Even the most optimistic attendance projections for the now-completed NFL Draft in Pittsburgh proved to be too conservative as history was made.
The NFL said it drew a three-day total of 805,000 for the draft, surpassing the league record of 775,000 set in 2024 in Detroit, and racing well past the 600,000 who turned out last year for the draft in Green Bay. The final total also easily surpassed the preliminary predictions of 500,000 to 700,000 for the attendance in Pittsburgh.
A solid foundation toward a new milestone was set during Thursday’s first round with a single-day record turnout of 320,000. The robust fan activity, however, continued during the subsequent rounds on Friday and Saturday.
Inside the Numbers
Like prior NFL Drafts, there are some caveats with the attendance numbers. The league counted everyone who entered the official draft locations—which in the case of Pittsburgh involved both the North Shore around Acrisure Stadium, as well as the separate NFL Draft Experience at Point State Park. That means fans attending on multiple days, or exiting and reentering the sites, were counted multiple times.
On Saturday, local officials also made several public callouts to fans, encouraging additional turnout in pursuit of the record, particularly after some early-morning rain.
Those counting methodologies and marketing strategies, however, have been in place since the NFL turned the draft into a traveling showcase in 2015—allowing for a straightforward comparison between 2026 and prior years. Anecdotally, downtown Pittsburgh was also jammed throughout the weekend, creating a series of shifts to local services.

What’s Next
The robust turnout in Pittsburgh, meanwhile, has local and state officials already thinking about what other big events it can attract to town. Steelers owner Art Rooney II hasn’t given up on bringing a Super Bowl there, either, despite Acrisure Stadium not having a roof.
“It’s all about the pitch, and we’re going to keep pitching,” Pennsylvania Deputy Secretary of Tourism Anne Ryan tells Front Office Sports. “Whether it be something like an Army-Navy Game, a UFC fight, or [another] Winter Classic, we’re going to be pursuing those big, national events. If Pittsburgh can hold an NFL Draft, it absolutely changes the conversation with the site selectors.”
The Pittsburgh experience also raises the bar considerably for Washington, D.C., which will host the 2027 draft. That event will be held on the National Mall, and officials there are already targeting an attendance tally of 1 million.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said on The Pat McAfee Show that representatives from 10 different cities were in Pittsburgh scouting for prospective draft bids, and that the ongoing growth of the event is creating additional internal pressure.
“We’re going to probably have to start allocating the drafts a little further in advance,” he said.