Recruiting Rules
College Golf Recruiting Rules, in Plain English
When coaches can contact you, what the recruiting periods actually mean, and how visits work, translated out of NCAA legalese and into something a family can act on.
College Recruiting · Updated July 3, 2026
The one date most families get wrong
You can email a college coach at any age. The rule that trips up families is not about when you can reach out, it is about when a Division I coach is allowed to reach back. For most sports including golf, that date is June 15 after your sophomore year. Before then, a DI coach may read your email and send you a recruiting questionnaire, but personal replies, calls, texts, and recruiting conversations are restricted by rule.
So if you email a coach as a freshman and hear only an automated questionnaire link back, that is usually compliance, not rejection. Start building the relationship early, keep your outreach and profile current, and understand the calendar is working against a fast reply, not against you.
When Division I coaches can contact you
The Division I recruiting communication rules were reformed to push first contact later and reduce pressure on young players. The core dates for golf:
- June 15 after sophomore year: coaches can begin calling, texting, emailing, direct-messaging, and making verbal scholarship offers.
- August 1 before junior year: you can begin taking official and unofficial visits, and coaches can have off-campus in-person contact within the recruiting calendar periods below.
These dates apply to Division I. Division II, Division III, and the NAIA run on their own, generally more relaxed timelines, which is one reason those paths are worth understanding early. Because the exact calendar can be adjusted year to year, confirm the current version on the NCAA's own recruiting calendars page at ncaa.org before you plan around a specific week.
Contact, evaluation, quiet, dead: what each period means
The recruiting calendar divides the year into four kinds of periods. They control what a coach can do in person, not whether you can email. Golf is evaluated largely at tournaments, so these periods mostly govern whether a coach can watch you play and talk to you there.
| Period | What a coach can do |
|---|---|
| Contact | In-person contact on or off campus, watch you compete, and communicate. The most open period. |
| Evaluation | Watch you play or visit your school to assess you, but no in-person recruiting conversation off campus. |
| Quiet | In-person contact only on the college's own campus. No watching you compete, no off-campus meetings. |
| Dead | No in-person contact at all, anywhere. Coaches can still call, text, and email if you are past the June 15 date. |
The practical takeaway: a coach going silent during a dead period is following the rules, and a coach walking your tournament during an evaluation period is not allowed to strike up a recruiting chat on the range even if they love your swing.
Official vs unofficial visits
An unofficial visit is one you pay for yourself. You can take unlimited unofficial visits, and for Division I they can start August 1 before junior year. An official visit is paid for, in whole or part, by the school. Official visits are limited in number and can only happen once you are eligible to take them under the calendar.
A visit is a two-way evaluation. The coach is watching how you carry yourself, and you should be pressure-testing whether you would actually want to spend four years there: the coach's style, where you would sit in the lineup, the academics behind the golf. Use our coach directory to line up the programs worth a visit before you spend a weekend traveling.
What the House settlement changed
The biggest recent shift is not a contact rule, it is scholarships. Following the House v. NCAA settlement adopted in 2025, Division I schools that opt into revenue sharing no longer operate under the old per-team scholarship caps. Instead they work to a roster limit, set at 9 players for golf (some conferences are using 8), and can fund up to that many scholarships however they choose.
Schools and conferences that opt out remain bound by the traditional equivalency limits many families still read about, historically 4.5 for DI men and 6 for DI women. In practice most programs are not fully funding all 9 spots yet. Because this is new and still settling program by program, treat any specific scholarship count as something to confirm with the coach directly. The mechanics are covered in our golf scholarship guide, and the NCAA's own summary lives at ncaa.org.
Academic eligibility and the Eligibility Center
Recruiting rules are only half the picture. To compete at a Division I or II school you must register with and be certified by the NCAA Eligibility Center, which reviews your core-course GPA, transcript, and amateur status. Register at the start of high school, take the required core courses, and keep your amateur status clean, since accepting prize money or the wrong kind of sponsorship can cost you eligibility before you ever sign.
Division III does not use the Eligibility Center for certification and sets admission and aid through the school itself. If college golf is the goal, keep the academics as sharp as the scoring average. Where you realistically fit is its own question, worked through in our recruiting resources.
Frequently asked questions
- When can college golf coaches start contacting you?
- For Division I, coaches can begin calling, texting, emailing, and making verbal offers on June 15 after your sophomore year. Campus visits open August 1 before your junior year. You can email a coach at any age, but before June 15 after sophomore year a DI coach is limited to sending you a questionnaire rather than a personal reply. Division II, III, and NAIA rules are generally more relaxed.
- What is the difference between a dead period and a contact period?
- During a contact period a coach can have in-person contact with you on or off campus and watch you compete. During a dead period a coach cannot have any in-person contact anywhere, though they can still call, text, and email if you are past the June 15 communication date. The periods control in-person interaction, not email.
- Can a college coach talk to me at my tournament?
- It depends on the period. During a contact period, yes. During an evaluation period a coach can watch you play but cannot have a recruiting conversation with you off campus. During quiet and dead periods they cannot approach you at an event at all. Golf is scouted heavily at tournaments, so the calendar matters.
- Do the same recruiting rules apply to D2, D3, and NAIA?
- No. The June 15 and August 1 dates are Division I rules. Division II, Division III, and the NAIA each set their own, generally more relaxed, timelines and contact rules. Always check the specific division you are targeting rather than assuming DI rules apply everywhere.
- How many golf scholarships can a Division I team give now?
- It changed with the 2025 House settlement. DI schools that opt into revenue sharing work to a roster limit of 9 players for golf and can fund up to that many scholarships however they distribute them. Schools that opt out remain under the older equivalency caps, historically 4.5 for men and 6 for women. Most programs are not yet fully funding all 9 spots, so confirm with the coach.