The Jacksonville Jaguars’ full schedule for the 2026-27 NFL regular season has been announced!
Preseason
- Week 1 (Sat, Aug 15th; 4 pm): at New Orleans Saints
- Week 2 (Fri, Aug 21st; 7:30 pm): vs Carolina Panthers
- Week 3 (Fri, Aug 28th; 7:30 pm): vs Tampa Bay Buccaneers
With the Jaguars wrapping up their preseason at home against Tampa Bay, it seems likely that Liam Coen may get his offseason wish for joint practices with the in-state Buccaneers.
Regular season
- Week 1 (Sun, Sept 13th; 1 pm): vs Cleveland Browns
- Week 2 (Sun, Sept 20th; 4:05 pm): at Denver Broncos
- Week 3 (Sun, Sept 27th; 1 pm): vs New England Patriots
- Week 4 (Sun, Oct 4th; 1 pm): at Cincinnati Bengals
- Week 5 (Sun, Oct 11th; 9:30 am): vs Philadelphia Eagles — London
- Week 6 (Sun, Oct 18th; 9:30 am): vs Houston Texans — London
- Week 7: Bye Week
- Week 8 (Sun, Nov 1st; 1 pm): vs Indianapolis Colts
- Week 9 (Thurs, Nov 5th; 8:15 pm): at Baltimore Ravens
- Week 10 (Sun, Nov 15th; 1 pm): at Tennessee Titans
- Week 11 (Sun, Nov 22nd; 1 pm): at New York Giants
- Week 12 (Sun, Nov 29th; 4:05 pm): vs Tennessee Titans
- Week 13 (Sun, Dec 6th; 1 pm): at Chicago Bears
- Week 14 (Mon, Dec 14th; 8:15 pm): vs Pittsburgh Steelers
- Week 15 (Sun, Dec 20th; 1 pm): at Houston Texans
- Week 16 (Sun, Dec 27th; 8:20 pm): at Dallas Cowboys
- Week 17 (TBD): vs Washington Commanders
- Week 18 (TBD): at Indianapolis Colts
First Impressions
The full 2026 schedule seems every bit as demanding as Jacksonville’s tough 2025 opening stretch, a seven-game run that tested this team in every conceivable way, with them emerging at 4-3 and major structural questions. And in nearly
identical fashion to 2025, Jacksonville opens Week 1 at home against a somewhat “easy” opponent before facing a murderers’ row of postseason contenders through the bye week. Fortunately, the schedule somewhat softens after the bye.
A primary difference this time could be that the Jaguars will be facing that early playoff-level competition as a better-known commodity, not an unknown upstart. The league has had a full season to study Liam Coen’s Jacksonville iteration of his and Anthony Campanile’s systems, and will look to counter early. The 2026 season will be their opportunity to adjust and respond in kind.
Duval After Dark
With only six “true” home games at EverBank Stadium, and following an electrifying 13-win, AFC South Championship season, the NFL awarded three primetime matchups to Jacksonville in 2026, with five total standalone games:
- Monday Night Football against the Steelers at home
- Thursday Night Football against the Ravens on the road
- Christmas Weekend, Sunday Night Football against the Cowboys on the road
- Back-to-back games played in London (both home games)
One thing is certain, the national media respect finally came, and the 2026 schedule is the receipt.
The primetime recognition is a notable upgrade from 2025, a season that featured just one true primetime appearance: the Week 5 Monday Night Football showdown against the Kansas City Chiefs at EverBank Stadium, a game that lived up to every bit of its billing.
For those who believe in Jacksonville’s complicated history with the primetime spotlight, however, the eerie similarities between this year’s schedule and the Jaguars’ tumultuous 2023 season are probably worth mentioning, as 2026 has nearly all of the familiar ingredients:
- Monday Night Football (Bengals)
- Sunday Night Football (Ravens)
- Thursday Night Football (Saints)
- Back-to-back games played in London (Falcons and Bills)
After starting the season 8-3, Jacksonville finished that year going 1-5 and missing the playoffs following a Week 13 Trevor Lawrence injury against the Cincinnati Bengals. Let’s hope lightning doesn’t strike twice.
Tough Sledding, or is it?
Jacksonville will face four of its six scheduled 2025 playoff opponents away from EverBank Stadium, the Philadelphia Eagles and Houston Texans in London, and the Chicago Bears and Denver Broncos on the road. The Pittsburgh Steelers and New England Patriots represent the only recent playoff participants making the trip to Jacksonville in 2026.
The schedule itself reads like a gauntlet. The Jaguars face the entire AFC North, the Baltimore Ravens, Pittsburgh Steelers, Cincinnati Bengals, and an interesting Todd Monken run the ball offense paired with a physical Cleveland Browns defense that has quietly become one of the more disruptive units in the league. The NFC East adds another, albeit slightly less difficult, layer of difficulty, with the Eagles, Cowboys, Commanders, and Giants each assigned to an AFC South opponent. Layer in an improved Tennessee Titans defense under Robert Saleh, a healthier Indianapolis Colts squad, and the ever-present challenge of the dominant Houston Texans defense, and the full picture of Jacksonville’s 2026 slate comes sharply into focus.
The structure of the 2026 schedule tells a familiar story to the 2025 one. A demanding opening stretch gives way to a post-London bye week, with the back half of the schedule offering a noticeably more manageable road ahead. Last year, Jacksonville faced the Texans, the Colts twice, the Chargers, and Denver following their Week 8 bye. This year, the post-bye slate features Baltimore, Pittsburgh, Dallas, Chicago, Houston, and Indianapolis twice. On paper, the degree of difficulty is comparable, and the 2026 Bears, Ravens, and Steelers, with Aaron Rodgers currently not practicing, may not represent a significant step up from last season’s Broncos and Chargers when all is said and done. The schedules, materially, are more alike than different, with a one-to-two game difference. Both seasons opened with a more digestible game before five-to-six consecutive tough matchups in succession into the bye week.
Home Away From Home
One final detail worth noting on the Texans game being played internationally: while losing a divisional home matchup against a top AFC South rival is never ideal, context matters. Houston is one of the few NFL franchises to have not played an international game since 2019. With just a 1-1 franchise record in international play and limited institutional experience in the planning and execution process, London may be anything but comfortable territory for the Texans. Meanwhile, the Jaguars are one of the league’s most experienced teams when it comes to playing in London.
Notably, Jacksonville and Philadelphia last met in the regular season in 2024, with the Eagles currently leading the all-time series 5-3. Philadelphia has won five consecutive matchups after the Jaguars won the first three meetings between the franchises.
Stadium Construction Impacts?
An away slate featuring the Ravens, Bears, Bengals, Cowboys, Broncos, Texans, and Colts represents a seven-game mountain to climb for any NFL team. But for a franchise that went 8-1 at EverBank Stadium in the regular season most recently, the addition of two lost home matchups (against the Eagles and the Texans in London) makes it abundantly clear the league was doing Jacksonville no favors with the game placements.
It probably should have been expected. With EverBank Stadium currently undergoing reconstruction, Jacksonville’s home capacity is projected to sit around 43,000 for the 2026 season. With that context, both the team and the league likely operate under the reasonable assumption that the Jaguars’ home games will be sold out regardless of the opponent.
But the financial calculus matters here too. NFL ticket revenue is split 60-40 between home and visiting teams, with the home team retaining the larger share, while 40% is distributed league-wide among all 32 franchises. With that structure in mind, the league as a business entity would naturally prefer that Jacksonville’s marquee matchups take place in venues capable of being fully packed at premium ticket prices, maximizing revenue for every owner in the process. London’s larger venues fit that model in ways that a 43,000-seat temporary configuration simply cannot. The business logic is understandable.
But from a purely on-field perspective, the relocation of two premier home matchups adds a very real and very significant layer of difficulty to Jacksonville’s 2026 mission to defend the AFC South title.
Notably, per the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Jacksonville “protected” the Steelers matchup from international play, in lieu of the Houston and Philadelphia matchups.
Teams with international dates have the ability to “protect” two home games, though that number could soon be reduced. They do that to ensure better matchups and more marquee games for their season-ticket holders.
Pittsburgh’s media and fanbase have suggested that Jacksonville likely protected the Steelers matchup because of their well-documented history of traveling in large numbers, a factor that has historically turned opposing stadiums into de facto home games for Pittsburgh. There may be some truth to that. But there’s another explanation worth considering: Jacksonville has true history with the Steelers that predates the current AFC South alignment. Protecting this game may have been just as much about giving Jaguars fans the treat of a marquee, rivalry-flavored AFC Central matchup as it was about ticket demand. It’s a game that carries weight in both cities, and Jacksonville’s front office likely recognized that.
For what it’s worth, the Jaguars own the all-time series advantage over Pittsburgh, leading 15-13. The most recent meeting came in 2023, when Jacksonville won 20-10 in Pittsburgh, a result that Steelers fans would probably prefer to forget.
Overall, Jacksonville had the option to protect any two of the following eight 2026 home games:
- Pittsburgh Steelers
- Philadelphia Eagles
- New England Patriots
- Houston Texans
- Indianapolis Colts
- Washington Commanders
- Tennessee Titans
- Cleveland Browns
With those options in play, it’s difficult to pinpoint exactly which second matchup Jacksonville chose to protect over the AFC South rival Texans and the NFC contending Eagles. However, reports suggest the Jaguars opted to protect Mike Vrabel’s New England Patriots, a somewhat surprising choice given the alternatives. Their 2025 placement as a top AFC team adds layers to 2026 playoff seeding.
The decision to leave the Texans and Colts matchups unprotected would be the more eyebrow-raising element of the two, if accurate. The Colts, in particular, represent a favorable home draw by any historical measure, as Indianapolis hasn’t won a game in Jacksonville since 2014. Holding onto that home-field advantage against a division rival with that kind of recent track record in Duval was a fortunate outcome, even if it wasn’t the product of a deliberate protection decision. Some wins are earned in the standings. Others are earned in the schedule room, and Jacksonville may have gotten a quiet one here.
A Hint of Nostalgia
Speaking of the AFC Central, older Jaguar fans likely remember the Jaguars old division. Before the creation of the AFC North and AFC South Divisions, the Jaguars were members of the AFC Central, after being granted a team in 1995. From 1995 to 2002, the Jaguars frequently battled these divisional foes, often with much success. The team spent eight seasons in the AFC Central, with playoff births in four consecutive seasons from 1996 to 1999, and two division championships. The uber-competitive division also featured up to 6 teams from 1999 to 2001:
- Baltimore Ravens
- Cincinnati Bengals
- Cleveland Browns
- Jacksonville Jaguars
- Pittsburgh Steelers
- Tennessee Titans
Team Schedule Release
In everyone’s favorite annual tradition, the Jaguars’ media team released the following social media post revealing the 2026 schedule:
SuperBowl?!
For those who prefer to put their money where their hope is, the Jaguars currently have +2500 odds to win Super Bowl LXI, according to FanDuel Sportsbook (odds are subject to change).
What are your thoughts on this year’s slate of games, Jaguars fans? Let us know in the comments below!











