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LSU football coach Lane Kiffin used private plane perk paid for by donors for family vacation 

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LSU football coach Lane Kiffin used private plane perk paid for by donors for family vacation 

Jul 16, 2026 | 5:52 pm ET
LSU football coach Lane Kiffin used private plane perk paid for by donors for family vacation 
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Clouds pass over Tiger Stadium on March 20, 2023, on Louisiana State University’s campus in Baton Rouge, La. (Matthew Perschall for Louisiana Illuminator)

LSU football head coach Lane Kiffin took his family to Boca Raton using his private airplane travel benefits at a cost of $40,000 to LSU donors, according to LSU Board of Supervisors documents

Kiffin’s employment contract allows him 65 hours of private air travel for personal use, a perk that is not unusual for head football coaches, but one that former head coach Brian Kelly did not have and other LSU coaches are not currently granted. 

LSU athletics spokesman Zach Greenwell declined to respond to a request for comment regarding the number of hours Kiffin used for the trip to Boca Raton, which is home to Florida Atlantic University, where Kiffin coached from 2017-2019. 

The nearly $40,000 tab for the trip was paid by the Tiger Athletic Foundation in March, though the report does not detail when the trip occurred or how long it was. 

The documents show the Tiger Athletic Foundation, a private entity that raises money for LSU athletics, also spent nearly $65,000 for four other private plane trips for business purposes, for Kiffin from January-March of this year. Kiffin’s ex-wife, Layla, children and nephew accompanied him for several of these business trips, which included recruiting visits and attending the Texas Bowl in December. 

LSU and Kiffin entered into his employment agreement last December, but the agreement did not receive final Board approval until last month. Kiffin was hired by the university after Kelly was fired mid-season. Then-Athletic Director Scott Woodward was fired shortly thereafter. 

His seven-year contract offers him $13 million in annual compensation and millions of dollars in bonus compensation. 

Kiffin’s trip was funded by the Tiger Athletic Foundation, but the bulk of his compensation is paid by the university itself. His contract also does not specify that the travel must be paid by private donors. 

Because Kiffin is a state employee, benefits he receives from a private entity affiliated with the university that exceed $1,000 must be reported to the board quarterly under Louisiana law.