Nobody gave Braden Smith much of a chance when he showed up in West Lafayette as a three-star recruit from Westfield, Indiana, in 2021. He had one major-conference offer, a modest recruiting profile, and zero national buzz around his name. Purdue was taking a flier on a kid most programs had not bothered to seriously recruit.
How Much Are Braden Smith’s NIL Deals Worth?
Four years later, that kid is one of the best point guards in college basketball history. Smith is a two-time All-Big Ten selection, a Bob Cousy Award winner, and the reigning Big Ten Player of the Year, chasing Bobby Hurley’s all-time NCAA assists record in what has become a storybook senior season. He chose to return for one more year rather than test the NBA, and the NIL landscape made that decision an easy one to make.
According to On3, Braden Smith carries an NIL valuation of $1.7 million, ranking him eighth overall among college basketball players on On3’s national leaderboard. That figure puts him firmly in the top tier of earners in the sport, which is a remarkable spot for a player who arrived at Purdue without a single other major-conference offer to his name.
His brand portfolio is one of the most diverse on any college roster in the country. Smith has inked deals with Stanley, The NIL Store, HEYDUDE Shoes, the Purdue NIL Store, Boilermaker Alliance, Versiti Blood Center of Indiana, and Trueblood Real Estate. The Stanley partnership, which he announced publicly during last year’s NCAA Tournament run, was particularly high-profile given the brand’s massive cultural footprint among younger consumers.
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The local and regional deals speak to how deeply Smith is woven into the fabric of West Lafayette and the broader Indiana community. He is not just a Purdue basketball star; he is a homegrown Indiana kid who stayed close to home, turned a three-star recruiting profile into a first-team All-American resume, and built a brand that resonates well beyond the confines of Mackey Arena.
Purdue entered the 2025-26 season ranked No. 1 in the preseason AP Poll, the first time in program history the Boilermakers had started a year atop the national rankings. Smith was named the conference’s preseason player of the year for the second consecutive season, and he has done nothing to disappoint. He is averaging 15 points, 8.7 assists, and 3.7 rebounds per game for a Purdue squad that sits at 22-7 overall.
The assists record chase adds another dimension to his value as a brand this season. Every game brings him closer to history, and every national broadcast that covers the storyline puts his name in front of a bigger audience. That kind of organic visibility is something no NIL deal can manufacture on its own.
His story is what the NIL era was supposed to celebrate: a player who earned everything through performance, loyalty, and staying the course when the easy path would have been to leave. The $1.9 million valuation on his name is just the number that finally catches up to what everyone in Boilermaker country already knew.

