
EA Sports has held exclusive rights to the NFL brand since December 2004, making Madden the only officially licensed football sim for nearly two decades. While other games like NFL 2K once offered alternatives, they haven’t held up in more recent years.
The exclusive contract between EA and the NFL was nearing its end, and many were wondering whether the agreement would continue or if something was about to change. The current deal—a $1.5 billion extension signed in 2020—runs through the 2025 season, with a conditional option to extend into 2026 if revenue targets are met.
It has by the way, even with all the gaming industry layoffs that have been happening recently.
The NFL and EA Sports have agreed to an extension through the 2030 season for the league’s Madden video-game license. pic.twitter.com/KtYCxNzwM9
— Ari Meirov (@MySportsUpdate) October 22, 2025
Now we have a little insight from Ari Meirov’s X (formerly Twitter) account, MySportsUpdate, that the NFL and EA Sports have agreed to an extension through the 2030 season for the league’s Madden video game license.
Is this a good thing or a bad thing? We can’t honestly say, as we have no other frame of reference, when it comes to football sim video games. The last contender was 2K, and they were not able to gain exclusive rights like EA and slowly became known for only basketball sims.
Sports video game fans rejoice (?) as EA Sports will continue to dominate the sports scene with the Madden series. Unless, of course, Madden still refuses to fix the issues and glitches that a lot of players have seen within the newer games. You know, the player models not being proportional and slightly unrealistic expectations when it comes to equipment—i.e., the helmets and how they fit and pad sizings (how in this age?).
Even though some fans are hoping for 2K to also gain exclusive rights to using the NFL licensing, that might not be happening anytime soon unfortunately.
Maybe being the big fish in the pond for the last two decades has made them slip when it comes to quality for the game, as they have no competition to create the game. They seem more concerned with pushing out as many units as they can in order to meet their bottom line.
With the license locked in through 2030, the real question isn’t who owns the rights—it’s whether Madden and EA Sports will earn them.
More must-reads:
+
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!