Bears No Longer Sneaking Up on Anyone After 2026 Schedule Release
The Chicago Bears spent years searching for relevance. Now they are one of the NFL's main attractions.
That reality became even clearer after the league officially unveiled Chicago's 2026 schedule on Thursday night. The Bears are scheduled for seven standalone or prime-time games, including appearances on Thanksgiving and Christmas, as the NFL fully embraces the franchise's growing national appeal entering Ben Johnson's second season as head coach.
But the attention comes with a different kind of pressure.
Last year, the Bears surprised the league by going from worst to first in the NFC North behind the rapid development of Caleb Williams. Chicago won 11 games, captured the division title and finally gave fans meaningful football deep into January again.
That breakthrough season changed expectations around the organization.
The Bears are no longer viewed as an up-and-coming team trying to prove itself. Heading into 2026, Chicago is being discussed as a legitimate contender in the NFC, and the schedule reflects it. Between major prime-time matchups, playoff-caliber opponents and huge divisional games late in the season, the Bears will spend much of the year in the center of the NFL spotlight.
Just some happy little matchups pic.twitter.com/mxaSU2VlOk
— Chicago Bears (@ChicagoBears) May 14, 2026
NFL Gives Bears National Showcase in 2026
The league clearly believes Chicago has become one of football's biggest draws.
The Bears will play seven standalone or prime-time games this season, including Monday Night Football matchups against the Philadelphia Eagles and Seattle Seahawks, a Thursday night game against the New England Patriots and a Sunday Night Football showdown with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
Chicago will also play on Thanksgiving against the Detroit Lions before hosting the Green Bay Packers on Christmas Day in one of the most anticipated games on the NFL calendar.
For the first time in franchise history, the Bears are scheduled to play games on Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday during the same season.
Chicago Bears 2026 Schedule
- Week 1: at Panthers
- Week 2: vs. Vikings
- Week 3: vs. Eagles (Monday Night Football)
- Week 4: vs. Jets
- Week 5: at Packers
- Week 6: at Falcons
- Week 7: vs. Patriots (Thursday Night Football)
- Week 8: at Seahawks (Monday Night Football)
- Week 9: vs. Buccaneers (Sunday Night Football)
- Week 10: Bye
- Week 11: vs. Saints
- Week 12: at Lions (Thanksgiving)
- Week 13: vs. Jaguars
- Week 14: at Dolphins
- Week 15: at Bills
- Week 16: vs. Packers (Christmas Day)
- Week 17: vs. Lions
- Week 18: at Vikings
Caleb Williams Enters Different Tier of Expectations
Much of the excitement surrounding Chicago revolves around Williams and his continued development into one of the NFL's brightest young stars.
The former No. 1 overall pick delivered several signature moments during the 2025 season, including multiple fourth-quarter comebacks and a playoff victory over Green Bay that completely changed the energy around the franchise.
Now the expectations are significantly higher.
Williams is no longer simply trying to prove he belongs. The conversation entering 2026 centers around whether he can elevate Chicago into true Super Bowl contention.
The schedule will immediately test that growth.
Road games against the Buffalo Bills, Seahawks and Packers will become major measuring-stick opportunities, while late-season divisional matchups against Detroit and the Minnesota Vikings could ultimately determine the NFC North race.
NFC North Could Again Run Through Chicago
The division remains one of the NFL's deepest, but Chicago no longer looks intimidated by it.
The Bears defeated Green Bay in the playoffs last season and split close games with both Detroit and Minnesota during the regular season. Johnson has quickly reshaped the culture of the franchise, while general manager Ryan Poles continues building around Williams with a more complete roster.
There are still major challenges ahead.
Chicago faces one of the league's toughest schedules, and every divisional rival enters the season believing it can reach the playoffs. The Lions remain dangerous, the Packers still have championship aspirations and the Vikings continue to hover in the postseason picture.
But the biggest difference entering 2026 is simple. The Bears are no longer chasing relevance. They are now one of the teams everyone is watching.
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This story was originally published May 14, 2026 at 9:16 PM.