The
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) is the largest association and governing body of collegiate athletics in the United States. The NCAA holds lacrosse championships for all three Divisions in men's and women's lacrosse. As of the 2023 season (2022–23 school year), the NCAA has 398 men's lacrosse programs and 528 women's lacrosse programs.
Division I men's lacrosse In the 2024 season, Division I men's lacrosse had the smallest number of teams compared to the Division II and Division III levels. The most recent 2024 NCAA lacrosse season involved 78 NCAA Division I men's lacrosse teams organized into 10 conferences. These teams are heavily concentrated in the
Northeast and
Mid-Atlantic regions, and only four teams are not in the
Eastern Time Zone (Air Force, Denver, Marquette, and Utah; a fifth school with that distinction, Lindenwood, dropped men's lacrosse after the 2024 season). From 1936 through 1970 the
United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association (USILA) selected the
Wingate Memorial Trophy winners as national champions based on regular season records.
Cornell took the first title over
Maryland, 12–6.
Syracuse has 11 Division I titles (*one vacated later),
Johns Hopkins 9,
Virginia (7) and
Princeton 6. The NCAA national championship weekend tournament normally draws over 80,000 fans. The most recent national champions from 2025 are the
Cornell Big Red. The most recent change to the conference lineup was announced in October 2023, when the
Northeast Conference (NEC), which had dropped the sport after the 2022 season, reinstated the sport effective with the 2025 season. The last previous change was announced during the 2022 NCAA tournament, when the
Atlantic 10 Conference (A-10) made official its widely-rumored sponsorship of men's lacrosse effective in the 2023 season. This move, along with other moves during the
2020s conference realignment, led to the NEC and
Southern Conference dropping men's lacrosse after the 2022 season, although as noted the NEC's elimination of men's lacrosse proved to be temporary. Two men's lacrosse schools started transitions from Division II to Division I in July 2022. Lindenwood and Queens (NC) are playing men's lacrosse in the
Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN), with Queens as a full member and Lindenwood as an affiliate. Le Moyne started a transition from D-II to D-I in the 2023–24 school year, joining the NEC and playing as an independent in 2024 before the reinstatement of NEC men's lacrosse in 2025. As noted earlier, Lindenwood dropped men's lacrosse after the 2024 season (along with eight other NCAA sports). In September 2018 the NCAA rules committee implemented an 80-second shot clock that begins upon possession. A team must advance the ball across midfield within the first 20 seconds, and then 60 seconds to shoot the ball once across midfield. The clock will only reset if the ball hits the goalie or the post. Failure to score before the shot clock runs out results in a change of possession. ;Conferences •
America East Conference •
Atlantic Coast Conference •
Atlantic Sun Conference •
Atlantic 10 Conference •
Big East Conference •
Big Ten Conference •
Coastal Athletic Association •
Ivy League •
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference •
Northeast Conference •
Patriot League Division II men's lacrosse Division II lacrosse is made up of 77 teams, mainly located in the
Northeast and
Southeast. The USILA conducted a "small college" lacrosse championship tournament in 1972 and 1973.
Adelphi University currently holds the record for the most D-II championships, with eight; it also has the most appearances in the championship match with 12. NCAA Division II lacrosse programs are organized into eight conferences, as well as independent programs consisting of mainly new D-II lacrosse teams. The newest addition to the roster of Division II men's lacrosse conferences came in 2017–18 when the
Great Lakes Valley Conference began sponsoring men's lacrosse. On December 2, 2014; the University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH) announced the addition of men's and women's lacrosse programs. These programs began competition with the 2016 season, initially as independents. The most recent Division II men's national champions are the Adelphi Panthers.
Conferences: •
Central Atlantic Collegiate Conference •
Conference Carolinas •
East Coast Conference •
Great Lakes Valley Conference •
Great Midwest Athletic Conference •
Northeast-10 Conference •
Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference •
South Atlantic Conference •
Sunshine State Conference Division III men's lacrosse and
Messiah in 2016 The majority of schools playing NCAA men's lacrosse play in Division III, with 245 in all. Most Division III lacrosse teams are located in the
Northeast, with only seven programs west of the
Mississippi River (with two others in cities on that river's east bank). Only two of these schools are west of the
Central Time Zone. The USILA conducted a "small college" championship in 1972 and 1973. The NCAA Division III championship originally was combined with Division II from 1974–1979, before the NCAA split the non-Division I schools into separate Division II and III tournaments in 1980.
Salisbury University shares the record for most D-III championships with 13, and has sole possession of the record for most championship game appearances with 18. The other holder of the record for most championships,
Hobart, won the championship the first 12 years it was held from 1980–1991, and appeared in the championship game 15 times. The 12 consecutive championships are an NCAA record but Hobart has not won again since 1993, and now plays at the Division I level. NCAA Division III lacrosse programs are organized into 22 conferences and over 20 independent programs. The number of conferences dropped by two after the 2023 season; the
New England Collegiate Conference, with only four full members in that season, disbanded as an all-sports conference, while the
Colonial States Athletic Conference and
United East Conference merged under the United East banner. The defending Division III national champions are the
Tufts Jumbos.
Conferences: •
Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference •
Centennial Conference •
Coast to Coast Athletic Conference •
College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin •
Conference of New England •
Empire 8 •
Great Northeast Athletic Conference •
Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference •
Landmark Conference •
Liberty League •
Little East Conference •
Middle Atlantic Conference •
Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association •
Midwest Lacrosse Conference •
New England Small College Athletic Conference •
New England Women's and Men's Athletic Conference •
North Atlantic Conference •
North Coast Athletic Conference •
Ohio Athletic Conference •
Old Dominion Athletic Conference •
Presidents' Athletic Conference •
Skyline Conference •
Southern Athletic Association •
Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference •
State University of New York Athletic Conference •
United East Conference •
USA South Athletic Conference == NCAA women's lacrosse ==