Girls Flag Football Is Officially Here: 17 States Sanctioned, Olympics Bound & Growing Fast in 2026


No more waiting. No more “maybe next year.” No more girls flag football being treated like a side project while the boys’ program gets the main stage.

Ohio just made it official — and the moment is bigger than you think.

The Ohio High School Athletic Association announced it will sanction a Girls Flag Football State Championship starting in spring 2026. The announcement dropped at the NFL FLAG Championships in Canton, Ohio, in July 2025, and it sent shockwaves through the high school sports world. Ohio is now the 17th state in the country to make girls flag football a fully recognized varsity sport, according to OHSAA and NFL Operations.

That’s not a small number. That’s a movement.


From 20 Schools to 80 — Ohio Went Off

Three years ago, Ohio had just 20 schools running girls flag football programs. Today? 80 schools are in. That’s a 300% growth rate, and the sanctioning is going to push that number even higher as more athletic directors realize this sport is not going anywhere.

The first Ohio state champion is already crowned. Hamilton Badin High School took home the inaugural state title in May 2025, winning the first-ever OHSAA Girls Flag Football tournament and putting their name in the history books forever. The Bengals even covered it — which tells you everything about the mainstream attention this sport is getting right now.


The NFL Is Not Playing Around — $32 Million Says So

Let’s be clear about something: the NFL doesn’t invest $32 million into something it doesn’t believe in.

That’s the amount the league has committed nationwide to grow girls flag football at the high school level through NFL FLAG. This isn’t a PR campaign or a feel-good press release. It’s infrastructure — fields, equipment, coaching resources, and official support that’s building real programs in real communities.

When billion-dollar organizations put that kind of money behind a high school sport, it changes everything. It legitimizes rosters, creates scholarship pathways, and signals to college programs that players are coming.


The Olympics Are Coming — And That’s the Game Changer

Here’s the stat that makes every girls flag football player’s story hit differently: flag football is set to debut at the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles.

That means the girls grinding through two-a-days right now, running routes after school, getting their flags pulled in the fall and the spring — they’re training for a sport that will be on the Olympic stage in two years. The recruiting implications of this alone are massive. College programs are about to rush to build rosters, and high school athletes who’ve been playing this game are going to be exactly who they’re looking for.

The pipeline is being built in real time.


It’s Not Just Ohio — This Is a National Wave

Ohio’s sanctioning is part of a national expansion that’s accelerating fast.

Maryland is also sanctioning for 2026. Howard County alone is adding 12 schools to the fold, and the Baltimore Ravens are providing free clinics to help programs launch properly, per Sports Illustrated High School. That’s an NFL franchise showing up and doing the work to make sure girls have access to the game.

In Minnesota, the Vikings are partnering with 104 schools for the 2026 season. The Minnesota state championship is scheduled for June 8 at TCO Stadium — the Vikings’ own practice facility. The Vikings announced that this partnership is a direct investment in the future of the game and in girls’ access to competitive athletics.

NFL teams are hosting state championships. Let that sink in.


Why This Matters Beyond the Field

This sport is giving girls something that flag football has always represented at its core: access.

Not every girl wants to play volleyball or soccer or basketball. Some of them grew up watching football with their families, throwing routes in the backyard, and wondering why there wasn’t a real spot for them on a real team. Girls flag football answers that question directly — no, you don’t have to pick a different sport. You can play football.

The mental health benefits of team sport participation, the confidence built through competition, the scholarship opportunities that are now starting to emerge — all of it matters. And for a generation of girls who’ve been told repeatedly to find a “girls’ version” of things they love, having a legitimate, fully sanctioned, Olympic-bound version of their sport is not a small deal.

It’s a genuinely historic shift in high school athletics.


Hot Take: Schools That Sleep on This Are Going to Regret It

Schools that haven’t started a program yet are already behind. The states that sanctioned this sport early are going to have experienced rosters and established coaching pipelines when college programs start knocking on doors. Athletic directors who’ve been slow-walking this conversation need to look at what Ohio, Maryland, and Minnesota are doing and get moving.

The recruiting advantage for early adopters is real. And in two years, when this sport is on TV at the Olympics, every school that doesn’t have a program is going to have some explaining to do to their girls’ athletic community.


What’s Next

With 17 states now sanctioned and more expected to follow before 2028, girls flag football is no longer a regional story. It’s a national story with Olympic stakes, NFL money, and a generation of athletes who are ready to compete at the highest level.

Ohio’s first state champion is Hamilton Badin. The second is still being determined. And the girls who lace up this spring — in Ohio, Maryland, Minnesota, and beyond — are writing the first chapter of something that’s going to be told for decades.

Don’t sleep on this. The revolution is already in the rep.


Is your school running a girls flag football program yet? Drop a comment and let us know — and if your program deserves a spotlight, tag us. We’re watching. 👀

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