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NAIA Track & field
Track & field recruiting at NAIA
NAIA Track & field recruiting is the process of identifying, contacting, and earning roster consideration at NAIA programs where your athletic and academic profile fits. Track and field recruiting is event-specific—coaches recruit by marks, times, and multi-event potential with clear performance standards by division.
Who it is for: Athletes evaluating NAIA track & field programs.
Why it matters: Moderate — regional and national outreach depending on program level. Understanding NAIA rules prevents misaligned outreach.
Division recruiting expectations
The NAIA (National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics) includes smaller colleges and universities with competitive athletics and flexible recruiting pathways.
Moderate — regional and national outreach depending on program level.
Scholarships and financial aid
NAIA programs may offer athletic scholarships under NAIA rules, which differ from NCAA Division I and II models.
NAIA eligibility requirements apply; programs evaluate academic readiness alongside athletic fit.
Athlete profile expectations
Coaches at the NAIA level expect verifiable track & field film, accurate academics, and professional communication. Build your profile in My College Offer before mass outreach.
Track & field recruiting timeline
Freshman–Sophomore year — Foundation
- Build academic habits and NCAA/NAIA eligibility awareness
- Develop sport-specific skills and baseline film
- Research division levels that match long-term athletic goals
Junior year — Visibility and outreach
- Maintain a complete recruiting profile with stats, academics, and film
- Begin emailing college coaches at target programs (follow NCAA/NAIA rules)
- Attend camps, showcases, or ID events where coaches evaluate your level
Senior year — Decisions and follow-through
- Track coach conversations and visits in a recruiting CRM
- Complete applications and financial aid steps on deadline
- Communicate clearly with programs about interest and roster status
| Division | Athletic scholarships | Aid model |
|---|---|---|
| NCAA Division I | Athletic scholarships allowed (NCAA rules) | Division I programs may offer athletic scholarships. Head-count sports (e.g., football, basketball) and equivalency sports follow different NCAA scholarship models. |
| NCAA Division II | Athletic scholarships allowed (NCAA rules) | Division II uses an equivalency scholarship model for most sports—partial athletic aid combined with academic and need-based aid is common. |
| NCAA Division III | No NCAA athletic scholarships | No NCAA athletic scholarships. Athletes may receive academic merit aid and need-based financial aid from the institution. |
| NAIA | Athletic scholarships allowed (NAIA rules) | NAIA programs may offer athletic scholarships under NAIA rules, which differ from NCAA Division I and II models. |
| Category | D1 | D2 | D3 | NAIA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Academic profile | Often strong GPA/test scores at selective schools; NCAA eligibility required | Solid GPA; eligibility required; academics influence aid packages | Academics frequently drive admission; athletic fit within campus culture | Eligibility requirements; varies by institution selectivity |
| Track & field visibility | National/regional film, showcases, or rankings in many sports | Regional film and coach relationships; clear position skills | Consistent film and coach outreach; fit over brand chasing | Regional/national outreach depending on program |
| Coach communication | Structured outreach with concise film and measurable context | Personalized emails and camp follow-ups | Professional outreach highlighting academics + athletics | Direct email with academics, film, and graduation year |
| Recruiting timeline | Often earlier in high-profile sports; sport-specific calendars | Junior–senior year focus with regional camps | Junior–senior year typical; campus visits important | Varies; many athletes contact coaches junior year |
Frequently asked questions
- How does NAIA track & field recruiting work?
- Moderate — regional and national outreach depending on program level. Athletes should maintain film, academics, and organized coach outreach using tools like My College Offer.
- Does NAIA offer athletic scholarships for track & field?
- NAIA programs may offer athletic scholarships under NAIA rules, which differ from NCAA Division I and II models.
- What should a track & field recruiting profile include for NAIA?
- Include position, graduation year, measurables, GPA, highlight film, club or high school schedule, and target division preferences—kept current for coaches and recruiting intelligence.