The Tampa Bay Buccaneers have spent the Todd Bowles era living on the edge, and that reality is baked into their 2026 schedule. In three of Bowles’ four seasons as head coach, Tampa Bay won the NFC South by a single game. Last season, the margin flipped the other way: the Bucs started 6-2, finished 8-9 and watched the division slip away by one game.
That’s the backdrop for a schedule loaded with tests that should tell the real story of this team. Tampa Bay has a second-place slate, but the NFC North and AFC North matchups are no gift, and even the common opponents could create problems. If the Bucs are going to get back to the postseason, they’ll need to handle the games that look winnable on paper and prove they belong in the conversation.
One of the earliest measuring sticks comes in Week 5 against Dallas. That game will say plenty about the defense Jason Licht and Bowles rebuilt over the offseason.
New faces like Rueben Bain Jr., Alex Anzalone, Josiah Trotter and Keionte Scott will be thrown right into the fire against a Cowboys offense that ranked top-three in yards per game and top-five in points per game. Tampa Bay will have to deal with George Pickens, CeeDee Lamb and Dak Prescott, one of the league’s best quarterbacks.
It’s also a prime-time stage, and that matters for a Buccaneers team that has been shaky under the lights, going 5-12 in prime time under Bowles and 2-9 since 2022.
The spotlight only gets brighter in Week 9, when the Bucs meet the Chicago Bears right before their bye. Tampa Bay has already seen Bears head coach Ben Johnson before, back when he was running the offense for the Detroit Lions, and he’ll be watching closely as the Bucs take on another explosive attack.
Chicago reached the Divisional Round last season and nearly knocked off the Los Angeles Rams, so this is no soft landing. If Tampa Bay can go into the cold, on prime time, and beat one of the league’s most dangerous offenses, that would be a major sign before the bye.
The first game after the break brings another heavyweight: the Detroit Lions. Since 2023, including the playoffs, Detroit is 3-1 against Tampa Bay.
The Buccaneers have had trouble slowing the Lions’ offense, and Detroit’s defense has done its part too. Last season’s meeting was a 24-9 loss for Tampa Bay, and the Bucs will be playing in Detroit for the fourth straight time in 2026.
The Lions had a down year last season, but their offense is still loaded and their defense has been reshaped under coordinator Kevin Sheppard. A win here would carry real weight heading into the second half.
Then comes the Rams in Week 17, and that one has the feel of a statement game. Sean McVay’s team has been the standard in the NFC for years, and with Puka Nacua, Davante Adams and a defense strengthened by Myles Garrett, Los Angeles could be the league’s best team heading into 2026.
Tampa Bay hasn’t matched up well with them, going 2-9 in the last 11 meetings and 2-4 against McVay’s Rams. The 34-7 loss in Los Angeles last season still hangs over this matchup.
If the Bucs can flip that result late in the year, they’d head into Week 18 with a full head of steam.
That final game could decide everything. Tampa Bay would prefer not to be chasing the NFC South at the buzzer again, but that’s been the pattern since 2022, and it may be the path once more.
The division is crowded with the Atlanta Falcons, Carolina Panthers and New Orleans Saints all trying to make noise, but the Saints may be the most dangerous threat. They showed promise last season with rookie quarterback Tyler Shough and head coach Kellen Moore, then added Jordyn Tyson in the draft and fortified the defense with players like Kaden Elliss in free agency.
That leaves the Saints as the last roadblock on the Buccaneers’ 2026 schedule. If the season comes down to one game, Tampa Bay will need to win on the road to lock up a playoff spot after missing out last year.
The Bucs already did something similar in 2023 when they beat the Panthers on the road to win the division, so the stage isn’t unfamiliar. But this one could end up being the biggest game they play all year.
In Other News...
Mike Evans Is Already Stirring Up Painful Questions For Bucs Fans
Mike Evans move out of Tampa Bay already has the kind of ripple effect that keeps Buccaneers fans looking backward instead of forward. After 12 seasons with the franchise, the veteran receiver has landed with the San Francisco 49ers and is quickly drawing notice in practice, where teammates and observers have been impressed by how seamlessly he has fit into the offense.
The early buzz has centered especially on his work in red zone drills, where Evans has made life difficult for defenders and given the 49ers another proven target near the goal line. For Bucs fans, it is the sort of offseason development that brings an uncomfortable reminder of what they just lost, and why every update from his new team is likely to feel a little more painful. [Read more 🡒]
NFL Verdict On Jason Licht Will Spark Debate Among Buccaneers Fans
Jason Lichts offseason standing is getting fresh national attention, and it should not surprise Buccaneers fans that he remains part of the league-wide conversation after OTAs and minicamp. The recent ranking of NFL general managers took a look at roster construction and how teams have performed lately, placing Licht alongside a few of the sports more recognizable front-office figures as evaluators weighed what has been built and what still needs to be sustained.
For Tampa Bay, the interesting part is less the praise than the placement. Lichts work has helped shape a roster that has stayed competitive and, over time, has given the franchise a steadier foundation than it had before, but any such list invites debate when other executives with strong track records are grouped nearby. The question for Buccaneers fans is whether the national view fully captures how much credit Licht deserves for keeping the team relevant, or whether there is still another tier he can climb with the next wave of moves. [Read more 🡒]
Buccaneers Just Made A Familiar Bet On Their Biggest Weakness
The Buccaneers have circled back to a familiar face for the middle of their defensive line, bringing back Rakeem Nunez-Roches for the 2026 season after three years away. He originally spent 2018 to 2022 in Tampa Bay, then went on to New York before returning to give the Bucs another experienced option in the rotation.
For Tampa Bay, the appeal is pretty clear: more depth, more versatility, and another body built to handle the dirty work inside. Nunez-Roches is expected to fit as a rotational nose tackle, the sort of piece who can help spell Vita Vea and stabilize snaps in a spot where the Bucs have been looking for more reliability as training camp approaches on July 28. [Read more 🡒]
