Texans Fans Will Circle These Training Camp Dates Fast

Dive into the Houston Texans' 2026 training camp schedule to discover the best days for fans to experience the excitement of open practices firsthand.

Houston’s training camp calendar has a little something for every kind of Texans fan this year, but not every open practice is built the same.

The team has announced eight dates when fans can claim free tickets and get a close look at camp at the Houston Methodist Training Center. With the Texans entering their milestone 25th season, the draw is bigger than a routine summer workout. This is the first real chance to watch a roster that’s being built to chase a title.

If you’re trying to decide which day deserves a spot on your calendar, the clearest answer is Tuesday, August 18. That’s the headline event on the schedule: a joint practice against the Las Vegas Raiders.

It’s not just another camp session, either. The offense will be facing a different defense, the pass rush will be tested against an unfamiliar line, and the whole setup should tell fans more than a normal practice ever could.

Add in “Cal’s Cookout” presented by H-E-B, and it stands out as the most attractive day on the slate. Tickets for that one figure to go quickly.

For fans who want the best overall atmosphere, Saturday, August 8 is the other obvious target. It’s the only evening practice, set for 6:00 PM, and that matters in Houston.

August heat can make a morning session miserable, so this is the one date that gives supporters a better shot at actually enjoying the experience. The cooler setting also changes the feel around the field, giving it more of a “Friday Night Lights” look.

For families with younger kids, it’s the most comfortable option on the schedule.

Then there’s the camp-goer who wants football without the extra showmanship. For that crowd, the stretch from Monday, August 3 through Wednesday, August 5 is the sweet spot.

Those morning practices are where the work gets sharper and the roster battles start to show themselves. Pads come on, the tempo picks up, and the coaching gets more direct.

It’s the kind of setting where you can hear the details of camp: the contact, the chatter, the corrections, and the competition for spots at wide receiver and on special teams.

The full open practice calendar begins with Saturday, August 1 at 9:00 AM for Back Together Saturday, the fan kickoff that should bring the biggest opening-day buzz. After that come Monday, August 3 at 9:00 AM, Tuesday, August 4 at 9:00 AM, Wednesday, August 5 at 9:00 AM, Friday, August 7 at 9:00 AM, Saturday, August 8 at 6:00 PM, Monday, August 10 at 9:00 AM, and finally the August 18 joint practice.

For fans with only one shot to see camp, August 18 is the premium ticket. For those trying to survive the Houston heat, August 8 is the smart play. And for the football diehards who want the rawest look at the team, that early-week run from August 3 to August 5 is where the real camp action lives.

In Other News...

Texans Fans Just Got A Familiar Reason To Worry About C.J. Stroud

C.J. Strouds rough finish last season is still hanging over the Texans as the next chapter opens, and the concern is not just about whether he can bounce back, but how much patience the team will have if the early returns are uneven. Houston spent the offseason trying to make life easier for its quarterback, upgrading the offensive line, the rushing attack and the receiving group, so the support system is there if Stroud is ready to take advantage of it.

Davis Mills is part of why this conversation keeps resurfacing. He went 3-0 as a starter while Stroud was sidelined, giving Houston a reminder that the backup spot is not just a placeholder if the offense stalls again. For now, the Texans are still banking on Stroud to settle in and look more like the player they expected, but the speculation around the quarterback room is not going away anytime soon. [Read more 🡒]

Texans Offense Is Suddenly Drawing The Kind Of Buzz Fans Wanted

The Texans spent the offseason trying to give C.J. Stroud a cleaner runway, and the early buzz around the unit reflects that effort. With Nick Caley now having a full year of experience working with Stroud, Houston is banking on better continuity after the communication and timing issues that showed up last season, while the front office also added help around its quarterback in the form of David Montgomery, several new offensive linemen and rookie wideouts Jayden Higgins and Jaylin Noel.

National analyst Ted Nguyen has even put Houston among his top five breakout offenses for the coming season, which is the kind of attention Texans fans have been waiting to hear. The bigger question is whether those changes can translate into the kind of rebound Stroud looked capable of when the system is clicking, especially with more responsibility at the line of scrimmage and a deeper supporting cast to lean on. [Read more 🡒]

Jaguars AFC Hype Still Has One Problem They Can't Ignore

The Jaguars can generate plenty of AFC buzz after a strong push into the conversation with the conferences established powers, but the Texans are still the team in their own division that can complicate the climb fastest. Houston has already shown it can stack wins, and its recent playoff run gave the franchise a reminder that it is no longer just trying to keep pace in the South.

Houston also looks built to make life harder again in the coming season, with ESPN placing its projected starting roster well ahead of Jacksonvilles and the Texans adding talent across the board while their rivals drew criticism for a quieter offseason. The bigger issue for Jacksonville is that the Texans have been the more reliable team in the matchup lately, and if the AFC race tightens the division could decide more than just bragging rights. [Read more 🡒]