Last week, the NCAA Committee on Women's Athletics recommended that all three Divisions should sponsor legislation adding flag football to the collegiate governing body's Emerging Sports for Women program.
The program aims to address gender equity by offering up-and-coming women's sports a sanctioned interim growth period at the varsity level.
Once added to the program, a sport has 10 years in which to establish a minimum of 40 school-sponsored varsity teams. Participating schools must also meet certain competition and regulatory requirements for the sport to ultimately earn official NCAA championship status.

Growth spurs NCAA efforts to elevate flag football
With the announcement that flag football will make its Olympic debut at the 2028 LA Games, the sport has seen increased popularity across the US. That interest has sparked inquiries into upping the sport’s competitive status at the NCAA level — particularly from women athletes.
At least 65 NCAA schools currently offer women's flag football at either the club or varsity level, with more slated to join in 2026, per the NCAA.
Division III's Atlantic East Conference will officially become the first NCAA league to sponsor the sport this year, with seven teams set to kick off their inaugural varsity season next month.
Division II's Conference Carolinas will join the varsity flag football party during the 2025/26 academic year, with at least six programs competing in that inaugural season.
Outside the NCAA, the NAIA — a governing body that oversees collegiate athletics at more than 200 mostly private schools — has been officially sponsoring women's flag football since 2020.
The NFL is also involved in growing the women's game, partnering with Atlantic East's efforts and recently advocating for flag football to become a girl’s high school varsity sport in all 50 states in a 2025 Super Bowl commercial.
Currently, just 14 states sponsor girl's high school flag football at the varsity level, though 18 more have pilot programs to test future state-wide sanctioning.

Emerging Sports program boosts NCAA gender equity
If the NCAA committee's recommended legislation successfully advances, flag football will join the likes of rugby, stunt, triathlon, acrobatics and tumbling, and equestrian in the Emerging Sports for Women program.
Since its 1994 establishment, the program has seen five women's sports — ice hockey, beach volleyball, rowing, water polo, and bowling — elevate to full NCAA championship status.
With its first championship season slated for 2025/26, women's wrestling will soon graduate from the program to become the NCAA's 91st title-winning sport.
All in all, enthusiasm for both youth and adult flag football is on the rise across the US, with this latest news indicating that the sport will likely join the college fold sooner rather than later.