The AFC East looks nothing like the division Buffalo used to own.
As 2026 approaches, New England is the team holding the crown after a 2025 season that flipped expectations on their head. What looked like a bridge year turned into a 14-3 finish, an AFC East title, and a Super Bowl trip for Mike Vrabel’s group. That kind of jump changes how everyone else has to view the division.
The Patriots also made sure it doesn’t look like a one-off. Bringing in A.J.
Brown gives the offense a true top-end playmaker, the kind of weapon that can change how defenses have to line up. It’s a clear sign that New England isn’t treating 2025 like a lucky break.
They’re building from it.
So Buffalo enters 2026 in a different spot than the one it occupied for much of its recent run. Josh Allen still keeps the Bills in the conference’s upper tier, and the roster is still built to win.
But they’re not walking into a soft division and trying to hold everyone off anymore. They’re chasing the team that just won the East, reached the Super Bowl, and then added another major offensive piece.
That makes the matchup feel more like a reclaiming mission than a routine defense of the throne.
Miami, meanwhile, is heading in the opposite direction. The Dolphins are in a full reset after a massive roster teardown and a financial mess that leaves them with roughly $179 million in dead cap.
Moving on from Tua Tagovailoa, Tyreek Hill, Jaylen Waddle, Jalen Ramsey, Bradley Chubb, and Minkah Fitzpatrick strips the roster down to the bare bones. This is not a retool.
It’s a full restart.
The identity that made Miami such a dangerous team in recent years is gone with it. The speed, the star power, the weekly explosiveness - all of that has been wiped away as the franchise tries to rebuild structure while carrying one of the toughest cap situations in football.
That leaves the Dolphins much further from the top of the division picture.
The Jets sit in a more stable, but still limited, lane. Geno Smith gives them experience and steadiness at quarterback, but not enough to realistically swing the AFC East race. They can still make life annoying for opponents, and divisional games tend to tighten up no matter what, but over a full season they don’t look like a team that can take control of the standings.
So the AFC East in 2026 is pretty straightforward: New England trying to prove 2025 was real, Buffalo trying to take the division back, Miami rebuilding from scratch, and the Jets hanging around as a spoiler more than a true contender.
That’s the shift. Buffalo isn’t just dealing with the pressure of being the favorite anymore. Now it has to chase.
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Bills Were Somehow A Split Second From NFL History Against Baltimore
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Buffalos scare came on a two-point attempt that stayed alive long enough to create the kind of chaos most teams never see, with the defense momentarily in a spot where one wrong step would have handed the Bills a single point. Instead, the play ended with Baltimore escaping the end zone area and the oddest scoring sequence in NFL history still sitting untouched. [Read more 🡒]
Bills Still Have One Flaw That Could Haunt Them In January
Buffalo spent the offseason patching holes on both sides of the ball, and on paper the roster looks deeper and more balanced than it did a year ago. The defensive front has more help, the offense has more options, and there is a real sense that the Bills have tried to make life easier on everybody else by strengthening the pieces around them.
Still, one area remains a little less settled than the rest. The linebacker group is built around Terrel Bernard, Dorian Williams and rookie Kaleb Elarms-Orr, but there is still a clear need for the group to prove it can hold up week after week. If the front does its part, the linebackers may only have to be solid. If not, it could become the sort of midseason issue Buffalo can live with in October and regret when the games tighten in January. [Read more 🡒]
