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What ECNL, MLS NEXT, and NPL Actually Cost (Side-by-Side)

#costs#comparison#ecnl#mls-next#npl#pathways

The Comparison Nobody Publishes

Parents researching youth soccer pathways face a specific problem: it's nearly impossible to get an apples-to-apples cost comparison across leagues. ECNL clubs structure fees differently from MLS NEXT clubs, which structure fees differently from NPL clubs. Some bundle tournaments. Some don't. Some include uniforms. Some charge them separately. Some publish fees on their website. Some make you attend an info session.

This article solves that problem. Three leagues, one format, real numbers. Everything broken down into the same categories so you can actually compare. Then we add Solstice FC so you can see where a cooperative model sits in the spectrum.

All figures are based on 2025-26 published fee schedules, club-reported data, and parent-reported actual spending. Ranges reflect regional variation — a club in Charlotte will cost differently than a club in LA.

The Master Comparison Table

Category ECNL MLS NEXT (Academy Div.) MLS NEXT (Homegrown Div.) NPL Solstice FC
Club dues $2,000-$3,500 $2,000-$4,000 $0 $1,200-$2,500 $2,000-$2,800
Platform/league fee $0-$500 $0-$500 $0 $0-$200 Included
Tournament fees $500-$1,500 $500-$1,200 $0-$500 $300-$800 $0-$300
Travel (hotels, gas, flights) $2,000-$5,000 $2,000-$7,250 $0 $500-$2,000 $0-$500
Gear/uniforms $300-$700 $300-$750 $0-$200 $200-$500 $150-$350
Private training (optional) $1,000-$3,000 $1,000-$3,000 $0-$3,000 $500-$2,000 $0-$1,000
College recruiting costs $0-$2,500 $0-$2,000 $0-$1,000 $0-$1,000 $0-$500
Misc. (coach travel share, social extras) $200-$1,500 $200-$1,500 $0-$500 $100-$500 $0-$200
Total (published dues only) $2,000-$3,500 $2,000-$4,000 $0 $1,200-$2,500 $2,000-$2,800
Total (all-in realistic) $6,000-$18,000 $6,000-$19,000 $0-$5,000 $2,800-$9,500 $2,150-$3,850

Read that bottom row twice. The gap between "published dues" and "all-in realistic" is the gap between what you're told at tryouts and what you actually spend.

Breaking Down Each League

ECNL (Elite Clubs National League)

What you pay the club: $2,000-$3,500 per year in dues. Some clubs add a platform fee ($200-$500) for ECNL-specific costs. Columbia Premier charges $2,494. Loudoun Soccer charges $2,850-$2,950. Phoenix Rising ECNL RL charges roughly $2,200 plus a $500 platform fee.

What you pay for travel: This is where ECNL gets expensive. Regular-season games are regional (within your conference), but national showcases, National Events, Playoffs, and Champions League require travel. Most ECNL families attend 3-5 out-of-town events per year. At $500-$1,200 per trip, that's $2,000-$5,000 annually.

What you pay for gear: ECNL clubs typically require a full uniform package (home and away kits, warm-ups, training kit) purchased through the club. Budget $300-$700 for the club-required items, plus your own cleats, shin guards, and training gear.

What you pay that nobody mentions: Coach travel surcharges ($25-$75/player/event at some clubs), "optional" camps and clinics that are socially mandatory ($200-$500), and the private training spending that ECNL's competitive culture encourages ($1,000-$3,000/year).

What you get: The strongest college recruiting infrastructure in youth soccer. Showcases attended by hundreds of college coaches. A nationally recognized brand that college programs know and trust. High-level competition across a deep league of well-run clubs. For players on the college track, ECNL delivers real value.

What you don't get: A guarantee of college placement. Direct professional pathway. Affordable access for middle-income families. Flexibility for multi-sport athletes.

MLS NEXT (Academy Division — Non-MLS-Affiliated Clubs)

What you pay the club: $2,000-$4,000 per year. GFI Academy in Houston charges $2,890. Other clubs range from $2,000 to $4,000 depending on region and age group. Some clubs offer payment plans but add a 10% financing fee.

What you pay for travel: MLS NEXT's national format can mean more regular-season travel than ECNL, depending on your club's conference assignment. Team travel fees of $2,000-$7,250 have been reported, though the typical range is $2,000-$4,000 for most clubs. MLS NEXT Fest and Cup events add additional travel costs.

What you pay for gear: Similar to ECNL. Uniform kits run $300-$750, often bundled into a separate fee from dues. Add personal training gear and cleats.

What you pay that nobody mentions: The Academy Division experience is essentially equivalent to ECNL in cost, but without the MLS Homegrown Division's free-to-play benefit. Parents sometimes assume "MLS NEXT" means an MLS academy experience. For Academy Division clubs, it means ECNL-level costs with MLS NEXT's competition format.

What you get: High-level national competition. Growing college recruiting presence. The MLS NEXT brand, which carries increasing weight with college coaches. Access to MLS NEXT events and showcases.

What you don't get: The free-to-play benefit of MLS-affiliated academies. A direct professional pathway (that's Homegrown Division only). Significantly different value from ECNL at a similar price point.

MLS NEXT (Homegrown Division — MLS-Affiliated Academies)

What you pay the club: $0. MLS academies are fully funded by their parent clubs. No tuition, registration, or uniform fees. Teams like the LA Galaxy, LAFC, San Diego FC, New England Revolution, and all other MLS-affiliated academies cover everything.

What you pay for travel: $0 for club-organized travel. The academy covers flights, hotels, and meals for league play and showcases. Families may incur incidental costs for attending games as spectators.

What you pay for gear: $0-$200. The academy provides training and match gear. Families may choose to purchase additional personal items.

What you pay that nobody mentions: Even in free programs, some families invest in private training ($0-$3,000) and incidental costs. But the structural cost is genuinely zero.

What you get: The best development-per-dollar in American youth soccer — because the dollar amount is zero. Professional-grade coaching, facilities, sports science, and a direct pathway to MLS NEXT Pro and the first team. Starting in 2025-26, every MLS NEXT club is required to offer at least one full scholarship per season.

What you don't get: Access. MLS academies are extremely selective and geographically limited. If you don't live near an MLS club, this pathway doesn't exist. Even if you do, roster spots are limited to roughly 15-20 players per age group.

NPL (National Premier Leagues)

What you pay the club: $1,200-$2,500 per year. NPL fees are generally lower than ECNL or MLS NEXT because the league operates through regional member leagues (like SoCal NPL, Red River NPL, NPL North Texas) with less national infrastructure to fund. Sporting Jax Academy charges up to $1,650 for NPL. Washington Premier League charges $625-$650 per season plus a State Cup deposit.

What you pay for travel: $500-$2,000 per year. NPL travel is primarily regional during the regular season. The exception is the NPL Finals in Colorado, which requires travel for qualifying teams. Most NPL families travel less than ECNL or MLS NEXT families.

What you pay for gear: $200-$500. Uniform requirements are similar to other leagues but often slightly less expensive because clubs at this level tend to have smaller markups.

What you pay that nobody mentions: NPL clubs exist in a competitive ecosystem where they're trying to attract and retain players who might move to ECNL or MLS NEXT. This creates pressure to add services (private training, showcases, camps) that raise the real cost above published dues.

What you get: Competitive league play at a high level with less travel than national leagues. A postseason pathway (NPL Finals) that provides exposure. Starting in 2026-27, US Club Soccer is integrating ECNL RL and NPL postseason pathways, which strengthens the league's competitive credibility. More affordable access to structured competitive soccer than ECNL or MLS NEXT.

What you don't get: The brand recognition of ECNL or MLS NEXT with college coaches (though this gap is narrowing). National regular-season play. The same depth of college recruiting infrastructure.

Time Commitment Comparison

Metric ECNL MLS NEXT (either division) NPL Solstice FC
Training sessions/week 4-5 4-5 3-4 3
Session length 90-120 min 90-120 min 90 min 90 min
Games/week 1-2 1-2 1 1
Travel weekends/year 4-8 4-8 2-4 0-2
Season length 10-11 months 10-11 months 9-10 months 9 months
Weekly hours (training + games) 10-15 10-15 7-10 6-8
Weekly hours (with travel) 12-20+ 12-20+ 8-12 6-9
Multi-sport compatible? Rarely Rarely Sometimes Yes

The time commitment comparison matters as much as the cost comparison. At 12-20 hours per week for 10-11 months, ECNL and MLS NEXT are effectively part-time jobs. For a 14-year-old, this means no other sports, limited social life outside the team, and significant academic scheduling constraints.

NPL's lighter schedule is one of its underrated advantages. At 7-10 hours per week with less travel, it's possible — though not easy — for NPL players to maintain other interests.

Solstice FC's schedule is deliberately designed for human sustainability. Three training sessions, one game, occasional optional local tournaments. A kid on our team can also play basketball in the winter, do swim team in the summer, and have dinner with their family most nights.

Geographic Availability

League Approximate # of Clubs Geographic Spread Availability in San Diego
ECNL (Boys) 100+ National, concentrated in metro areas 3-4 clubs (Surf, Albion, San Diego SC, etc.)
ECNL (Girls) 100+ National, concentrated in metro areas 3-4 clubs
MLS NEXT (Homegrown) 30 MLS markets only San Diego FC
MLS NEXT (Academy) 150+ (expanding) Growing national footprint Multiple clubs
NPL (SoCal) 50+ (SoCal league) Regional Multiple clubs
Solstice FC 1 San Diego Yes

For San Diego families specifically, the landscape is relatively rich. You have access to ECNL, MLS NEXT (both divisions, thanks to San Diego FC's MLS entry), SoCal NPL, and multiple competitive leagues. The challenge isn't availability — it's navigating the alphabet soup and understanding what each option actually costs and delivers. For a San Diego-specific breakdown, see San Diego Youth Soccer Costs Compared.

What Each Pathway Leads To

This is the question parents are really asking when they compare leagues: where does this take my kid?

Outcome ECNL MLS NEXT (Academy) MLS NEXT (Homegrown) NPL Solstice FC
D1 college soccer Strong pathway Strong pathway Strong pathway Moderate pathway Possible but not primary
D2/D3 college soccer Strong pathway Strong pathway Less emphasis Strong pathway Good pathway
Professional contract Rare Rare Primary goal Very rare Not a goal
Lifelong love of the sport Variable Variable Variable Variable Primary goal
Recreational adult player Not emphasized Not emphasized Not emphasized Not emphasized Emphasized

Here's the uncomfortable data: regardless of which elite league a player is in, about 7% of high school soccer players go on to play college soccer at any level. About 1% play Division I. About 0.04% sign a professional contract.

The difference between ECNL and NPL in college placement rates is real but smaller than the marketing suggests. Both produce college players. Both also produce large numbers of kids who don't play beyond high school. The biggest determinants of college placement are the player's ability, their academics, and their initiative in the recruiting process — not which league badge is on their jersey.

The Value Question: Cost Per Development Hour

Here's a metric nobody uses but everybody should: how much does each hour of coached development cost?

League Annual all-in cost (moderate) Annual coached hours (approx.) Cost per coached hour
ECNL $11,200 400-500 $22-$28
MLS NEXT (Academy) $11,500 400-500 $23-$29
MLS NEXT (Homegrown) $1,000 500-600 $1.50-$2
NPL $5,500 300-400 $14-$18
Solstice FC $3,000 250-300 $10-$12

MLS Homegrown is an obvious outlier — it's essentially free, and the coached hours are extensive. For the leagues families actually choose between (ECNL, MLS NEXT Academy, NPL, and programs like Solstice FC), the cost-per-coached-hour tells an interesting story.

ECNL and MLS NEXT Academy Division cost roughly $22-$29 per coached hour. NPL costs $14-$18. Solstice FC costs $10-$12.

Is the coaching at ECNL worth 2-3x more per hour than coaching at Solstice FC? For some players, yes — the competitive environment, the peer group, and the recruiting infrastructure add value beyond the coaching itself. For most players? The marginal difference in coaching quality between a well-run regional competitive program and an ECNL program is not worth a 2-3x price premium.

Who Should Choose What

Choose ECNL if:

  • Your child is a top-5% player with D1 college ambitions
  • Your family can absorb $8,000-$15,000/year without financial strain
  • You want the strongest college recruiting infrastructure available
  • Your child thrives on high-pressure, high-commitment environments
  • Your child is willing and excited to make soccer their primary activity

Choose MLS NEXT (Homegrown) if:

  • Your child has genuine professional potential
  • You live near an MLS club and your child can access the academy
  • Free-to-play elite development is available to your family
  • Your child wants to pursue a professional pathway

Choose MLS NEXT (Academy Division) if:

  • You want MLS NEXT competition but don't have access to an MLS academy
  • Your family's budget is similar to ECNL range
  • The MLS NEXT clubs in your area have stronger coaching than local ECNL options

Choose NPL if:

  • Your child wants competitive soccer with less travel than ECNL/MLS NEXT
  • Your budget is $3,000-$8,000/year all-in
  • Your child may want to play college soccer but isn't necessarily D1 bound
  • You want structured league play with a national postseason pathway

Choose Solstice FC if:

  • Your child wants competitive, well-coached soccer without the lifestyle takeover
  • Your budget is $2,000-$4,000/year all-in
  • You value community ownership and financial transparency
  • Your child plays (or wants to play) multiple sports
  • You believe development should serve the kid, not the other way around
  • You're in San Diego

The Bottom Line

The American youth soccer pathway system is designed to move families upward — from rec to competitive to elite — with each step increasing cost, time commitment, and emotional investment. The implicit message is that higher is always better, that more expensive means more development, and that the right pathway is the most exclusive one your child can access.

That message serves the financial interests of clubs and leagues. It does not necessarily serve the interests of your child.

Before choosing a pathway, be honest about three things:

  1. What does your child actually want from soccer?
  2. What can your family sustainably afford — in money, time, and family cohesion?
  3. What outcome are you hoping for, and how realistic is that outcome regardless of which league you choose?

The answers to those questions will tell you more about the right pathway than any league comparison chart.


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