The safety spot has become one of the NFL’s most valuable chess pieces, and the league keeps proving it. Offenses are leaning harder into multiple-tight-end looks, and that has pushed teams to prioritize defensive backs who can cover, tackle, and survive in the box without blinking.
Even this year’s draft reflected the trend, with Caleb Downs going to the Cowboys at No. 11, Dillon Thieneman landing with the Bears at No. 25, and three more safeties coming off the board in the second round.
With that in mind, here are five of the league’s best safety pairings heading into 2026.
Atlanta tops the list with Jessie Bates and Xavier Watts. The Falcons may not get much love as a franchise, but their back end is loaded.
Watts arrived as a third-round rookie from Notre Dame and wasted no time becoming a full-time force, playing 99% of the snaps while posting five interceptions, 96 tackles and 11 passes defensed. That production helped him finish fourth in Defensive Rookie of the Year voting.
Bates, meanwhile, keeps stacking elite seasons. He earned second-team All-Pro honors in 2025, his third such nod, and has 27 interceptions over eight seasons with the Bengals and Falcons.
He’s also been remarkably durable, missing just three games in his career.
Baltimore checks in next with Kyle Hamilton and Malaki Starks, a duo that could make life miserable for opposing quarterbacks. Hamilton is already the standard at the position.
The 2022 first-round pick out of Notre Dame has three All-Pro selections, including two first-team honors, in his first four seasons. Over the past three years, he’s produced 31 passes defensed and 21 tackles for loss, a reminder that there isn’t much he can’t do.
Starks looks like the right partner for him. The first-round rookie from Georgia started 15 games and played in all 17 last season, finishing with two interceptions and 84 tackles while handling 94% of the snaps.
With former Chargers defensive coordinator Jesse Minter now in Baltimore, there’s room for Starks to keep climbing.
Green Bay’s tandem of Xavier McKinney and Evan Williams is right there as well. McKinney has been a home run signing for the Packers, earning All-Pro honors in both seasons with the team and finishing eighth in Defensive Player of the Year voting in 2024.
He’s one of the league’s best coverage safeties, with 10 interceptions overall and eight of them coming in his first season in Green Bay. Williams has quickly become a strong sidekick.
The 24-year-old fourth-round pick in 2024 became a full-time starter last season and delivered three interceptions, four tackles for loss, 100 tackles and five passes defensed while playing 86% of the defensive snaps.
Denver’s pair of Talanoa Hufanga and Brandon Jones gives the Broncos another elite safety room. Hufanga arrived from the 49ers in free agency in 2025 and made an immediate impact, earning second-team All-Pro honors after playing all 17 games and recording 11 passes defensed, six tackles for loss and two sacks.
Health has been the question for him after he was limited to 17 total games over the previous two years, but the talent is obvious. Jones has turned into more than just a solid complement.
After being a good player on his rookie deal with the Dolphins, he has taken off under Vance Joseph in Denver, piling up 193 tackles, 17 passes defensed, four interceptions and two fumble recoveries since 2024.
Cincinnati rounds out the top five with Geno Stone and Jordan Battle. Battle has become one of the league’s more underrated defenders.
Entering a contract year, the fourth-year safety finally settled into a starting role last season after playing fewer than half the defensive snaps in 2023 and 2024. He responded with 96% of the Bengals’ defensive snaps, four interceptions, 125 tackles and two tackles for loss.
Stone is now beside him after joining on a three-year deal following his rookie contract with the Chiefs. A two-time Super Bowl champ, he returns to his native city with plenty of experience, having started 46 games over the past three seasons and totaled 13 passes defensed and three interceptions in that span.
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