How do you secure a university football scholarship in the United States?

For many British players, the U.S. university football system remains an underrated pathway. Unlike the professional academy route, which is highly selective and narrows sharply after age 16, the NCAA system remains open to strong grassroots and semi-professional players well into their early twenties. It combines competitive football with a world-class university education, and the financial support on offer is significant. Looking For Soccer works with the leading U.S. college soccer placement partner to help players aged 18 to 23 secure the right scholarship. Request your free profile evaluation.

What Is a U.S. University Football Scholarship?

U.S. universities field competitive athletic programmes, called programs, that actively recruit players from around the world. In exchange for their contribution to the team, student-athletes receive a scholarship covering all or part of their university costs.

For football, scholarships are governed by four main systems:

  • NCAA Division I: The most competitive and most financially generous division. Top programmes, best facilities, highest media exposure. Heavily scouted by MLS and professional clubs.
  • NCAA Division II: Excellent level of competition with a strong academic balance. Partial or full scholarships available. A very realistic target for strong club and academy-level British players.
  • NAIA: Smaller universities with a personalised approach. Significant scholarships and serious competition, which is often the best entry point for international players and those coming from grassroots or semi-professional backgrounds.
  • NJCAA: Two-year junior colleges, an ideal stepping stone before transferring to NCAA or NAIA programmes. More gradual academic pressure and a good way to adapt to the U.S. environment progressively.

Scholarship amounts vary based on the player’s athletic level, academic record, the programme’s budget, and the division. A full Division I scholarship can be worth up to £51,000 per year. Understanding how a football academy or sport-studies programme strengthens your profile is key to maximising that amount.

Full Scholarship vs. Partial Scholarship : what’s the difference ?

  • Full scholarship (“full ride“): Covers 100% of tuition fees, accommodation, meals and travel for competitions. It’s the goal every player should aim for and it is achievable with the right profile and preparation.
  • Partial scholarship: Covers a portion of costs like tuition only, or a percentage split across tuition and accommodation. Far more common, but still represents significant savings. The stronger your athletic and academic profile, the larger the package you can negotiate.

Even a 50% partial scholarship can represent $80,000–$120,000 in savings over four years at a private U.S. university. Families often underestimate the return on this process relative to the cost of a British university education.

Who Can Get a U.S. Football Scholarship?

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Athletic Requirements

U.S. college coaches recruit competitive players, not necessarily professionals. For British players specifically, a strong profile typically includes:

  • Active registration with an FA-affiliated club, with experience at county, regional or national level
  • Experience in structured competition like grassroots leagues, county cups, regional development programmes
  • Players released from professional club academies (EPPP Category 1–4) at U16–U18 are particularly strong candidates. They have high-level technical training and a proven dual academic-athletic track record
  • Academy or football boarding schools programme experience is a significant advantage. It demonstrates the ability to handle intensive training alongside serious academic demands, exactly what U.S. college coaches look for
  • Match highlight reel footage allowing coaches to evaluate your profile remotely

Academic Requirements

Academic records play a decisive role both for NCAA eligibility and for the scholarship amount.

  • A-Levels or equivalent (BTEC, IB, Scottish Highers) are required for university admission. The NCAA Eligibility Center evaluates British qualifications directly. Most standard A-Level pathways qualify.
  • NCAA Eligibility Center certification: Required for all players entering NCAA programmes. The centre reviews your qualifications, grades and course history..

Age

The NCAA allows four seasons of athletic competition, typically starting before age 24. Players aged 17 to 22 are in the ideal window. Looking For Soccer supports players aged 18 to 23 through the full scholarship process.

How Does the U.S. Football Recruiting Process Work?

U.S. college football recruiting works very differently from professional scouting in England. Coaches don’t come to watch you : you have to make yourself visible proactively. The process typically runs from September to March for an August university start.

Step 1 : Player Profile and Highlight Reel

The first thing a U.S. coach looks at is your video. A 3–5 minute highlight reel showing your best in-match actions and not training footage is essential. It should showcase your positional qualities, game vision, physical engagement, and at least a few complete sequences rather than isolated moments. Your player profile includes season stats, competition level, physical data and preferred position.

Step 2 : University Search and Coach Outreach

Our network covers more than 500 U.S. universities across all divisions (NCAA, NAIA, NJCAA, USCAA). We identify the 15 to 30 programmes where your athletic and academic profile is the best match and where financial support is realistic. Coaches are contacted directly with your profile and highlight reel.

Step 3 : Scholarship Negotiation

When a coach expresses interest, conversations begin via emails, video calls, campus visits. This is where the scholarship package is negotiated. NCAA regulations strictly govern coach-player contact by age group and division. An experienced intermediary prevents compliance errors that can cost a player their eligibility.

Step 4 : Placement, Visa and Departure

Once an agreement is reached, the player signs a National Letter of Intent (NLI) formalising the scholarship. What follows: university admission, NCAA Eligibility Center certification, F-1 student visa processing. Looking For Soccer supports every step through arrival on campus.

What Does a U.S. Football Scholarship Actually Cover?

  • Tuition fees: $15,000–$60,000/year depending on the university
  • Accommodation and meals: $10,000–$20,000/year
  • Books and supplies: $1,000–$2,000/year
  • Athletic kit: Provided by the university in most programmes
  • Competition travel: Covered by the university in full scholarships

A full Division I scholarship can represent $40,000–$80,000 per year in value. Costs not covered typically include your annual return flight and personal spending.

What Football Level Do You Need?

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It is more accessible than most British players assume. U.S. universities want competitive players, not professionals. A solid county or regional-level player who is well-prepared and well-presented can earn a scholarship in Division II, NAIA or NJCAA and sometimes Division I at the right programme.

What matters as much as raw level:

  • Demonstrated progression over recent seasons
  • Footballing intelligence and tactical versatility, which are highly valued by NCAA coaches
  • Academic profile with stronger grades open doors at better universities
  • Maturity and capacity to integrate into a multicultural environment

British players who have come through football boarding school programme in England, Spain or France have a structural advantage. They’ve already demonstrated the ability to balance intensive training with serious academic demands and it’s exactly what U.S. college coaches want in a student-athlete.

Why British Players Have a Competitive Edge

U.S. college coaches actively recruit from Britain for several reasons:

  • Technical quality: The English football development pathway produces technically sound, tactically intelligent players who adapt well to the U.S. game
  • Native English: No language barrier, no TOEFL requirement. British players integrate into U.S. academic and social life with significantly less friction than most international recruits
  • Maturity: Players who have managed a dual sport-academic track in the UK are seen as self-sufficient and reliable. Those are qualities coaches prize in student-athletes
  • Cultural fit: British football culture is well-understood and well-regarded in U.S. college football circles. Many coaching staffs actively seek British players for their professionalism and work ethic

Life as a Football Player at a U.S. University

A Typical Day

Every university has its own schedule, but the structure is broadly consistent. During the season, players typically have 1 to 3 training sessions per day, 5 days a week with one rest day. Recovery sessions are built into the programme. Classes are woven around the athletic schedule. Players manage their time semi-professionally, with real autonomy over their day.

The Season Calendar

  • August: Pre-season, intensive training to build match fitness
  • September – November: Regular season, conference and non-conference matches, typically 2 games per week
  • November – December: Play-offs, conference championships, national championship
  • January – August: Off-season, academic focus, optional summer tournaments

Facilities

U.S. universities invest heavily in athletic infrastructure to attract top talent. Campuses typically include multiple state-of-the-art pitches, weight rooms, pools, gymnasia, cold recovery suites and video analysis rooms. Competition travel is well-organised. Some universities even use private aircraft for longer fixtures.

What Comes After the Scholarship?

  • MLS SuperDraft: The best college players are scouted by MLS clubs at dedicated events each year. U.S. college football competitions are actively followed by professional teams. Dozens of players progress from NCAA to MLS (Major League Soccer) or USL (United Soccer Leagues) annually. They are part of the professional youth football leagues in the United States.
  • Return to the UK or Europe: A U.S. university degree is internationally recognised. Four years of high-level athletic and academic experience is a compelling profile for any employer in the UK, Europe or globally.
  • Graduate school: U.S. universities offer master’s programmes accessible to former student-athletes, often with additional financial support.
  • Professional network: Four years at a U.S. university builds an international professional network that lasts a career.

Why Choose Looking For Soccer to secure a university football scholarship in the United States?

Looking For Soccer works with the leading U.S. college football placement partner, more than 15 years of experience, a network of 500+ universities across all divisions (NCAA, NAIA, NJCAA, USCAA), and advisers who have played college football themselves. They know the system from the inside.

  • 100% placement rate for validated profiles. This is not a marketing claim. It reflects our selectivity. We only take on profiles where we’re confident we can find a scholarship.
  • You only pay if you get a scholarship. Beyond the initial file fee, no placement fee is due if we don’t find a scholarship for your player. Full transparency.
  • 150+ athletes placed across universities throughout the United States.
  • End-to-end support: from first interview to arrival on campus, our team is always on hand to address any concerns you may have.

Request your free first interview with no commitment.

Frequently Asked Questions about the U.S. Football Scholarships

Do British players need a TOEFL or IELTS score?

No. Native English speakers are exempt from English language tests. This is a genuine advantage over international candidates and removes one significant administrative step from the application process.

Are A-Levels accepted by U.S. universities?

Yes. The NCAA Eligibility Center evaluates British qualifications directly. Standard A-Level pathways (or equivalent BTEC, Scottish Highers, IB) are well understood and accepted by U.S. universities. Our advisers can confirm how your specific qualifications map to NCAA requirements.

Can I get a scholarship without going through an agency?

Technically yes, but it’s very difficult in practice. The NCAA recruiting process is complex, strictly regulated and highly competitive. Mistakes like wrong targeting, out-of-compliance contact, poorly presented materials, can cost a player their eligibility. An experienced intermediary with an active coaching network makes a real difference in the size and quality of scholarship offered.

How long does a U.S. football scholarship last?

Scholarships are granted year by year, renewable for four years as long as the player maintains athletic performance and academic standing (minimum GPA typically 2.0–2.5/4.0). The Bachelor’s degree takes four years. The GPA (Grade Point Average) is the grading system used in the United States.

What if you don’t find a scholarship for my child ?

It’s rare. But if it happens, you won’t owe a placement fee. Beyond the initial file fee, you only pay if your player gets a scholarship.

My player is 16. I it too early to start planning?

No, it’s the right time. The ideal preparation window is 2 to 3 years before university entry. At 16, a player can already build their match video library, optimise academic results, work on maintaining fitness, and explore soccer boarding schools in Europe that will strengthen their recruiting profile. Read our guide on what age to join a football boarding school programme.

Can student-athletes work while studying in the U.S.?

F-1 visa holders have restrictions on off-campus paid employment. However, since the NCAA’s 2021 NIL (Name, Image, Likeness) reform, student-athletes can be compensated for public appearances and brand partnerships, which is a new opportunity for strong profiles.

Can girls get a football scholarship in the U.S.?

Yes and often more easily than boys. Women’s soccer is one of the most developed collegiate sports in the U.S., with strong programmes in every division. Division I women’s football is extremely competitive (many players go on to the NWSL or national teams), and opportunities in Division II and NAIA are strong for solid county or regional-level players.

What is the NJCAA and should I consider it?

The NJCAA covers two-year junior colleges and is a great entry point for players who want to adapt to the U.S. environment progressively before transferring to NCAA or NAIA programmes. Scholarships are available, academic pressure is more gradual, and several of our placed players have followed this route successfully.

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