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As an aside, a gymnast cannot be in an advertisement as a gymnast (even if not paid) or they will lose their NCAA eligibility. There are very limited exceptions to this particular rule, however.
I thought this was for current collegiate athletes only, not prospective athletes. I know prospective athletes cannot be compensated for any work that is related to his/her sport, including modeling. However, it is my understanding that they can model for free. For instance, the Leo makers all use volunteer gymnasts to model their wear. On their sites, they specifically say it must be volunteer so that it doesn't void NCAA eligibility. That includes no free leotards. Am I wrong on this??As an aside, a gymnast cannot be in an advertisement as a gymnast (even if not paid) or they will lose their NCAA eligibility. There are very limited exceptions to this particular rule, however.
Gwenmom,
I don't know what current IRS law is about gifts, but at one time any gift over a certain amount was taxable and had to be reported to the IRS.
I thought this was for current collegiate athletes only, not prospective athletes. I know prospective athletes cannot be compensated for any work that is related to his/her sport, including modeling. However, it is my understanding that they can model for free. For instance, the Leo makers all use volunteer gymnasts to model their wear. On their sites, they specifically say it must be volunteer so that it doesn't void NCAA eligibility. That includes no free leotards. Am I wrong on this??
thanks for the clarificationYes, you are wrong because you are mixing together two, separate ideas and jumping to the incorrect conclusion.
There is no difference between NCAA athletes and prospective athletes in terms of amateurism. NCAA athletes have different risks in terms of promoting goods that are policed by their respective universities.
There are "very limited exceptions" to the amateurism rule as I said above - leotards are expressly one of the exceptions.
I wouldn't do a GoFundMe account, but if a relative wants to help pay for gym, it is still the family paying... a check directly to the gym or to the child (birthday, holiday, etc GIFT) or to the parent IS acceptable. This is not a DONATION, but rather a GIFT ... and then it is technically not a perk they are getting FOR doing gymnastics.I know this is an older post, but can anyone clarify when NCAA eligibility actually begins? If you have young children...can family and friends donate to you for the cost of their lessons, fees, etc.? Nothing to do with being tax deductible, but as small gift donations? For example...GoFundMe accounts. Thanks!