Texas State University (TXST) Women's Basketball Financial Data

NCAA Membership Financial Reporting System (MFRS) · Pac-12 · Data available: FY2010–FY2025

In fiscal year 2025, Texas State University (TXST)'s Women's Basketball program reported $66K in revenue and $3.0M in expenses, for a net deficit of $3.0M. Like most Group of Five Women's Basketball programs, Texas State University generates minimal direct revenue and is funded primarily through shared athletic department revenues. Among the 78 FBS programs reporting Women's Basketball data, Texas State University ranks 56th overall in total expenses (14th of 36 Group of Five programs) — below the FBS average of $5.2M. Texas State University competes in the Pac-12; financial data is available from FY2010 through FY2025.

FY2025 Overview

Total Revenue
$66,289
Total Expenses
$3,031,461
Net
-$2,965,172

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FY2025 Revenue Sources

CategoryAmount
Guarantees$25,000
Ticket Sales$14,555
Indirect Institutional Support$14,400
Contributions$10,348
Program, Novelty, Parking and Concession Sales$1,704
Athletics Restricted Endowment and Investments Income$282

FY2025 Expense Breakdown

CategoryAmount
Athletic Facilities Debt Service, Leases and Rental Fee$866,875
Coaching Salaries, Benefits and Bonuses paid by the University and Related Entities$553,355
Athletic Student Aid$532,820
Team Travel$393,522
Support Staff/Administrative Compensation, Benefits and Bonuses paid by the University and Related Entities$145,270
Game Expenses$124,092
Sports Equipment, Uniforms and Supplies$90,382
Enhanced Educational Benefits (Alston or other)$89,700
Recruiting$64,183
Direct Overhead and Administrative Expenses$46,444
Medical Expenses and Insurance$35,280
Student-Athlete Meals (non-travel)$30,282
Other Operating Expenses$19,596
Indirect Institutional Support$14,400
Fund Raising, Marketing and Promotion$9,800
Guarantees$8,000
Memberships and Dues$4,210
Facilities Maintenance and Operations$3,250
Data sourced from NCAA MFRS filings obtained via public records (FOIA) requests and official athletic department disclosures. Figures are as reported to the NCAA and may include institutional support, conference distributions, and other non-self-generated revenue. See the methodology page for full sourcing details.

Year-over-Year Trend

Fiscal YearRevenueExpensesNet
FY2025$66,289$3,031,461-$3.0M
FY2024$63,187$2,793,520-$2.7M
FY2023$76,493$1,966,901-$1.9M
FY2022$88,444$1,532,213-$1.4M
FY2021$54,049$1,309,331-$1.3M
FY2020$97,004$1,326,052-$1.2M

Texas State University Women's Basketball — Financial Context

The program generated just $66K in total revenue in FY2025, with guarantees — money earned by playing road games at other schools — accounting for the largest share at $25K, leaving a $3.0M deficit. At $3.0M in total expenses, Texas State ranks 56th among 78 FBS programs and 15th among 37 Group of Five schools, spending well below the FBS average of $5.2M, with athletic facilities debt service, leases, and rental fees representing the single largest cost at $867K. Expenses have more than doubled over the past four years, rising steadily from $1.3M in FY2021 to $

Other Sports at Texas State University

Football · Men's Basketball · Baseball · Soccer · Volleyball · Softball · Tennis · Golf · Track and Field

Frequently Asked Questions

What does Texas State University spend on Women's Basketball?
Texas State University Women's Basketball reported $3,031,461 in total expenses in FY2025. The largest expense was Athletic Facilities Debt Service, Leases and Rental Fee at $866,875.
How does Texas State University Women's Basketball spending compare to other FBS programs?
Among the 78 FBS programs reporting Women's Basketball data, Texas State University ranks 56th overall in total expenses (14th of 36 Group of Five programs) — below the FBS average of $5.2M.
How is Texas State University Women's Basketball funded?
Like most Group of Five Women's Basketball programs, Texas State University funds Women's Basketball primarily through shared athletic department revenues, which flow from football and basketball at most FBS institutions.