Jaguars fans will get their first chance to see the 2026 team when training camp opens July 29 at the Miller Electric Center, and tickets for those open practices go on sale July 15.
Season ticket members can start claiming spots at noon that day, with the general public following at 1 p.m. through the ticket link on the Jaguars Training Camp page. The team is also offering a new priority-access signup on its website, which will send a notification 30 minutes before the public sale and give fans a shot at tickets at 12:30 p.m.
Admission and parking are free, but space is limited and advance registration is required.
The first open practice is set for Wednesday, July 29, and the schedule runs through late August. Unless otherwise noted, parking lots open at 7 a.m., gates open at 7:45 a.m. and practice begins at 8:30 a.m.
The open dates at Miller Electric Center are Wednesday, July 29; Thursday, July 30; Friday, July 31, which is exclusive to season ticket members; Sunday, Aug. 2 for NFL Back Together Sunday presented by Ticketmaster; Monday, Aug. 3; Friday, Aug. 7 for the Teal & White Game, with parking opening at 6:45 a.m., gates at 7:30 a.m., warmups at 8:30 and the mock game at 10:30 a.m.
; Sunday, Aug. 9; Wednesday, Aug. 19 for a joint practice with the Carolina Panthers, with parking at 8 a.m., gates at 8:45 a.m. and practice at 9:30 a.m.
; Sunday, Aug. 23; and Tuesday, Aug. 25 for a joint practice with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
In Other News...
Jaguars Suddenly Linked To A Veteran Fix For A Lingering Problem
The Dolphins have been quiet since the draft, but that does not mean the roster is finished changing before training camp. With Miami in a retooling phase and a veteran linebacker on an expiring deal, the possibility of a move has started to circulate, and it is the kind of depth-market situation that can draw interest from teams looking for an immediate fix rather than a long-term project.
Jacksonville fits that general profile after losing Devin Lloyd in free agency and needing more help in the middle of the defense. Bleacher Report floated a deal built around a late 2027 pick, which is the sort of modest price that can make sense for a team trying to patch a problem quickly, but the bigger question is whether the Jaguars decide the fit is worth acting on before the market tightens. [Read more 🡒]
Jaguars Defense Faces Its Biggest Identity Test After Losing A Takeaway Star
The Jaguars defense spent much of 2025 living off takeaways, a formula that helped cover for low sack totals and kept the unit among the leagues more disruptive groups. Jacksonville finished the regular season with 31 takeaways in 17 games, and when it won the turnover battle, it usually won the game too, going 8-1 in those spots. A big part of that identity came from Devin Lloyd, whose knack for being around the ball gave the defense a playmaking edge it could not always create with pressure alone.
Now the challenge is whether that edge can hold after Lloyds offseason departure. The Jaguars still have the framework of a defense that understands how to hunt the football, and Antonio Johnsons second-half rise helped keep the turnover production from falling apart late in the year. But replacing a player who shaped so many of those game-changing moments is a different task entirely, and it leaves Jacksonville with a real identity test heading into the next phase of the roster build. [Read more 🡒]
