The free, compliance-aware readiness kit for the parent or guardian of a Westside high school athlete.
And it's moving one direction — toward letting athletes get paid.
On May 4, 2026, Indiana's IHSAA board voted 13-5 to allow high school athletes to sign NIL deals, effective the 2026-27 school year — making Indiana the 46th state (plus D.C.) to allow high school NIL. Ohio authorized it in November 2025. Mississippi's bill to allow it quietly died in February 2026. That leaves just four states still prohibiting it entirely:
Hawai'i hasn't announced a change. We're not saying it's coming next week. We're saying: the national map is flipping toward yes, and the families who are ready before it flips here are the ones first in line — not scrambling to build an audience from zero.
Five things a Westside parent or guardian can do this week — fully inside current HHSAA rules. No paid deals. No brokering. Just readiness.
HHSAA still prohibits paid NIL for high school athletes in Hawai'i — competing for money or signing a pro/athletic contract can cost amateur status. Read the current rule with your athlete, and keep an eye on the national map (46 states and counting). Knowing exactly where the line is means you never cross it by accident — and you'll spot the moment it moves here.
For a minor athlete, the adult is the account owner — you hold the passwords and review every post. Start a simple one-tab log now: date, what was posted, any contact from a brand, school, or recruiter. If the rule changes, you have a clean record. If a coach asks, you're transparent. Consent-first is the whole posture: this is always the parent's call, not the kid's.
Claim your athlete's handle (or a clean variation) across Instagram, TikTok, X and YouTube before someone else does. Post training, work ethic, and personality on a steady rhythm — and keep a current 60–90 second highlight reel of real game film. Build the following that comes for the athlete, not the school's logo. Audience is the one asset you can grow today that NIL pays for tomorrow.
A one-page, parent/guardian-consented athlete profile and media kit: name, position, school, class year, stats, a few strong photos, and the parent's contact — no school marks, nothing implying a school or HHSAA endorsement. This is the document a brand or collective asks for first. Having it built and clean means the day the rule flips, you send it in five minutes instead of starting from nothing.
Before you ever run a fundraiser, signing event, or (one day) a deal through any platform, read exactly what they take. A lot of "free" NIL and fundraising tools quietly skim a cut. Know the fee before you commit so your athlete — and your 'ohana — keeps as close to 100% as possible. Readiness includes knowing who's reaching for your wallet.
Every step above is readiness and audience-building only. Under current HHSAA rules a Hawai'i high school athlete cannot accept a paid NIL deal — so this checklist contains none, and addresses the parent or guardian, never the minor. Oceania Media Group does not broker deals for minors and does not run a deal marketplace. This is a parent/guardian resource, not legal advice.
Tell us a little about your athlete and we'll send the printable kit — plus a heads-up the moment the rule looks like it's moving in Hawai'i. One parent to another, no spam.
A pro media kit is $99. A managed, compliance-aware athlete profile runs $25–49/mo. But the 5-step checklist above is yours free — no purchase, no catch.
Questions? Email oceaniamghi@gmail.com. Already on our list and want off? Reply "unsubscribe" to any email — we'll remove you, no hard feelings.