The NCAA reported spending $63.5 million in legal fees during the fiscal year that ended August 2025, according to its latest tax return, bringing its five-year total spending on outside counsel to $292.6 million.

The biggest beneficiary was law firm Wilkinson Stekloff, which received nearly $19.6 million in FY25. The firm’s partner Rakesh Kilaru has served as lead counsel for the association in the House v. NCAA antitrust litigation that was resolved with a court-approved settlement in June 2025.

Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner was the second-highest-paid law firm, receiving $7.3 million.

The NCAA also continued to incur substantial litigation costs beyond attorney fees. Its latest tax filing, a public copy of which was released Friday, disclosed $372.3 million in legal settlements during FY25. Combined with the landmark House settlement, the association has spent more than $3 billion in legal settlement costs over the past two fiscal cycles.

Meanwhile, the NCAA reported $1.56 billion in FY25 revenue, up $14% from the prior fiscal year, and $1.57 billion in expenses—down nearly 60%. Those year-over-year comparisons, however, are heavily distorted because the NCAA recognized the full back damages payout of the $2.7 billion House settlement as an expense in FY24.