NCAA Division I independent schools

NCAA Division I independent schools are four-year institutions that compete in college athletics at the NCAA Division I level, but do not belong to an established athletic conference for a particular sport. These schools may however still compete as members of an athletic conference in other sports. A school may also be fully independent, and not belong to any athletic conference for any sport at all. The reason for independent status varies among institutions, but it is frequently because the school's primary athletic conference does not sponsor a particular sport.

Full independents

One school is competing as a full independent for the 2023–24 season. Chicago State left the Western Athletic Conference at the conclusion of the 2021–22 school year without announcing a new conference affiliation for the next season. It will join the Northeast Conference (NEC) beginning in the 2024–25 season.[1]

Five Chicago State teams have conference homes in the 2023–24 school year: men's soccer, and men's and women's golf in the Ohio Valley Conference, and men's and women's tennis in the Horizon League. Chicago State's future home of the NEC sponsors all of these sports.

Current members

InstitutionLocationFoundedAffiliationEnrollmentNicknameJoinedColorsFuture
conference
Chicago State UniversityChicago, Illinois1867Public
(TMCF)
2,620[2]Cougars1984;
2006;
2022[a]
   Northeast (NEC)
Notes

Men's sponsored sports by school

SchoolBasketballCross
Country
GolfSoccerTennisTrack
& Field
(indoor)
Track
& Field
(outdoor)
Chicago State Y YOVCOVCHorizon Y Y

Women's sponsored sports by school

SchoolBasketballCross
Country
GolfSoccerTennisTrack
& Field
(indoor)
Track
& Field
(outdoor)
Volleyball
Chicago State Y YOVC YHorizon Y Y Y

Other recent independents

InstitutionLocationFoundedAffiliationEnrollmentNicknameJoinedLeftColorsCurrent
conference
University of HartfordWest Hartford, Connecticut1877Nonsectarian6,792Hawks20222023   Commonwealth Coast (CCC)[a]
New Jersey Institute of Technology
(NJIT)
Newark, New Jersey1881Public11,901Highlanders2006;
2013
2008;
2015
   America East
Notes

Baseball

While there are currently no baseball independents, Oregon State will be participating as a baseball independent beginning in the 2025 season.[3]

Future members

InstitutionFoundedNicknameFirst seasonLocationTypeEnrollmentPrimary conference
Oregon State University1868Beavers1907Corvallis, OregonPublic37,121West Coast Conference[a]

Bowling

Bowling, like beach volleyball, is currently a women-only sport at the NCAA level that holds a single national championship open to all NCAA members. As of 2023–24 season, nine bowling programs compete as independents.

InstitutionTeamLocationFoundedTypeEnrollmentPrimary conference
Baldwin Wallace UniversityYellow JacketsBerea, Ohio1845Private2,592OAC
(Division III)
Dominican UniversityStarsRiver Forest, Illinois1901Private3,066NACC
(Division III)
Mount St. Mary's UniversityMountaineersEmmitsburg, Maryland[a]1808Private1,889MAAC
(Division I)
University of Nebraska–Lincoln (Nebraska)CornhuskersLincoln, Nebraska1869Public25,260Big Ten
(Division I)
Oklahoma Christian UniversityLady EaglesEdmond, Oklahoma1950Private2,153Lone Star
(Division II)
Wartburg CollegeKnightsWaverly, Iowa1852Private1,563ARC
(Division III)
University of Wisconsin–WhitewaterWarhawksWhitewater, Wisconsin1868Public11,722WIAC
(Division III)
Wittenberg UniversityTigersSpringfield, Ohio1845Private1,326NCAC
(Division III)
Wright State UniversityRaidersFairborn, Ohio[b]1967Public10,264Horizon
(Division I)

Field hockey

As of the upcoming 2024 season, one school will be a Division I independent in field hockey. Queens University of Charlotte began a transition from NCAA Division II to Division I in July of 2022, joining the Atlantic Sun Conference.[4] (Stonehill joined the field hockey-sponsoring Northeast Conference.[5] However, the ASUN does not sponsor field hockey, and Queens has yet to announce a future field hockey affiliation for its program.

As of the most recent 2023 season, two other schools were Division I independents in field hockey along with Queens: James Madison and Lindenwood. James Madison, had competed in the Colonial Athletic Association (now the Coastal Athletic Association) in all sports, including field hockey, but moved to the Sun Belt Conference (SBC) in July 2022.[6][7] However, since the SBC does not sponsor field hockey, the Dukes competed as an independent in that sport only for 2022 and 2023.[8] In April 2023, it was announced that James Madison would become a field hockey affiliate of the Mid-American Conference in 2024, joining fellow Sun Belt member Appalachian State there.[9]

Lindenwood also transitioned from NCAA Division II at the same time as Queens, in July 2022. Similar to Queens, they joined a conference that does not sponsor field hockey, the Ohio Valley Conference,[10] and did not announce a future field hockey affiliation for its program. However, on December 1, 2023, Lindenwood announced that it would discontinue 10 athletic programs, including its field hockey program, at the end of the 2023-24 school year.[11]

InstitutionTeamLocationFoundedTypeEnrollmentPrimary conference
Queens University of CharlotteRoyalsCharlotte, North Carolina1857Private1,740Atlantic Sun Conference

Football

Football Bowl Subdivision

As of the recent 2023 college football season, four NCAA Division I FBS schools are football independents. The ranks of FBS independents will drop by one in 2024, when Army will depart to join the American Athletic Conference as an affiliate for football. UMass will become a full member of the Mid-American Conference in 2025.

InstitutionFoundedNicknameFirst seasonLocationTypeEnrollmentPrimary conference
United States Military Academy
(Army)
1802Black Knights1890West Point, New YorkFederal4,294Patriot League
University of Notre Dame1842Fighting Irish1887Notre Dame, IndianaPrivate12,179Atlantic Coast Conference
[a]
University of Connecticut (UConn)1881Huskies1896Storrs, Connecticut[b]Public32,257Big East Conference
University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass)1863Minutemen1879Amherst, MassachusettsPublic29,269Atlantic 10 Conference
Notes

Football Championship Subdivision

As of the 2024 season, two schools, Merrimack and Sacred Heart, will play as FCS independents.

InstitutionFoundedNicknameFirst seasonLocationTypeEnrollmentPrimary conference
Merrimack College1947Warriors1996North Andover, MassachusettsPrivate3,726Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (in 2024)
Sacred Heart University1963Pioneers1991Fairfield, Connecticut5,974

Ice hockey

Men

There are currently six NCAA Division I independents in men's ice hockey—the University of Alaska Fairbanks (branded athletically as simply "Alaska"), the University of Alaska Anchorage, Arizona State University, Lindenwood University, Long Island University (LIU), and Stonehill College.

Alaska became a men's independent after the 2020–21 season due to the demise of its former league, the men's side of the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (the WCHA remains in operation as a women-only league). The seven Midwestern members of the men's WCHA left to reestablish the Central Collegiate Hockey Association without the WCHA's three geographic outliers—the two Alaska schools, along with Alabama–Huntsville. Of these three schools, Alaska was the only one that did not initially drop hockey.[13]

Alaska-Anchorage's hockey program was suspended in 2020 by the University of Alaska System due to a reduction in state funding, along with the skiing and gymnastics programs. The 2020–21 season was set to be its last, but due to the COVID-19 pandemic, they did not end up playing that season either. The Alaska Board of Regents told the hockey program they would be reinstated if they were able to collect 3 million dollars in donations and fundraising, so the team was on hiatus for both the 2020–21 and 2021–22 season while its future was uncertain. Ultimately, the money was raised, and the Seawolves were reinstated for the 2022–23 season, but due to the WCHAs aforementioned disbanding, they resumed play as an independent alongside the Nanooks.

Arizona State moved up from club hockey in the ACHA to full varsity status. The Sun Devils began playing a full Division I schedule in 2016–17, and expected to be in a hockey conference for 2017–18, but no conference move materialized for several years. With the 2020–21 season dramatically impacted by COVID-19, ASU entered into a scheduling agreement with the Big Ten Conference for that season, with the Sun Devils playing a road-only schedule of four games against each of the seven Big Ten hockey members.[14] On July 5, 2023, it was announced that the Sun Devils would join the National Collegiate Hockey Conference for the 2024–25 season and beyond.[15]

LIU announced in late April 2020 that it would launch varsity men's hockey for the 2020–21 season. The Sharks have yet to announce a conference home, but played their first season as a scheduling partner of Atlantic Hockey.[16]

In 2021–22, Lindenwood fielded two separate men's club teams, each playing at a different level of the American Collegiate Hockey Association (ACHA), which governs the sport at club level. On March 23, 2022, Lindenwood announced that it would launch a Division I men's varsity program starting in the 2022–23 season, while maintaining its ACHA program. This announcement came shortly after the school announced it was starting a transition from Division II to Division I in July 2022, joining the non-hockey Ohio Valley Conference.[17]

On April 5, 2022, Stonehill, then a member of the D-II Northeast-10 Conference (NE-10), announced it was joining the Northeast Conference (which also does not sponsor ice hockey) that July, starting its own transition to D-I. Before this announcement, Stonehill had been one of seven NE-10 members that played men's ice hockey under Division II regulations, despite the NCAA not sponsoring a championship event at that level. (All other D-II schools with varsity men's ice hockey play under D-I regulations.)[18]

Neither Lindenwood nor Stonehill has announced a conference home for its men's hockey program.

InstitutionTeamLocationFoundedTypeEnrollmentYearsPrimary conference
University of Alaska Fairbanks (Alaska)NanooksFairbanks, Alaska1917Public8,3362021–presentGreat Northwest Athletic Conference
(Division II)
University of Alaska AnchorageSeawolvesAnchorage, Alaska1954Public6,8132022–presentGreat Northwest Athletic Conference
(Division II)
Arizona State UniversitySun Devils[19]Tempe, Arizona1885Public50,2462015–presentPac-12 Conference
(Big 12 Conference in 2024)
Lindenwood UniversityLionsSt. Charles, Missouri1827Private6,4912022–presentOhio Valley Conference
Long Island UniversitySharks[20]Brooklyn and Brookville, New York[a]1926Private15,1972020–presentNortheast Conference
Stonehill CollegeSkyhawksEaston, Massachusetts1946Private2,5002022–presentNortheast Conference

Soccer

Women

The most recent departure from the independent ranks was Delaware State, who joined the Northeast Conference as an affiliate in women's soccer in 2023.[21]

InstitutionTeamLocationFoundedTypeEnrollmentPrimary conference
South Carolina State UniversityLady BulldogsOrangeburg, South Carolina1896Public3,000Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference

Lacrosse

Men

One school is competing as an independent in the 2024 season. Le Moyne College started a transition from Division II in July 2023 as a new member of the Northeast Conference (NEC), which sponsors all of Le Moyne's current sports except men's lacrosse.[22] However, the NEC will resume sponsorship of the sport for the 2025 season, and Le Moyne will begin competition there after the conclusion of the 2024 season.[23]

InstitutionTeamLocationFoundedTypeEnrollmentPrimary conference
Le Moyne CollegeDolphinsDeWitt, New York1946Private3,409Northeast Conference

Volleyball

Men's (indoor)

Men's volleyball has a truncated divisional structure in which members of both Division I and Division II compete under identical scholarship limits for a single national championship. Eight men's volleyball programs play as independents; all are D-II members.

Four schools left the independent ranks after the 2023 season. American International became a single-sport member of the East Coast Conference, which added men's volleyball for the 2024 season;[24] Queens of North Carolina joined the Midwestern Intercollegiate Volleyball Association;[25] Limestone discontinued its men's volleyball program;[26] and Alderson Broaddus closed entirely.[27]

Maryville and Missouri S&T will leave the independent ranks after the 2025 season once their primary home of the Great Lakes Valley Conference starts sponsoring the sport.[28]

InstitutionTeamLocationFoundedTypeEnrollmentPrimary conference
Lincoln Memorial UniversityRailsplittersHarrogate, Tennessee1897Private2,579South Atlantic Conference
(Division II)
Maryville UniversitySaintsTown and Country, Missouri[a]1872Private3,500Great Lakes Valley Conference
(Division II)
Missouri University of Science and TechnologyMinersRolla, Missouri1870Public6,086Great Lakes Valley Conference
(Division II)
University of Puerto Rico at BayamónCowboysBayamón, Puerto Rico1971Public5,014Independent[b]
(Division II)
University of Puerto Rico at MayagüezTarzansMayagüez, Puerto Rico1911Public13,146Independent[b]
(Division II)
University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras CampusGallitosSan Juan, Puerto Rico1903Public18,653Independent[b]
(Division II)
Thomas More UniversitySaintsCrestview Hills, Kentucky1921Private1,983Great Midwest Athletic Conference
(Division II)
Tusculum UniversityPioneersTusculum, Tennessee[c]1794Private2,053South Atlantic Conference
(Division II)

Women's (beach)

Beach volleyball, currently a women-only sport at the NCAA level, holds a single national championship open to members of all three NCAA divisions. The following programs competed as independents in the 2024 season (2023–24 school year).

InstitutionTeamLocationFoundedTypeEnrollmentPrimary conference
Barry University[a]BuccaneersMiami Shores, Florida1940Private7,401Sunshine State Conference (Division II)
Berry CollegeVikingsMount Berry, Georgia1902Private1,900Southern Athletic Association (Division III)
California State University, Los Angeles
(Cal State Los Angeles)
Golden EaglesLos Angeles, California1947Public27,685California Collegiate Athletic Association (Division II)
Carson–Newman UniversityEaglesJohnson City, Tennessee1851Private2,115South Atlantic Conference (Division II)
Catawba CollegeIndiansSalisbury, North Carolina1851Private1,207South Atlantic Conference (Division II)
Chaminade University of HonoluluSilverswordsHonolulu, Hawaii1955Private2,836Pacific West Conference (Division II)
Colorado Mesa UniversityMavericksGrand Junction, Colorado1925Public11,000Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference (Division II)
Concordia University Irvine
(Concordia–Irvine)
Golden EaglesIrvine, California1976Private2,564Pacific West Conference (Division II)
East Texas Baptist UniversityTigersMarshall, Texas1912Private1,771American Southwest Conference (Division III)
Eckerd College[a]TritonsSt. Petersburg, Florida1958Private1,650Sunshine State Conference (Division II)
Erskine CollegeFlying FleetDue West, South Carolina1839Private920Conference Carolinas (Division II)
Florida Southern College[a]MoccasinsLakeland, Florida1883Private2,185Sunshine State Conference (Division II)
Hawaii Pacific UniversitySharksHonolulu, Hawaii1965Private4,998Pacific West Conference (Division II)
Hendrix CollegeWarriorsConway, Arkansas1876Private1,400Southern Athletic Association (Division III)
Huntingdon CollegeHawksMontgomery, Alabama1854Private900Collegiate Conference of the South (Division III)
LaGrange CollegePanthersLaGrange, Georgia1831Private1,100Collegiate Conference of the South (Division III)
University of LynchburgHornetsLynchburg, Virginia1903Private2,460Old Dominion Athletic Conference (Division III)
University of Mary Hardin–BaylorCrusadersBelton, Texas1845Private2,700American Southwest Conference (Division III)
McKendree UniversityBearcatsLebanon, Illinois1828Private1,960Great Lakes Valley Conference (Division II)
Mississippi State UniversityBulldogsMississippi State, Mississippi1878Public21,884Southeastern Conference
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
(Nebraska)
CornhuskersLincoln, Nebraska1869Public33,273Big Ten Conference
Palm Beach Atlantic University[a]SailfishWest Palm Beach, Florida1968Private2,233Sunshine State Conference (Division II)
Saint Leo University[a]LionsSt. Leo, Florida1889Private2,235Sunshine State Conference (Division II)
Southwest Baptist UniversityBearcatsBolivar, Missouri1878Private2,168Great Lakes Valley Conference (Division II)
Spring Hill CollegeBadgersMobile, Alabama1830Private1,439Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (Division II)
Stevenson UniversityMustangsStevenson, Maryland1947Private3,621MAC Commonwealth (Division III)
University of Tampa[a]SpartansTampa, Florida1931Private7,600Sunshine State Conference (Division II)
University of Texas at Austin
(Texas)
LonghornsAustin, Texas1883Public52,384Big 12 Conference
(SEC in 2024–25)
Texas A&M University–KingsvilleJavelinasKingsville, Texas1925Public8,783Lone Star Conference (Division II)
Tusculum UniversityPioneersTusculum, Tennessee1794Private2,053South Atlantic Conference (Division II)
Vanguard UniversityLionsCosta Mesa, California1920Private2,752Pacific West Conference (Division II; in 2024–25)
Wayne State CollegeWildcatsWayne, Nebraska1910Public4,202Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference (Division II)

Wrestling

As of the most recent 2023-24 season, three schools were Division I independents in wrestling, with one being a full D-I member and the other two transitional D-I members. The full D-I member, Morgan State, announced that they would be adding a wrestling team for the 2023-24 season, becoming the only HBCU to field the sport at the Division I level.[29] However, their primary conference, the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference, does not sponsor the sport, so they compete as an independent in that sport only.

The transitional D-I independents are Lindenwood and Queens (in North Carolina; not to be confused with Queens College in New York City, which remains in D-II), both of which started their transitions from NCAA Division II in July 2022. Lindenwood and Queens both joined conferences that do not sponsor wrestling, respectively the Ohio Valley Conference and Atlantic Sun Conference, and neither school has announced a future wrestling affiliation. Both Lindenwood and Queens announced they would discontinue their respective programs at the end of the 2023-24 school year.[30][31]

InstitutionTeamLocationFoundedTypeEnrollmentPrimary conference
Lindenwood UniversityLionsSt. Charles, Missouri1827Private6,992Ohio Valley Conference
Morgan State UniversityBearsBaltimore, Maryland1867Public9,101Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference
Queens University of CharlotteRoyalsCharlotte, North Carolina1857Private1,740Atlantic Sun Conference

Sports with no independents other than full independents

Full independent Chicago State is the only school that is independent in the following sports: men's and women's basketball, men's and women's cross country, men's and women's golf, and women's (indoor) volleyball.

Women's ice hockey

No women's ice hockey teams have played as independents at the National Collegiate level, the de facto equivalent to Division I in that sport, since the 2018–19 season. In that season, five schools—Franklin Pierce, Post, Sacred Heart, Saint Anselm, and Saint Michael's—competed as independents, all participating in the nascent New England Women's Hockey Alliance (NEWHA), which had originally been established in 2017 as a scheduling alliance among all of the then-current National Collegiate independents. The NEWHA initially included six schools, but Holy Cross left after the inaugural 2017–18 NEWHA season to join Hockey East. The NEWHA officially organized as a conference in advance of the 2018–19 season,[32] but was not officially recognized by the NCAA as a Division I league until the 2019–20 season, by which time the newly launched LIU program had joined to return the conference membership to six.[33]

The three most recent schools to add women's ice hockey had confirmed conference homes before starting or resuming play. Stonehill started varsity play in the 2022–23 season as the newest playing member of the NEWHA.[34] Assumption joined the NEWHA for administrative purposes alongside Stonehill, but did not start NEWHA play until launching its new team in 2023–24.[35] Robert Morris, which had dropped the sport after the 2020–21 season due to COVID-19 impacts, resumed play in 2023–24, returning to its previous conference of College Hockey America[36] (which merged with the Atlantic Hockey Association, home to RMU's men's team, after the 2023–24 season to create Atlantic Hockey America).

Women's lacrosse

In the 2023 season (2022–23 school year), four schools competed as independents—full independent Hartford, plus San Diego State, UC Davis, and Xavier.

San Diego State and UC Davis became independents after the 2021 season when their former women's lacrosse home of the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation shut down its league due to a lack of sponsoring members. Both joined the Pac-12 Conference for women's lacrosse after the 2023 season.[37] Xavier started varsity play in 2023, and began full conference play in its full-time home of the Big East Conference in 2024.[38] The collapse of the Pac-12 in 2024 would have left San Diego State and UC Davis as independents, but both will become affiliates of the Big 12 Conference once it adds women's lacrosse in the 2025 season.[39]

Two women's lacrosse schools left lacrosse-sponsoring conferences after the 2023 season to join non-sponsoring conferences—Cincinnati from the American Athletic Conference to the Big 12 Conference, and Liberty from the ASUN Conference to Conference USA. Both remained in their former conferences as associate members;[40][41] Cincinnati will move to the new Big 12 women's lacrosse league for the 2025 season.

Men's soccer

No school was independent in the most recently completed 2023 men's soccer season.

Men's swimming & diving

No men's swimming & diving programs are independents in the 2023–24 season. The only full independent, Chicago State University, does not sponsor swimming & diving for either sex.

Women's swimming & diving

As in the case of men's swimming & diving, no women's programs in that sport are competing as independents in 2023–24. .

See also

References