For those of you who’ve read and hung out at Buffalo Rumblings long enough, you understand that I’m against giving much in the way of Buffalo Bills game predictions. That’s especially the case when asked to do so during a Five Questions gauntlet in-season. Yet, here I am, writing an admittedly far too early article to predict how Buffalo will finish it’s 2026 regular season.
Spoiler alert: The Bills will face a tough schedule this coming fall, regardless of what strength of schedule says, or the when
and where of any matchup. Buffalo is among the NFL elite, and they’re tasked with showcasing it against the best competition thanks to their consistency as a winning organization that features quarterback Josh Allen.
Yet, something about this schedule gives me pause. Sure, all anyone can do at this point is consider how 2025 went for every team, and what they’ve done in the offseason (personnel and player additions/losses). A deep dive into Buffalo’s personnel changes and how they affect matchups game-by-game doesn’t feel the best move to make at this moment. We have zero idea how the team will operate under new leadership — again, just that there’s substantial energy in the building and key players are muscularly bigger.
For years, I’ve enjoyed WGR 550’s segment featuring Howard Simon’s often sardonic weekly look at the Bills’ upcoming schedule based on recent events. It’s with him in mind that I’ll paint this picture for Rumblers as a psuedo “Pick the Bills” event. In other words, don’t take this too seriously. I have no idea what the heck Buffalo is going to do in September and beyond.
With that out of the way comes this: The folks at FanDuel Sportsbook believe they have a good grasp on Buffalo’s football future in 2026. Right now, FanDuel Sportsbook has the Bills as (-135) favorites to win (back) the AFC East. They’re positioned second to win the AFC (+500), just behind the Baltimore Ravens (at +490). As it pertains to Buffalo’s Week 1 road tilt against the Houston Texans, they’re currently trending as favorites (-1.5).
It would seem that betting folks are currently buying in on the Bills’ chances this season:
So much will change between this article and Week 1, and the regular-season roller coaster will send Bills Mafia into fits of pandemonium and panic from one breath to the next between every game. For now, let’s just try and enjoy the fact that meaningful NFL football has an official outline for the 2026 season.
With that, here goes my best (or otherwise) attempt at predicting the Bills’ W/L record in 2026.
Predicting Bills’ W-L record of 2026 NFL season
Week 1: at Houston Texans (1 p.m. ET | CBS)
I’m handing the Bills a loss to open the regular season. It’s a road game for a first-time head coach, and in a stadium where Josh Allen has played some of his worst NFL football. Sure, it’s a new era and we keep hearing about the energy around One Bills Drive.
The Texans, however, didn’t get worse on defense and they’re certain to be ready to get the bad taste of that playoff loss in New England out of the way. Allen will have to wait a bit longer for his first win in Houston’s swanky dome.
Bills: 0-1
Week 2: home opener vs. Detroit Lions
Another thing I really dislike is picking the Lions to lose — at least in any game where they don’t play the Bills. Detroit is also finally a good football team, but one that tends to play a chaotic brand of football similar to Buffalo.
I see the Bills winning their home opener for obvious reasons. Some things are bigger than head-to-head roster analysis. Things like the first game in a new stadium featuring the best fan base in all of sports roaring at the cameras of Thursday Night Football. It’s a primetime stage that favors Josh Allen, and I see him rising to the occasion once again here in the first matchup of a three-game home stand to break in the new place.
Bills: 1-1
Week 3: vs. Los Angeles Chargers
There are some things anyone predicting future records avoids. Then there’s me, someone who tends to avoid even mentioning what those items are, simply because I believe I have jinxing powers. (Yes, that’s now fully in play with this schedule release.) Hopefully folks get what I’m angling toward here. Essentially, it’s that in considering the Bills’ best against the Chargers’ best, victory goes to Allen and a Buffalo team playing its second-consecutive game at home.
Bills: 2-1
Week 4: home vs. New England Patriots (1 p.m. ET | CBS)
What to make of the Patriots based on 2025? Well, they figured out how to make great luck work in their favor until the end. Can we know much about New England in 2026 with three games in the books ahead of this Week 4 game? Perhaps not.
Is Buffalo losing this game? You’d like to think no, especially with the drama that’s sure to follow head coach Mike Vrabel. Still, remember that in 2025, the Bills dropped one at home to the Pats. It’s not happening this time. Get the troughs, and rally ‘round the personal massage devices! Be sure to let Tom Brady know that Buffalo’s hotels have no room for him, too. He can sleep in the parking lot if he draws this matchup as an announcer.
Bills: 3-1
Week 5: at Los Angeles Rams (Monday Night Football)
Buffalo can’t win every game, right? This is likely to be billed as a potential Super Bowl matchup, and a game featuring the two most-recent NFL MVPs in Allen and quarterback Matthew Stafford. These Rams are a tough out, no matter the circumstances. Even playing what was arguably their best football a couple seasons ago, Buffalo still managed to fall to the NFC’s equally potent LA club.
I see this as a loss for the Bills: 3-2
Week 6: at Las Vegas Raiders (4:25 p.m. ET | CBS)
The second half of a two-game road stand out west see the Bills taking on a Raiders team that could find reason to start rookie quarterback Fernando Mendoza by Week 6. Even if veteran quarterback Kirk Cousins plays, and even if tight end Brock Bowers and running back Ashton Jeanty go Large Hadron Collider mode, Buffalo isn’t losing to the rebuilding Raiders. Right?
Bills: 4-2
Week 7: BYE WEEK
4-2 entering the early bye is a good place to be, especially with Baltimore on the horizon.
Week 8: vs. Baltimore Ravens
This is a tough game to predict. If Sean McDermott was still the head coach, there’d be every reason to lean on his record out of bye weeks. It’s a new era, and the Bills could be ripe for a let down against a Ravens team that has plenty of scores to settle.
Bills lose, drop to: 4-3
Week 9: at Minnesota Vikings (Monday Night Football)
Look, The Bills aren’t losing to the Vikings this time, whether Kyler Murray or J.J. McCarthy plays quarterback.
Bills: 5-3
Week 10: at New York Jets
You can try and sell me on how great the Jets seemed to have done in the 2026 NFL Draft; that Breece Hall is being paid well. It doesn’t matter. A team serious about the Super Bowl doesn’t lose this game, no matter what traps may lie in waiting.
Bills: 6-3
Week 11: vs. Miami Dolphins
You can try and sell me on how great the Dolphins seemed to have done in the 2026 NFL Draft; that Devon Achane is being paid well. It doesn’t matter. A team serious about the Super Bowl doesn’t lose this game, no matter what traps may lie in waiting.
Bills: 7-3
Week 12: vs. Kansas City Chiefs (Thanksgiving night)
Buffalo’s first home game on Thanksgiving, where there’s sure to be some larger (and perhaps even unconventionally spicy) fowl eats for the winner. It’s a tale with plenty of history, where the Bills seem to have the Chiefs’ and Patrick Mahomes’ number in the regular season.
Anything can happen, but… Bills win: 8-3
Week 13: at Patriots
If Buffalo wins the first matchup (Week 4), then it’s fair turnabout to say New England figured a few things out in the nine weeks between the two meetings. Still, I’m picking the Bills here. The Patriots could be better than last season’s team and even better than they were in Week 4, but I sense revenge will be on Buffalo’s mind all season long. And they’re going to need this game.
Bills: 9-3
Week 14: at Green Bay Packers (Sunday Night Football)
Full disclosure: I’m not head over heels about Jordan Love’s game. The Packers do have a wealth of talent, and lots of people like LaFleur as head coach. Another thing I’m not hyped about is a late-season game at Lambeau Field. Now, if James Cook gets going in 2026 like he did in 2025, all bets are off — but a team that plays games in a region with awful weather doesn’t always play its best games in adverse conditions. Buffalo loses in Green Bay, which raises questions about their talent against top-tier NFC teams.
Bills: 9-4
Week 15: vs. Chicago Bears (Saturday in primetime)
I don’t really know how to gauge this one. It’s a game most saw as an ideal Week 1 matchup for the Bills as a home opener. That, as we well understand now, won’t happen. Yes, the DJ Moore factor is a real thing, and we should have a real good idea of how he fits with Allen by the time this game rolls around one month before the postseason.
On one hand, I see no way Buffalo loses this game if McDermott was still the head coach. He’d do just enough to squeak by and ask the team to avoid playing flashy ball that reveals much ahead of three in a row against the AFC to close the regular season. But in 2026, it’s Joe Brady’s show. Was his offense in 2025 a byproduct of McDermott’s demands? We’ll only be told so if it looks vastly different with him at the helm.
All this to say, I could see a real scenario where Brady gets bold and plays to win (or calls mind-numbing plays behind the LOS), with a mistake here or there handing them another loss against a tough NFC opponent. Another home loss will hurt, make no mistake. But dropping games against the NFC is a tiny silver lining.
Bills: 9-5
Week 16: at Denver Broncos (Christmas Day)
What a tough draw for Buffalo this season. That is, getting in the frame of mind to travel to Colorado for a Friday afternoon game against the Broncos as part of their Christmas Day celebration. These guys are professionals, but there’s little (or nothing) in the way of routine for the group in playing both a Friday game and on such a massive holiday.
Can the Bills win this game? All you need to do is understand that Josh Allen exists. Sure, they can win it, but there could be plenty of distractions to point toward them losing an unconventional matchup against a playoff-caliber team. Plus, the Broncos added Jalen Waddle to the wide receivers room. Bo Nix could have a wealth of options catching passes in 2026.
Bills: 9-6
Week 17: at Miami Dolphins
Just as I see McDermott finding a way to defeat the Bears if still in charge, it’s also easy to see this game going off the rails with him still in the building. We saw that happen against this team in 2025. McDermott didn’t lose a ton of games, but those he did stood out in really bad ways. He marched a wholly unprepared team into South Beach for an indefensible beatdown.
That’s something that should stick with the key players and coaches on this season’s roster. Playing in the heat at the peak of the afternoon will affect a Bills team in late-season form. If Miami’s rookie class takes a while to adapt, then it comes down to how well first-time defensive coordinator Jim Leonhard schemes to stop Devon Achane. Jaylen Waddle.
Bills: 10-6
Week 18: vs. New York Jets
Another year, another regular-season ending against the Jets. One of these seasons, Gang Green will play decent-to-good football. The NFL schedule makers are counting on that happening in 2026, if they saw fit to lock in this AFC East clash mere days before the Wild Card round.
Forget all that. Buffalo has big plans and they can’t relax and rest players in the final game of the season if this prediction proves true. With that, the Bills complete a season sweep of the AFC East, reminding everyone that rose-colored glasses fit well when reflecting back on what was the Patriots’ fortune in 2025.
Bills: 11-6
Before writing this, I had talked myself into the idea of a 10-7 season at best. I thought 9-8 might even be realistic with what could pan out as 11 potentially losable games. Then I remembered that every NFL game is losable, and that motivation is real in professional football. There’s a ton of unfinished business for Allen and the Bills, and it begins with fixing letdowns against their AFC East rivals.
If you’d please, allow me time to cross my fingers and toes that the jinx isn’t in play at this point. You can in kind press your luck at FanDuel Sportsbook to see if you’ve got what it takes to make a play on the Bills in 2026.
What do you see happening with the Bills’ regular season on a week-to-week basis in 2026?











