Broncos Fans Will Have Strong Opinions On This AFC West QB Ranking

Amidst shifting ranks and veteran grit, Patrick Mahomes remains the top quarterback in the AFC West as we assess the evolving talents heading into 2026.

The AFC West has turned quarterback debates into a weekly sport of their own, and heading into 2026, the order still starts with the same familiar name at the top. Patrick Mahomes remains the standard in the division, even with the Chiefs asking him to carry more of the load than ever. From there, the conversation gets much more interesting.

Kansas City’s offense has made life harder on Mahomes in recent years. The offensive line hasn’t held up the way it once did, the receiver group has taken a hit, and the running game has been almost nonexistent, which is part of why the team brought in Kenneth Walker in free agency.

Even so, Mahomes is still the most established quarterback in the AFC West by a wide margin. He’s a 3-time Super Bowl champion, a multiple-time MVP, and even coming off injury, he’s still the one you’d trust most if you needed a big season.

His touchdown percentage has settled around 4.5 percent over the last three years, and that may just be where the floor lives now. But if you’re betting on anyone in this division to throw 45 touchdowns in a season, Mahomes is still the obvious pick.

The No. 2 spot goes to Bo Nix, and that alone says plenty about how fast his stock has risen. There are fair arguments against putting him this high, and there’s even a case for him being the best quarterback in the division over the last two seasons.

But what Nix has already done in two years is hard to ignore. He’s helped the Broncos reach the playoffs in each of his first two seasons, guided them to the AFC Championship Game last year, and built a reputation as one of the NFL’s most clutch quarterbacks.

Including the playoffs, he has produced 11 game-winning drives. He’s also one of the better dual threats at the position.

The criticism is that he still isn’t the most efficient quarterback snap to snap, and that part of his game has to improve this season. Still, when the moment gets big, he finds a way to make it work, and he’s done it against top defenses.

Justin Herbert lands at No. 3, which is where the talent-versus-results debate really starts to bite. If this were only about physical gifts, Herbert would be the easy answer at the top of the list.

He has the strongest arm in the division, can make every throw, and remains one of the best quarterbacks in football at escaping the pocket and extending plays. But the postseason resume is impossible to ignore.

Since being drafted in 2020, Herbert has played in three playoff games, and his numbers in those games have been rough enough to raise real questions about what comes next. For all the reputation he’s built, he still hasn’t delivered in the biggest moments.

At this stage, it’s fair to expect more.

Kirk Cousins comes in last for the Raiders, whether he ends up as the presumptive starter in 2026 or the team leans into Fernando Mendoza as the future. Either way, Las Vegas is at the bottom of this quarterback group.

Cousins is no longer in his prime, but he can still play competent football. He showed that late last season with the Falcons, who were a sinking ship, and he managed some inspired stretches down the stretch.

The problem is that his ceiling is limited now. He can still function in the pocket, but he’s not the kind of quarterback who creates much on his own anymore.

His last full season as a starter was ugly, with 16 interceptions and 13 fumbles in 14 starts. He did clean up some of the turnover-worthy plays last season, but at 37, turning 38 in August, the range of outcomes is narrow: a decent floor, and not much more.

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