NFL to return to Real Madrid's Santiago Bernabeu stadium in 2026

Since 2013, the Jacksonville Jaguars have played an annual "home" game in London, excluding 2020, under a separate agreement ⁠with the UK beyond the NFL's main international series. NFL owners voted in December ⁠2024 to ‌increase the number of overseas games, with Commissioner Roger Goodell expressing a desire for up to 16 international fixtures ⁠annually in the near future.


Reuters | Updated: 02-02-2026 17:48 IST | Created: 02-02-2026 17:48 IST
NFL to return to Real Madrid's Santiago Bernabeu stadium in 2026

The NFL plans to return to the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium in Madrid for ‌a regular season game in 2026, it said on Monday, continuing the league's growing commitment to international expansion.

The ⁠venue, home to soccer giants Real Madrid, hosted its first NFL game in November 2025, when the Miami Dolphins defeated the Washington Commanders 16-13 in overtime. The ​contest was part of a seven-game international series that year, with ‍further games played in London, Berlin, Dublin and Sao Paulo.

Looking to broaden its global footprint and attract untapped markets, the NFL plans to expand its international fixtures to nine games ⁠in ‌2026, with matches ⁠confirmed in Melbourne, Rio de Janeiro, Mexico City, Munich, London, and now Madrid. The league aims ‍to grow its presence in new regions, with Australia set to host its first ​game in Melbourne, featuring the Los Angeles Rams as the designated home ⁠team.

The league has also committed to hosting three regular-season games over five years at Rio ⁠de Janeiro's Maracana Stadium, beginning in 2026. Since 2013, the Jacksonville Jaguars have played an annual "home" game in London, excluding 2020, under a separate agreement ⁠with the UK beyond the NFL's main international series.

NFL owners voted in December ⁠2024 to ‌increase the number of overseas games, with Commissioner Roger Goodell expressing a desire for up to 16 international fixtures ⁠annually in the near future.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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