University of Maryland, College Park Lacrosse Financial Data

NCAA Membership Financial Reporting System (MFRS) · Big Ten · Data available: FY2017–FY2025

In fiscal year 2025, University of Maryland, College Park's Lacrosse program reported $1.6M in revenue and $5.4M in expenses, for a net deficit of $3.7M. The program generated $1.6M in total revenue, led by Contributions at $584K. Among the 25 FBS programs reporting Lacrosse data, University of Maryland, College Park ranks 5th overall in total expenses (5th of 13 Power Four programs) — above the FBS average of $2.6M. University of Maryland, College Park competes in the Big Ten; financial data is available from FY2017 through FY2025.

FY2025 Overview

Total Revenue
$1,609,942
Total Expenses
$5,358,397
Net
-$3,748,455

This is a data snapshot. The interactive explorer lets you filter by sport, compare schools, and dig into multi-year trends.

Open Interactive Explorer →

FY2025 Revenue Sources

CategoryAmount
Contributions$584,228
Direct Institutional Support$503,518
Ticket Sales$279,757
NCAA Distributions$150,000
Athletics Restricted Endowment and Investments Income$92,439

FY2025 Expense Breakdown

CategoryAmount
Coaching Salaries, Benefits and Bonuses paid by the University and Related Entities$2,236,963
Athletic Student Aid$1,425,475
Team Travel$527,246
NCAA Post-Season Non-Football Expenses$265,895
Sports Equipment, Uniforms and Supplies$244,863
Enhanced Educational Benefits (Alston or other)$180,269
Student-Athlete Meals (non-travel)$141,439
Other Operating Expenses$79,958
Recruiting$71,294
NCAA Post-Season Non-Football Expenses - Coaching Compensation/Bonuses$63,745
Game Expenses$61,616
Medical Expenses and Insurance$34,667
Support Staff/Administrative Compensation, Benefits and Bonuses paid by the University and Related Entities$23,458
Facilities Maintenance and Operations$772
Memberships and Dues$737
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$1,609,942$5,358,397-$3.7M
FY2024$892,552$4,783,513-$3.9M
FY2023$854,741$4,054,122-$3.2M
FY2022$266,203$4,418,050-$4.2M
FY2021$150,578$3,619,934-$3.5M
FY2020$140,587$3,255,413-$3.1M

University of Maryland, College Park Lacrosse — Financial Context

The lacrosse program operates at a $3.7M deficit, with $5.4M in expenses dwarfing $1.6M in revenue, the latter driven primarily by $584K in contributions. At $5.4M in total expenses, Maryland ranks 5th among all 25 FBS lacrosse programs and 5th among the 13 Power Four schools offering the sport, spending more than double the FBS average of $2.6M. Expenses have climbed steadily from $3.3M in FY2020 to $5.4M in FY2025, with coaching salaries, benefits, and bonuses alone accounting for $2.

Other Sports at University of Maryland, College Park

Football · Men's Basketball · Women's Basketball · Baseball · Soccer · Volleyball · Softball · Tennis · Golf · Gymnastics · Wrestling · Field Hockey · Track and Field

Frequently Asked Questions

What does University of Maryland, College Park spend on Lacrosse?
University of Maryland, College Park Lacrosse reported $5,358,397 in total expenses in FY2025. The largest expense was Coaching Salaries, Benefits and Bonuses paid by the University and Related Entities at $2,236,963.
How does University of Maryland, College Park Lacrosse spending compare to other FBS programs?
Among the 25 FBS programs reporting Lacrosse data, University of Maryland, College Park ranks 5th overall in total expenses (5th of 13 Power Four programs) — above the FBS average of $2.6M.
How is University of Maryland, College Park Lacrosse funded?
Like most Power Four Lacrosse programs, University of Maryland, College Park funds Lacrosse primarily through shared athletic department revenues, which flow from football and basketball at most FBS institutions.