The NFL Is Close To Making Significant Officiating Changes
The NFL is reportedly close to making some pretty significant officiating changes for the 2026 season and beyond.
The league is negotiating a new Collective Bargaining Agreement with the officials. Thankfully, it sounds like the league has avoided the worst-case scenario, which would have brought replacement referees - and potential disaster - to the league for at least part of the 2026 season.
In negotiation for the new deal, the league is in the process of making some pretty significant officiating changes for 2026 and beyond, which should be welcomed by all across the league.
The NFL, among other things, is reportedly in the process of developing a "practice squad" for referees, that will be able to travel to games.
This will avoid bad situations where an NFL referee or two are injured during games and the officiating staffs are quickly shorthanded.
NFL's changes to referees are coming
The NFL is also looking to increase competition and accountability for its referees.
"I think it is going to create competition amongst the officials from top to bottom," NFL V.P. of officiating training and development Ramon George told ESPN.
Further details have emerged.
"The competition includes the creation of a "practice squad" that can have up to 12 officials. Per ESPN, members of the practice squad will be assigned to specific crews. They'll travel to game sites. They'll be available to step in, if one of the assigned officials is performing poorly or gets injured. The latter point is an important one," Pro Football Talk reported.
"When referee Adrian Hill suffered a leg injury during a Thursday night game between the Bills and the Texans, umpire Roy Ellison had to pull double duty. The absence of an immediate replacement for Hill (or Ellison) ready to go underscored a major flaw in the NFL's overall officiating process."
It'll be good to see, that's clear.
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This story was originally published June 21, 2026 at 12:00 PM.