The NFL Draft’s first round last Thursday was optimized for television with a tighter format that produced real results, but the viewership still failed to match last year’s.
ESPN said the draft’s first round averaged 13.2 million viewers across multiple linear and digital platforms, including ESPN, ABC, NFL Network, the ESPN app, and YouTube, among others. That figure is down 3% from the comparable figure from the 2025 draft.
The event’s viewership peak remains the 15.5 million who tuned in for the first round of the 2020 NFL Draft—held in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic and when fans were particularly starved for sports content. The 2026 figure now ranks third behind the marks from 2020 and last year.
This year’s first round of the draft featured a more streamlined structure in which teams were limited to 8 minutes between first-round picks, down from the prior 10 minutes. That led to a meaningful reduction of more than half an hour compared to the length of last year’s first round, and a crisper pace throughout the evening.
The draft audience result somewhat mirrored the situation from Super Bowl LX in February, which also produced a historically high figure but just missed matching the average from 2025. The decline also happened despite last fall’s arrival of Nielsen’s Big Data + Panel methodology and improved tabulation of out-of-home audiences.
More to Come
Viewership for the full three-day draft will be released later this week. Even with the first-round decline from last year, though, the first-round viewership provided another signal of how large the league’s offseason showcase has become, as it still will be one of the most-watched sports broadcasts for the seven-month period between Super Bowl LX and the start of the 2026 regular season.
On-site in Pittsburgh, the draft drew a record attendance of 805,000 across the three days, and that mark is likely to be short-lived, as organizers in Washington, D.C., are already targeting 1 million for the 2027 draft.
Las Vegas selected Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza with the No. 1 pick, and he holds a unique position among NFL rookies between his own personal history, the long-struggling Raiders franchise, and Mendoza’s already-close relationship with team co-owner Tom Brady.





