The NFL Competition Committee has proposed five rule changes for the 2026 season, set for consideration by league owners at next week's Annual League Meeting. Each proposal requires 75% approval to pass. The changes address onside kicks, kickoffs, alignments, disqualifications and officiating corrections.
The NFL Competition Committee, made up of coaches and executives, presented the proposals ahead of the owners' meeting. One key change would allow the kicking team to declare an onside kick at any time during a game, rather than only when trailing. Teams could not attempt surprise onsides or stack the field to boost recovery chances. This comes as current rules have made onside kicks safer but reduced their success rate significantly, prompting calls for more exciting alternatives. Another proposal aims to close a loophole exploited in 2025 by teams like the Pittsburgh Steelers and Dallas Cowboys. It would place out-of-bounds kickoffs from midfield at the receiving team's 20-yard line, eliminating the incentive to intentionally kick out of bounds and pin opponents at the 25. Pittsburgh special teams coordinator Danny Smith directed kicker Chris Boswell to do so in Week 9 against the Indianapolis Colts, drawing attention after Smith fist-pumped following the penalty. Dallas tried a similar tactic against the Kansas City Chiefs. A third tweak modifies receiving team alignment on kickoffs in the setup zone, adjusting player numbers on the restraining line and spacing to enhance safety and return competitiveness under the league's dynamic kickoff rules made permanent in 2025. For disqualifications, the proposal permits league personnel to consult on-field officials on flagrant football acts or non-football acts without entering the field. This follows an incident last season where Seattle Seahawks receiver DK Metcalf fought a Detroit Lions fan on the Pittsburgh Steelers' sideline during a 29-24 Steelers win. Officials missed it, so Metcalf played on but received a two-game suspension later, contributing to the Lions missing playoffs. Finally, for 2026 only, the NFL Officiating Department could correct clear officiating errors during referee work stoppages involving the NFL Referees Association, avoiding repeats of the 2012 replacement referee controversy like the Packers-Seahawks touchdown call.