| Week | Date | Opponent | Home/Away | Time (CT) | TV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preseason 1 | Sat, Aug 15 | Los Angeles Rams | Home | 3:00 PM CDT | KSHB 41 |
| Preseason 2 | Sat, Aug 22 | Tampa Bay Buccaneers | Away | 6:30 PM CDT | KSHB 41 |
| Preseason 3 | Fri, Aug 28 | Seattle Seahawks | Home | 7:00 PM CDT | KSHB 41 |
| 1 | Mon, Sep 14 | Denver Broncos | Home | 7:15 PM CDT | ESPN/ABC |
| 2 | Sun, Sep 20 | Indianapolis Colts | Home | 7:20 PM CDT | NBC |
| 3 | Sun, Sep 27 | Miami Dolphins | Away | 12:00 PM CDT | CBS |
| 4 | Sun, Oct 4 | Las Vegas Raiders | Away | 3:25 PM CDT | CBS |
| 5 | — | BYE | — | — | — |
| 6 | Sun, Oct 18 | Los Angeles Chargers | Home | 3:25 PM CDT | CBS |
| 7 | Sun, Oct 25 | Seattle Seahawks | Away | 7:20 PM CDT | NBC |
| 8 | Sun, Nov 1 | Denver Broncos | Away | 3:25 PM CST | CBS |
| 9 | Sun, Nov 8 | New York Jets | Home | 12:00 PM CST | CBS |
| 10 | Sun, Nov 15 | Atlanta Falcons | Away | 12:00 PM CST | CBS |
| 11 | Sun, Nov 22 | Arizona Cardinals | Home | 12:00 PM CST | CBS |
| 12 | Thu, Nov 26 | Buffalo Bills | Away | 7:20 PM CST | NBC |
| 13 | Thu, Dec 3 | Los Angeles Rams | Away | 7:15 PM CST | Prime Video |
| 14 | Sun, Dec 13 | Cincinnati Bengals | Away | 3:25 PM CST | FOX |
| 15 | Mon, Dec 21 | New England Patriots | Home | 7:15 PM CST | ESPN/ABC |
| 16 | Sun, Dec 27 | San Francisco 49ers | Home | 3:25 PM CST | CBS |
| 17 | TBD (Flex) | Los Angeles Chargers | Away | TBD | TBD |
| 18 | TBD (Flex) | Las Vegas Raiders | Home | TBD | TBD |
The NFL’s handling of Kansas City’s 2026 opener was almost theatrical. Denver was on the other side of the line as Arrowhead glowed gold on a Monday night. For better or worse, the Chiefs continue to be that team. It’s the kind of opening assignment the league reserves for teams it believes can draw a crowd. In Kansas City, the announcement of the schedule is often celebrated like a small holiday, and this year’s version offers fans plenty to ponder before a single snap is made.
The first thing that stands out is how front-loaded the travel becomes as the year goes on. The latter part of October becomes truly harsh after a Week 5 bye that comes early enough to feel almost premature. In Week 7, Kansas City travels to Seattle for a Sunday night game before immediately returning to Denver the next week. Two road trips, two different time zones, and two games against spoiler-worthy teams. It’s difficult to ignore how little time passes between them.
There are complications of its own during Thanksgiving week. On Thursday, November 26, the Chiefs take on Buffalo in front of a nationwide crowd that has grown accustomed to seeing these two teams square off in January. Six days later, they are back on a short week once more, this time traveling to SoFi Stadium to play the Rams on Thursday night. While back-to-back short weeks are not unheard of, scheduling them against elite opponents is the kind of peculiarity that coaches complain about in press conferences but seldom address in practice.

Additionally, primetime exposure hasn’t decreased. Six nationally televised night games are scheduled throughout the year, including a Sunday night trip to Seattle and a Monday game against New England in late December, if you include the Monday opener against Denver. The league continues to view Kansas City as an appointment, regardless of other roster changes from year to year, and it doesn’t seem like this practice will change anytime soon.
The way the season ends, however, may be the most interesting detail. Flex games against the Chargers and Raiders, division rivals whose precise dates and times depend on how the standings turn out, are scheduled for weeks 17 and 18. The league has quietly acknowledged that this stretch could have an impact on playoff seeding, which raises a small amount of uncertainty in the months leading up to kickoff.
In contrast, the preseason appears to be almost routine: a trip to Tampa Bay, a home game against the Rams, and then Seattle back at Arrowhead. It’s a chance to sort out depth before the games start counting, nothing dramatic. However, given how the schedule becomes more constrained once October arrives, there’s a feeling that this year’s preseason is under a little more scrutiny than usual.
When taken as a whole, it reads like a schedule designed for a team that the league still believes is essential to watch, interspersed with parts that are challenging enough to see if that reputation is maintained. More about this season will probably be revealed by how Kansas City handles the Seattle-Denver double or those consecutive short weeks than by the opening game.

