The NFL's ten head coaching vacancies for the 2026 season are now filled, closing a carousel that moved faster than the league's prior two cycles. The final hire came 28 days after the first vacancy opened, approximately ten days quicker than the 2024 window when Chicago became the last team to name Matt Eberflus's replacement. Teams with playoff coaches—New Orleans, Las Vegas, Jacksonville—had to wait until Wild Card weekend exits, compressing their timelines and pushing coordinator negotiations into a narrow five-day window before the Senior Bowl's January 28 roster deadline.
The ten seats included four first-time head coaches and six retreads, a higher retread ratio than 2024's split. New Orleans, Jacksonville, and Chicago hired defensive coordinators from playoff teams, meaning those assistants negotiated staff budgets while their current squads prepared postseason gameplans. Las Vegas and the New York Jets both pulled from the Kyle Shanahan tree—offensive coordinators who'd interviewed for head roles the prior two cycles without landing one. The Jets' hire came with a $9.5 million annual salary, league sources said, tying the fourth-highest public figure for a non-Super Bowl-winning coach. Chicago's deal includes performance kickers tied to playoff wins, a structure more common in college than NFL front offices.
What matters: The compressed timeline creates two immediate effects. First, assistant hirings now happen in a three-week blitz before the Super Bowl, meaning coordinators interviewing for other head coach jobs must choose whether to stay in their current playoff run or jump to a new staff. Second, teams that hired early—Jacksonville on January 12, Las Vegas on January 14—gained a recruiting edge for top assistants, particularly offensive line coaches and special teams coordinators, roles that require scheme fluency and don't carry the name recognition that pulls itself. Jacksonville already announced four of its ten assistant hires, all former head coaches or coordinators willing to step down a rung for stability. Las Vegas is still filling its defensive staff, and two candidates told agents they're waiting to see how the Saints' playoff run unfolds before committing, hoping to interview with the coordinator there if the team exits early.
The retread-heavy class also signals a shift in owner psychology. After the 2024 cycle produced three first-time head coaches who posted a combined 14-37 record in Year 1, owners moved back toward names with prior head coaching experience, even if that experience was mixed. The six retreads averaged 4.2 years in their prior head coach stints, long enough to install a system but short enough that their firings came mid-rebuild, not post-collapse. Two of them—the Saints' and Jets' hires—spent the last three seasons as coordinators for playoff teams, giving them recent credibility without the stink of a failed rebuild. The four first-timers all come from top-five offenses or defenses, a narrower filter than 2024's openness to position coaches with strong interview presence but thinner résumés.
Coordinator salaries are already climbing. Three teams hiring defensive-minded head coaches are chasing offensive coordinators with playcalling experience, and the bidding for one NFC West assistant is rumored near $3.2 million annually, which would break the informal ceiling of $2.8 million set last cycle. Special teams coordinators, often the last hires, are being contacted earlier this year—Chicago reached out to four candidates before naming its head coach, ensuring it had a ready list once the deal closed. Agents say the accelerated process favors assistants who already have offers in hand, as teams don't have time for two-week negotiations. One AFC East team lost its top offensive line coach target because it waited three days to send a formal offer, and the coach signed elsewhere.
What to watch: Assistant hirings finish by February 4, the week before the Super Bowl, when coaching staffs traditionally lock. Coordinator announcements begin this week, with offensive coordinator roles filling first because those interviews don't require defensive gameplanning disruptions. The Saints, Jets, and Jacksonville are expected to announce their coordinators before the Senior Bowl, where coaches conduct interviews and scout draft-eligible players simultaneously. Chicago's delayed timeline—its head coach wasn't hired until January 20—means its staff may not be complete until after the Super Bowl, risking lost time in free agency preparation, which opens March 10. Contract details for the ten head coaches will leak over the next month as agents use them to set baselines for 2027 negotiations.
The Saints' hire includes a reported $8 million annual salary with $24 million guaranteed, the largest guaranteed figure for a coach without a prior Super Bowl appearance. That number now becomes the floor for future hires with comparable résumés, meaning the 2027 cycle—projected to have six to eight openings—will likely see first-time head coaches commanding $7 million minimums, up from this year's $6 million range. Jacksonville's owner told local media the team spent $42 million on its entire coaching staff, a figure that includes performance bonuses and relocation packages, suggesting teams are budgeting closer to $50 million all-in when factoring back-end incentives. The faster close also means teams avoided the public spectacle of dragging searches into February, when media attention intensifies and fanbases grow impatient, though it remains unclear whether speed produced better hires or simply faster ones.
The takeaway
Ten NFL head coach seats filled in 28 days; coordinator market now live with salaries climbing past $3 million as assistant negotiations compress into three-week window.
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