The NFL's plans to renegotiate media rights deals before the 2026-27 season are increasingly uncertain due to federal scrutiny over sports broadcasting. Streamers would need to offer 'astronomical' fees for the league to consider moving away from traditional broadcast partners.
Key points
NFL plans to renegotiate media rights deals before 2026-27 season
Federal scrutiny is causing uncertainty in negotiations
Streamers need to offer high fees to attract NFL games
DOJ and FCC are involved in examining sports broadcasting
Mentioned in this story
NFLDOJFCC
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell
Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images
The NFLās effort to renegotiate media rights deals early has only become more uncertain in recent weeks.
The league, which earlier this year reportedly set out to ink new deals with all five of its current primary broadcast partners before the 2026-27 season begins in September, almost certainly will not meet that goal. The reasons for that are multiple, but among them is the federal governmentās recent attention on sports fragmentation, particularly with regard to the NFL transitioning games that were once found on traditional broadcast or cable networks over to streaming services.
While it appears as if the federal government will be all bark and no bite when it comes to its pressure on the NFL, with probes from both the DOJ and FCC likely resulting in no tangible actions against the league, the newfound attention from Washington has been enough to at least give the NFL pause.
Further, even if federal pressure doesnāt result in anything tangible, it might be enough to spook the NFL, at least temporarily, into keeping the vast majority of its games on broadcast television, rather than selling another major package of games to a streamer. Thatās the opinion of Business Insider media reporter Peter Kafka, who appeared on a recent episode of John Ourandās The Varsity podcast and claimed it would take a huge offer for the NFL to move a package of games to streaming now.
Discussing the idea of the NFL selling a package of games currently allocated to a linear partner to a streamer, Kafka said, āI still think they would be uneasy about that from just a pure commercial reach, and I think politically it is too much of a tripwire for them to touch. What would have to happen is an Apple or a Netflix would have to offer a astronomical number for them to make it worth their while to get into what surely would be a political fight.ā
Q&A
What are the NFL's current media rights deals?
The NFL has deals with five primary broadcast partners, which it aimed to renegotiate before the 2026-27 season.
Why is the NFL's media rights negotiation uncertain?
Federal government scrutiny over sports broadcasting and fragmentation has introduced uncertainty into the NFL's negotiation process.
What would it take for the NFL to move games to streaming services?
Streamers would need to offer 'astronomical' rights fees for the NFL to consider moving games off traditional broadcast networks.
What federal agencies are involved in the NFL's media rights scrutiny?
The Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) are the federal agencies currently examining the NFL's media rights situation.
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Kafka is saying the NFL likely recognizes it is still too early in the transition to streaming for the NFL to move a large swath of games to a platform like Netflix or Apple, especially in this political climate. One of those platforms would need to offer an outrageous sum of money for the NFL to consider such a move, Kafka believes.
That may be true, which could help explain why networks are feeling emboldened as to not yet engage with the NFL over a new rights deal, perhaps even deciding to wait until after the 2029-30 season when the NFLās opt-out clauses hit.
So far, streamers have not been willing to put up the āastronomicalā numbers the NFL would require to make such a bold transition. Prime Video, the leagueāsĀ Thursday Night Football partner, pays the least of any NFL broadcaster, averaging about $1 billion per year in rights fees. Everyone else has only dipped their toes in the water by purchasing one or two games here and there.
For the moment, it seems that the likelihood of any major shift in how NFL broadcasts are distributed is low, at least over the near-term.