What Is the NCAA Evaluation Period and When Is It? (2024)

What Is the NCAA Evaluation Period and When Is It? (1)

The NCAA Evaluation Period is a specific time of year when college coaches are allowed to watch an athlete compete in person or visit their school. However, coaches are not allowed to communicate with that athlete (or parents) off the college campus. Coaches can sit in the stands during a recruit’s practice or game, as well as visit the recruit’s school. This gives college coaches a chance to talk to the recruit’s coach, teachers or guidance counselor to get a better understanding of the student-athlete’s character. After the visit, the coach may call or email the recruit and let them know how their experience was at the school or game.

The NCAA Evaluation Period is just that: a time set aside for evaluation. While coaches can’t talk to athletes off the college campus, they can still call, email, text and direct message recruits. Evaluation periods are very specific, and not all sports have them. The only sports with these periods are DI football (FBS and FCS), DI Men’s/Women’s Basketball, DI Women’s Volleyball, DI Softball, DII Football and DII Men’s/Women’s Basketball.

For more on the topic, check out former D1 football player Phill Wells in this video breaking down what an evaluation period is.

What to expect during the NCAA Evaluation Period

The evaluation period is a time for coaches to evaluate athletes who they are seriously recruiting. By this point, the coach has been communicating with the recruit, has watched their highlight film and probably checked out their academic eligibility. The evaluation period is an opportunity to do two different things:

  • Watch the recruit compete in-person. Highlight films can only show so much of an athlete’s ability and character on the field. When evaluating the recruit in-person, coaches can see what goes on between the highlights. The coach will either attend a “made for recruiting” showcase/tournament or an athlete’s practice. They are evaluating the athlete’s attitude, body language and how they interact with their teammates and coaches. In other words, they want to know who you are as an athlete.
  • Evaluate a recruit’s character. Coaches might drop in at a recruit’s school during the evaluation period. They will seek out a recruit’s guidance counselor, coach and perhaps other key members of the staff who interact with the recruit on a daily basis. Some coaches have been known to talk to the school janitor or team managers! The purpose? The coach wants to get a better sense of the athlete’s personality and character to ensure they would be a positive addition to the team.

Insider Tip: Be aware of the impression that you leave on the people you’re around every day, and always be prepared for a coach to drop in at your school.

Even though coaches can watch recruits compete during the evaluation period, it doesn’t necessarily mean that they will just show up to your game or school one day. Remember, coaches have a lot of recruits to evaluate, and they have to plan their time wisely. They are only able to visit recruits who they are seriously interested in. By the time the evaluation occurs, the coach already has a good idea of a recruit’s talent level. Instead, coaches want to see those intangibles like character, leadership, sportsmanship and coachability. Read how to be more coachable.

Insider Tip: While coaches typically use evaluation periods to visit high school juniors and sometimes seniors, that doesn’t mean freshmen and sophom*ores are off the hook. Coaches will notice any standout underclassmen who are on the team of the athlete they are evaluating. It’s not uncommon for a talented underclassman to receive questionnaires or general mail from coaches after an evaluation takes place at their school.

When is the NCAA Evaluation Period?

For all the DI sports not listed below, the NCAA has established a basic recruiting rule around evaluations. Coaches are able to evaluate each recruit seven times throughout the year. Those seven evaluations are a combination of two different types of in-person visits:

  • An evaluation in which the coach can talk to the recruit and their family
  • An evaluation in which the coach cannot talk to the recruit and their family

Of the seven in-person evaluations coaches can make per recruit, no more than three of them can be evaluations in which the coach is able to talk to the recruit and their family. Thankfully, it’s up to the coach to keep track of these in-person evaluations; however, it can only benefit you to know what the rules are.

Insider Tip: You should always be prepared for a coach to visit you. However, because each coach has a limited number of evaluations per athlete, they will probably schedule their visit with you rather than just showing up.

Division I Football FBS

  • September 1 – December 1, 2024
  • September, October and November: College coaches can conduct evaluations during 42 days of their choosing (or 54 for U.S. service academies); coaches are not allowed to visit an athlete’s school on more than one calendar day during this time
  • April 15 – May 25, 2025: Coaches can take 168 evaluation days (or 216 for U.S. service academies). An authorized recruiter can use one evaluation day to assess a recruit’s athletic ability. Then, they can use another evaluation day to assess the recruit’s academic qualifications. Coaches/recruiters can do both assessments on the same day, and then take a second evaluation day to evaluate athletic ability again if they choose.

Division I Football FCS

  • September 1 – December 1, 2024
  • September, October and November: College coaches can conduct evaluations during 42 days of their choosing; coaches are not allowed to visit an athlete’s school on more than one calendar day during this time
  • April 15 – May 24, 2025

Division I Men’s Basketball

  • May 16–18, 2025 (NCAA certified events only)
  • June 20 (noon) – 22 (6 pm), 2025
  • June 27 (noon) – 29 (6 pm), 2025
  • July 10–13, 2025
    • NCAA certified events, institutional camps and permissible governing body events
  • July 18–20. 2025
    • NCAA certified events, institutional camps and permissible governing body events begins Friday at 6 p.m. and ends Sunday at 3 p.m.
  • July 21–23, 2025
    • Evaluation period for NCAA College Basketball Academy only

Division I Women’s Basketball

  • October 1, 2024 – February 28, 2025 except designated dead period and contact period. (only scholastic events)
  • April 25–27, 2025 (only certified non-scholastic events)
  • May 16–18, 2025 (only certified non-scholastic events)
  • June 12 (noon) – 14 (6 p.m.), 2025 (only scholastic events approved by the NCAA and NFHS and intercollegiate events approved by applicable two-year college governing body.)
  • July 11–14, 2025
  • July 18–21, 2025
  • July 25–28, 2025 (NCAA College Basketball Academy only) 

*A prospective student-athlete may not make an unofficial visit during the July evaluation periods unless she has signed a NLI or the institution’s written offer of admission and/or financial aid, or the institution has received a financial deposit from the prospective student-athlete in response to an offer of admission

Division I Men’s/Women’s Cross Country and Track & Field

  • August 1–21, 2024

Division I Women’s Lacrosse

  • November 8–10, 15–17, 22–24, 2024 (5 pm Friday–Sunday): Evaluation periods
  • During the Women’s Lacrosse Championship, coaches can evaluate athletes at one event, as long as it’s hosted within a 100-mile radius of the championship site. Coaches are not permitted to attend any evaluation event that occurs two hours before, during, or two hours after the semifinals competition and final game.
  • June 13–July 31, 2025: Evaluation period
    • Except: July 2–6, 2025: Dead period

Division I Women’s Volleyball

  • Coaching staff is permitted to evaluate recruits on one day only, starting the Thursday of the NCAA Division 1 Women’s Volleyball Championship through the Sunday immediately following the championship. The event they recruit at must be within a 30-mile radius of the championship site, and they cannot attend any events that take place at the same time as a collegiate game.

Division I Women’s Beach Volleyball

  • December 2–17, 2024
  • January 1–17, 2025
  • May 5–23, 2024

Division I Softball

  • August 12 – November 24, 2024 (only scholastic practice and competition activities)
  • October 19–20, 26–27, 2024 (only scholastic and non-scholastic practice or competition activities)
  • November 2–3, 9–10, 16–17, 23–24, 2024 (only scholastic and non-scholastic practice or competition activities)
  • January 3 – May 26, 2025, Evaluation period (only scholastic practice and competition activities)
  • Any high school regional and state championship competition that doesn’t occur during a dead period should be treated like an evaluation period.

Division II Football

  • During the recruit’s high school or junior college football season, starting with the first regularly scheduled practice
  • November 1–26, 2023: Evaluation period
    • Except: Junior college recruits should treat the period from their last postseason game until November 26, 2023 as a contact period.
  • April 15 – May 31, 2024: Evaluation period, excluding Memorial Day and Sundays; when evaluations aren’t taking place, recruits should treat it like a quiet period.
    • Note: March 7 – May 31, 2024 is a quiet period except for the 4 weeks from April 15 through May 31 (excluding Memorial Days and Sundays) selected at the sole discretion of the member institution and designated in writing in the office of the director of athletics.
  • Coaching staff members are allowed to evaluate a high school football all-star game at any time of the year as long as the game takes place in the same state as the university or college.

Division II Women’s Basketball

  • June 15 – July 31, 2024

Division II Men’s Basketball

  • June 15 – July 31, 2024
What Is the NCAA Evaluation Period and When Is It? (2024)
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