sponsored men's soccer in the 2022 season,
Bowling Green,
Northern Illinois, and
Western Michigan moved the sport to the
Missouri Valley Conference, and
Akron moved it to the
Big East Conference. Chicago State eventually joined the newly established OVC men's soccer league. When Louisiana Tech accepted the SBC invitation, it notified CUSA of its planned 2026 departure date. Three days later, CUSA pushed back, citing provisions of conference bylaws, but left the door open for a buyout. Despite several months of negotiations, no agreement was reached, which led the
University of Louisiana System, whose membership includes established SBC members Louisiana and ULM as well as Louisiana Tech, to file suit against CUSA on Tech's behalf in the school's home of
Lincoln Parish, Louisiana on March 5, 2026. In the following week, CUSA and the SBC released their 2026 football schedules, with Tech included in both, which at the time gave the
Bulldogs 20 scheduled games (compared to the FBS limit of 12). This led the website
FootballScoop to declare the dispute over the terms of Tech's CUSA departure to be "public, ugly, and also a little bit hilarious."
Conference USA Having lost 6 of its 14 members to The American and 3 to the SBC, Conference USA was left with 5 members, short of the NCAA minimum of 6 and the FBS minimum of 8. On November 5, 2021, CUSA invited four schools: FBS independents
Liberty and
New Mexico State, who then respectively played non-football sports in the
ASUN Conference and Western Athletic Conference; full ASUN member
Jacksonville State; and full WAC member
Sam Houston. All four schools began CUSA play with the 2023–24 season. Per NCAA rules, Jacksonville State and Sam Houston were to serve a two-year probationary period. Liberty and New Mexico State, as established FBS members, did not have to serve probationary periods. Around the same time, reports surfaced that CUSA members
Western Kentucky and
Middle Tennessee were poised to join the
Mid-American Conference (MAC). However, Middle Tennessee elected to remain in CUSA, and the MAC did not invite Western Kentucky after Middle Tennessee did not join. In April 2022, it was announced that
Dallas Baptist would be moving its baseball program from the
Missouri Valley Conference to CUSA effective that July (with play starting in the 2023 season). While all other
Dallas Baptist University teams compete in Division II, primarily in the
Lone Star Conference, the baseball team competes in Division I. DBU is also the last D-II member playing D-I baseball. On October 14, 2022, CUSA announced that another ASUN member,
Kennesaw State, would start a transition to FBS after the 2022 football season and join CUSA in 2024. CUSA announced on May 10, 2023 that it would add the women-only sport of
bowling effective in 2023–24. The new bowling league was established by CUSA absorbing the
Southland Bowling League (SBL), which the
Southland Conference had created in 2015 as a separate single-sport league. Accordingly, CUSA inherited the SBL's automatic berth in the
NCAA Bowling Championship. The eight SBL members, which included established CUSA member
Louisiana Tech and new CUSA member Sam Houston, were joined by another new CUSA full member in Jacksonville State, which started a women's bowling program in 2023–24. ESPN's Pete Thamel reported on November 27, 2023 that
Delaware, a member of both sides of the CAA, was planning to transition from FCS to FBS in 2024 and join CUSA in 2025; CUSA officially announced this move the next day. Delaware was ineligible for the FCS playoffs in 2024; however, because of recent changes to bylaws of the all-sports CAA, it remained eligible for CAA championships and automatic NCAA tournament bids in non-football sports until actually leaving the conference. On May 10, 2024, CUSA poached another team from the FCS ranks, announcing that
Missouri State, a member of the
Missouri Valley Conference and the separate though closely related
Missouri Valley Football Conference, would also join in 2025. In October 2024, UTEP announced it would leave CUSA for the
Mountain West Conference starting in 2026. UTEP was the oldest member of the conference, having joined the conference in 2005. On July 15, 2025, after weeks of speculation following Texas State's announcing their departure to the rebuilt Pac-12 in 2026,
Louisiana Tech released a statement stating that they would leave for the Sun Belt by July 1, 2026. This would have the effect of dropping the total number of members of CUSA from 12 to 10 by 2026. Dallas Baptist baseball would follow Texas State to the reconfigured Pac-12.
Mountain West Conference Multiple media reports indicated that
San Diego State University, which had been heavily linked with the Pac-12 after the departure of UCLA and USC was announced, had sent a letter on June 13, 2023 to the MW stating it intended to leave the conference in 2024. The school had also reportedly asked the MW for a one-month extension of the June 30 withdrawal deadline, citing "unforeseen delays involving other collegiate athletic conferences beyond our control", likely a reference to the upcoming Pac-12 media deal that had yet to be finalized. This led to an exchange between the MW and SDSU, with university president
Adela de la Torre indicating that the June 13 letter was not a formal resignation. The MW's exit fee with a year's notice is $16.5 million, which increases to $34 million with less than a year's notice—which explained SDSU's reported request for a one-month extension to the deadline. In addition to the Pac-12, SDSU has been seen as a potential Big 12 target. The MW responded with a letter to SDSU stating that it would not approve any extension, and also considered the June 13 letter to be an effective notice of withdrawal. The MW and SDSU reached a settlement the next month, with SDSU remaining a member. Although not joining the conference, remaining Pac-12 members Oregon State and Washington State came to a scheduling agreement with MW schools in December 2023 where all MW football teams play one and/or the other, in a bid to rebuild the conference, starting in 2024. The agreement, however, was not renewed for 2025, leaving both the Beavers and Cougars as de facto independents following the season. Washington State later announced it would become an MW affiliate in baseball and women's swimming & diving effective in 2024–25, while Oregon State would join the West Coast Conference as a full affiliate member. During San Diego State's flirtation with the Pac-12, the MW announced it would begin sponsoring women's gymnastics in the 2023–24 season, with full conference members Air Force, Boise State, San Jose State, and Utah State participating. All had previously participated in the single-sport
Mountain Rim Gymnastics Conference, which had also included BYU and
Southern Utah. With BYU moving women's gymnastics to the Big 12 together with the bulk of its teams, and Southern Utah not being invited to MW women's gymnastics, Southern Utah was temporarily left without a gymnastics conference, but it would join the
Mountain Pacific Sports Federation in September 2023. On September 12, 2024, Boise State, Colorado State, Fresno State and San Diego State all announced their intentions on leaving the Mountain West and joining the Pac-12, starting in 2026. later showing interest in the Pac-12 instead. Following speculation in the days prior,
UTEP announced it would depart Conference USA in 2026 for the Mountain West on October 1, 2024. The MW officially announced this move the next day. On November 1, 2024, the Mountain West Conference announced that Grand Canyon University, a non-football member of the Western Athletic Conference, would join the league no later than July 2026. On July 8, 2025, it was confirmed that Grand Canyon would officially join the MW one year ahead of schedule. On December 10, 2024, the MW announced that
UC Davis would join from the
Big West Conference in non-football sports.
UC Davis football will remain in FCS as an affiliate of the
Big Sky Conference. During this time, Mid-American Conference member
Northern Illinois University was increasingly speculated as a football-only target for the MW. This speculation proved correct, as NIU accepted such an invitation from the MW, with the acceptance reported on January 3, 2025. Following final approval by the school's governing board on January 7,
NIU football will join the MW in 2026. It was reported that the MAC would not likely keep NIU as a non-football member, and the MW's invitation was for football only, given the school's geographic separation from the rest of the conference. With that in mind, NIU was reportedly seeking an all-sports affiliation, with speculated future homes being the non-football
Horizon League (in which NIU had been a member from 1994 to 1997),
Missouri Valley Conference, and
Summit League, as well as the FCS
Ohio Valley Conference. Most industry sources believed that NIU would eventually join the Horizon, and multiple media outlets reported on February 24 that this was indeed the case, with the school's governing board set to vote on a Horizon League return on February 27. NIU applied to maintain MAC membership in two sports not sponsored by the Horizon—women's gymnastics and men's wrestling. The Horizon League move became official on the same day as the board's vote. NIU later announced that its two remaining sports not sponsored by the Horizon would join other conferences in 2026–27. Men's wrestling will join the Pac-12, and women's gymnastics will also join the MW. The MW later announced that it would start sponsoring men's soccer and men's swimming & diving starting in 2026–27. Four of the six inaugural MW men's soccer teams are full conference members that had previously housed men's soccer in the WAC, namely Air Force, Grand Canyon, San Jose State, and UNLV. The other two are incoming full MW member UC Davis and departing WAC member Utah Tech, which will become an affiliate in both men's soccer and baseball. Men's swimming & diving, being reinstated after having been dropped in 2011, will initially feature new full MW member Hawaii and established MW members Air Force, Grand Canyon, UNLV, and Wyoming. In February 2026, multiple media outlets reported that the MW was in serious discussions with 10-time FCS champion
North Dakota State which could see the Bison join the conference as a football-only member as early as the 2026 season. On February 8, it was reported that a membership deal with a 2026 entry date had been reached, and the official announcement came the following day.
Mid-American Conference The
Mid-American Conference (MAC) entered the realignment cycle with the longest period of membership stability of any FBS conference, not having gained or lost a core member since Marshall left in 2005 to join CUSA. This changed on February 26, 2024, when
The Athletic reported that the
University of Massachusetts Amherst, more often known as UMass, was reported as having been approved for full MAC membership, starting in July 2025. The university was expected to finalize this move in the coming days, and MAC commissioner
Jon Steinbrecher stated that the MAC would formally announce UMass' arrival on February 29, with a news conference on the UMass campus in the next week. The MAC announcement was made, with UMass making its own announcement that day in advance of its news conference. UMass had been a
football-only MAC member in the 2012–2015 seasons while otherwise being a member of the
Atlantic 10 Conference (A-10). Eventual full membership in the MAC had been part of the affiliation contract, but UMass turned down full membership, choosing to become an
FBS independent. In the months leading to the UMass invitation, the school had engaged with CUSA as well as the MAC, but opted for the MAC, which offered a more favorable geographic footprint and sponsored more of the school's sports. UMass requested to remain in the A-10 for
men's lacrosse and women's rowing, neither of which was then sponsored by the MAC, though the A-10 was not expected to vote on this request before May 2024. The A-10 would later vote to keep UMass as a men's lacrosse affiliate; women's rowing was left without a conference home before the MAC added the sport for 2025–26.
Men's ice hockey, a sport also not sponsored by the MAC, remains in
Hockey East. With the MAC set to expand to 13 members for 2025–26, speculation about future additions immediately focused on Middle Tennessee and Western Kentucky, CUSA members which had been courted by the MAC earlier in the decade. This was followed in July 2024 by the announcement that the MAC would add women's rowing as a sponsored sport in 2025–26, coinciding with the arrival of UMass. The MAC rowing league initially consists of full members
Eastern Michigan,
Toledo, and UMass, plus affiliates
Delaware,
High Point, and
Temple. The MAC will lose another member in 2026 with Northern Illinois' departure for MW football and the Horizon League for most other sports. The MAC officially announced Sacramento State's arrival on February 16. ==FCS conferences affected==