
The San Francisco 49ers face the longest travel schedule in NFL history with stops in Melbourne and Mexico City. This series previews every 2026 game ranked by championship impact—from early measuring sticks to the critical late-season clashes that will define the Niners' season and hopes for a deep playoff run.
The San Francisco 49ers will travel more than 38,000 miles during the 2026 regular season—more plane time than any team in NFL history. Along with a pair of international trips, the Niners' schedule features five prime-time matchups and multiple difficult stretches throughout the year.
The 49ers enter 2026 with a familiar mandate but an unfamiliar map. After a season that ended later than reasonably expected but earlier than the Faithful hoped, San Francisco's path back to the playoffs takes the team across two continents, into multiple prime-time windows, and through a late-season stretch that closely resembles a postseason grind. While the 49ers' preseason "strength of schedule" may be near the middle of the pack, their schedule is anything but average.
Every NFL game is important, but not every matchup carries the same playoff weight. Some serve as early measuring sticks, while others carry tiebreaker implications that won't be felt until January. Many of the 49ers' 17 games will shape the NFC West, conference playoff seeding, and how the 2026 season will ultimately be defined.
We begin with a set of games against teams led by new head coaches with familiar faces and experience on the Niners' sideline at Levi's Stadium. Enjoy these while you can, because the San Francisco 49ers' 2026 regular season schedule gets pretty ugly pretty quickly.
Sunday, November 8, 1:05 p.m. PT, Levi's Stadium
A Bay Area rivalry currently on hiatus returns to Levi's Stadium as the Las Vegas Raiders, led by new head coach Klint Kubiak, kick off our list of the San Francisco 49ers' top games for 2026. The Niners draw Las Vegas the week after their bye, which will hopefully leave San Francisco rested and prepared for the challenge.
Aside from his surname, Klint Kubiak is best known as the Seattle Seahawks' 2025 offensive coordinator, the 49ers' 2023 passing game coordinator, and the former Minnesota Vikings quarterback coach who worked with Kirk Cousins during some of the QB's more serviceable NFL campaigns. The Raiders plan to "redshirt" their No. 1 overall draft pick, quarterback Fernando Mendoza, for most of the upcoming season, which forced the team into the "overpriced bridge quarterback" market, a market ruled by one man alone—an aged free agent fresh off a 2-year, $100 million contract.
This Week 9 matchup ranks here not based on the lively history between the teams, coaches, or players, but because the path to victory appears to be the most straightforward of any game on San Francisco's slate. A clean performance against an AFC West opponent in transition is the expectation, as head coach Kyle Shanahan currently holds a 4-game post-bye winning streak, including 6 victories over the past 7 seasons.
Shanny may have the date circled or "hearted" on his calendar for his own personal reasons, but for the Bay Area's lone remaining NFL franchise, this matchup is a game the 49ers simply need to win if they expect to contend in 2026.
Sunday, September 20, 1:25 p.m. PT, Levi's Stadium
The 49ers' home opener brings the Miami Dolphins and another first-time NFL head coach to Santa Clara, former Green Bay Packers defensive coordinator and prior San Francisco defensive backs coach Jeff Hafley, along with new offensive coordinator but old friend of the team, Bobby Slowik. 2026 also marks the beginning of the Malik Willis era in Miami, as former Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa takes his talent—and nearly $100 million in dead cap space—from South Beach to Atlanta.
Also absent from the Dolphins' organization is long-time Shanahan assistant and fan favorite Mike McDaniel, whose abrupt dismissal as Miami's head coach reportedly caught him completely off guard. At the time, McDaniel was focused on assisting the team in their 2026 GM search while finalizing one-on-one player "exit interviews" in preparation for the upcoming year.
Miami's 2025 season was bumpy; Tagovailoa's play and availability were suboptimal, and McDaniel's press conferences remained awkward but less entertaining, so a parting of ways at season's end was a realistic outcome as the team managed just 2 wins over their first 8 weeks. But after a November loss to the Baltimore Ravens resulted in the ouster of general manager Chris Grier rather than McDaniel, who followed up with a four-game winning streak and a final record in the "respectable" realm of 7-10, it appeared the Dolphins' HC would be afforded a fifth season to determine his long-term future in Miami.
Avoiding bad news on coach anti-holiday "Black Monday" appeared to seal the deal, and scheduled meetings regarding the Dolphins' new GM search and schematic changes for the upcoming campaign were icing on the cake. By Thursday, McDaniel's focus was finishing his remaining "exit interviews" and preparing for a playoff run in 2026, rather than concern over his immediate future.
Tight end Darren Waller concurred as the pair "reflected on the year" during their pre-scheduled Thursday morning meeting and discussed the Dolphins' interest in the receiving threat returning to play a prominent role for the Dolphins in 2026. But 12 minutes in, owner Stephen Ross interrupted the meeting. McDaniel told Walker they would "finish the conversation later." They never did. Waller left the office for a massage. The next time he checked his phone, McDaniel had been fired.
"Stephen Ross kicked the door in," Waller recounted on Johnny Manziel's Glory Glaze podcast. "I was at the scene of the crime, bro."
"After careful evaluation and extensive discussions since the season ended, I have made the decision that our organization is in need of comprehensive change," Ross's official statement began.
There's a compelling case that Ross is correct, although likely not in the way he intends. Since purchasing the team and becoming Chairman and Managing General Partner in 2009, the Dolphins are 118-133, have cycled through seven head coaches, and own the NFL's longest postseason win drought, now 25 years and running. His tenure has also been marked by tampering sanctions, lost draft picks, a federal lawsuit, and allegations of racism and intentional "tanking" to improve draft positioning. Ross may be correct that the organization needs comprehensive change, but the results under his stewardship offer little evidence he's equipped to deliver it.
Whether the Dolphins are in a state of disarray is debatable, but their rebuilding status is not—just don't tell running back De'Von Achane. Miami cleaned house this offseason, racking up dead cap numbers that would make 49ers general manager John Lynch blush. The speedy receiver duo, Tyreek Hill and Jaylen Waddle? Both are gone. Bradley Chubb, Minkah Fitzpatrick, James Daniels—the list goes on, and Miami still owes Jalen Ramsey over $20 million on the cap in 2026.
Setting aside Miami's drama, the obvious question mark surrounding this game for San Francisco is the contest immediately prior—the Niners' showdown with the Los Angeles Rams on the opposite side of the planet. If victorious in Australia, a matchup back in the Bay as 10.5-point favorites over the Dolphins sounds like a favorable situation. But if San Francisco falls to their rivals in Week 1, the 49ers will likely find the effects of their time zone hangover a bit more palpable and the necessity for victory a bit more urgent.
Sunday, September 27, 1:05 p.m. PT, Levi's Stadium
The first NFC West game on our list features the Arizona Cardinals under head coach Mike LaFleur, another former Shanahan assistant. With a coaching tree that's slowly growing into a coaching forest, San Francisco's head coach increasingly faces opposing staffs with a deep familiarity with the 49ers' offense.
LaFleur's arboreal connection runs particularly deep, as the rookie HC began his NFL career as an offensive intern for Browns offensive coordinator Shanahan in 2014. The younger LaFleur brother followed Shanahan to Atlanta for two seasons and then to San Francisco, where he acted as the team's passing game coordinator through the 2020 season.
When the New York Jets hired 49ers defensive coordinator Robert Saleh as their new head coach, LaFleur joined him as the team's official offensive coordinator, with mixed results. The Jets decided to part ways with their OC two years later, but LaFleur quickly found a new home within the extended family as the Los Angeles Rams' offensive coordinator amidst head coach Sean McVay's Super Bowl Hangover coaching overhaul. After a pair of up-and-down seasons in Los Angeles, LaFleur's offense exploded for over 500 points in 2025, which helped the 38-year-old LaFleur secure his first career head coaching gig in Arizona.
The unfortunate reality for LaFleur is the Cardinals' offense isn't going to score 500 points in 2026, but their defense might allow a similar number after coming close in 2025. LaFleur knows his immediate job is to manage Arizona's rebuild, and the transition from working with an NFL MVP under center to renegotiating a 1-11 backup quarterback's contract so he'll show up at training camp will be rocky.
But no matter the opponent, division games hold an extra level of importance, and the Cardinals have been a respectable threat in recent meetings. A divisional loss at home in September would linger through every tiebreaker conversation in December, while two losses to NFC West opponents in three weeks would be borderline catastrophic. The 49ers need to handle the games they are "supposed to handle," and their first matchup with the Cardinals—currently listed as 11.5 underdogs—fits the bill.
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