The NFL will not be using replacement officials during the 2026 season as the NFL Referees Association has ratified a new seven-year labor agreement with the league.
After nearly two years of growing rancor and on-and-off negotiations, the union approved the deal following a Thursday night vote that stretched into midday Friday. The pact runs through the 2032 season, succeeding the prior deal that was set to expire May 31.
The new agreement contains a series of provisions that enhance performance monitoring and referee training. Among the key terms:
- The creation of a formal development program for officials that will include a training camp of their own and practices.
- Increased access for league officials to referees during the offseason—something the NFL was particularly interested in to help aid in further development.
- The creation of a “bench” of additional officials that will backstop the existing group of referees.
Talks between the two sides had improved considerably in recent weeks, raising expectations a deal would be reached.
“This agreement is a testament to the joint commitment of the league and union to invest in and improve officiating,” said NFL EVP of football operations Troy Vincent. “It also speaks to the game officials’ relentless pursuit of improvement and officiating excellence. We look forward to working together for the betterment of the game.”
Disaster Averted
The deal eliminates the need for the NFL to bring in replacements for the upcoming season, as had increasingly been the expectation. Those officials would have been primarily drawn from smaller colleges and minor pro leagues—and those levels of football remain well below the speed and complexity of NFL play.
Specifically, the labor agreement nullifies a provisional rule approved at the NFL’s recent annual meeting in Arizona. There, team owners ratified a measure in which the league’s officiating department in New York could consult in real time with replacement officials and use replay to correct clear and obvious calls missed by those alternates.
That additional rule was designed to serve as something of a safety net should replacement officials had been needed, but it’s now moot.
Even with that rule in place, the NFL faced the possibility of a repeat of the start of the 2012 season. That year featured a 110-day lockout of the referees, with replacements pulled primarily from lower-level colleges and minor pro leagues.
Most notably, that period included the infamous “Fail Mary” game in which a Week 3 contest on Monday Night Football between the Packers and Seahawks ended with a Seattle game-winning touchdown that the league later conceded involved an uncalled offensive pass interference penalty. Had that penalty been called, it would have ended the contest in a Green Bay victory. Instead, the Seahawks’ touchdown included two referees standing right next to each other, making opposing calls on the play.
Two days after that game, the NFL and NFLPA reached a deal, and NFL commissioner Roger Goodell acknowledged the widespread attention “may have pushed the parties further along” toward the agreement. The Packers’ loss also helped lead the team to being the No. 3 seed in the 2012 playoffs instead of the No. 2 seed with a first-round bye. Green Bay then lost on the road to San Francisco in the divisional playoffs.
“We see this new CBA as a partnership with the league that benefits our membership but also seeks to make our game better,” said NFLRA president Carl Cheffers. “It is good to get these negotiations behind us so we can focus on preparing for the 2026 season.”
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