College Football Week 1 of the 2026 season runs from Thursday 3 September to Sunday 6 September 2026, with the full Week 1 slate concentrated on Saturday 5 September as part of the traditional Labor Day weekend opener. Week 1 launches the 156th season of intercollegiate football and the third year of the expanded 12-team College Football Playoff.
What is College Football Week 1?
College football in the United States is contested across multiple NCAA divisions, with the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) representing the top tier. Week 1 is the opening weekend of the regular season and typically features several high-profile neutral-site matchups alongside home openers at each of the 136 FBS programmes.
The 2026 season follows the expanded 12-team College Football Playoff format introduced in 2024. Each FBS team plays 12 regular-season games, with automatic playoff bids going to the five highest-ranked conference champions and seven at-large spots drawn from the College Football Playoff selection committee rankings. Conference realignment continues to reshape the sport, with the SEC, Big Ten, ACC and Big 12 now holding the majority of historic powerhouse programmes.
When is College Football Week 1?
Week 1 runs from Thursday 3 September through Sunday 6 September 2026. Thursday and Friday nights offer a handful of openers, but the vast majority of the schedule is played on Saturday 5 September. Sunday 6 September hosts a neutral-site primetime game, with Monday 7 September traditionally closing the Labor Day weekend with another nationally televised fixture.
Where is College Football Week 1 played?
Games are played at each host university’s stadium across the United States plus a handful of neutral-site kickoff fixtures. Traditional Week 1 neutral-site venues include Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta (Chick-fil-A Kickoff), Nissan Stadium in Nashville, AT&T Stadium in Arlington and Lambeau Field in Green Bay (Shamrock Series). Campus stadiums typically feature home openers at Michigan Stadium (107,601 capacity, the largest in the US), Beaver Stadium (107,000), Ohio Stadium, Tiger Stadium and Kyle Field.
Key Contenders
Ohio State are the defending national champions after winning the 2024-25 College Football Playoff, with Georgia taking the 2025-26 title under Kirby Smart. Alabama, Texas, Oregon, Penn State, Notre Dame, Michigan, Florida State and Clemson all feature in the perennial College Football Playoff conversation. The SEC and Big Ten are the two dominant conferences, having produced every national champion since the playoff era began in 2014.
Week 1 marquee fixtures in 2026 include Louisville against Ole Miss at Nissan Stadium in Nashville, Baylor against Auburn at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, and the Sunday-night neutral-site meeting between Wisconsin and Notre Dame at Lambeau Field in Green Bay. Each contest kicks off a season that will run through to the College Football Playoff National Championship in January 2027.
How to Watch
In the United States, college football rights are split between ESPN (ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, ABC and ESPN+), Fox Sports (Fox, FS1), CBS Sports, NBC and Peacock (for Notre Dame home games) and The CW (for select Big 12 and ACC games). In the United Kingdom and Ireland, selected games air live on ESPN and Sky Sports NFL. In Canada, TSN shares rights with ESPN’s schedule.
ESPN+ is the primary streaming home for out-of-market fixtures, with most ESPN-family broadcasts available through a live TV subscription or cable. NBC Peacock carries all Notre Dame home games. In non-US markets, the NCAA Live service and ESPN International handle digital distribution of many games.
History and Records
College football dates to 1869, when Rutgers played Princeton in what is recognised as the first college football game. The Associated Press has named a national champion since 1936, and the modern playoff era began with the four-team BCS-successor format in 2014, expanding to 12 teams in 2024. Alabama hold the most modern-era national titles, followed by Michigan (with the most all-time claimed championships) and Notre Dame. The Heisman Trophy, awarded annually to college football’s outstanding player, has been presented since 1935.
Tickets and Attendance
Tickets for Week 1 college football fixtures are sold through each university’s athletics department and their official ticketing partners (typically Ticketmaster or Paciolan). Neutral-site kickoff games tend to command premium prices, often selling out within days of release. Typical Week 1 tickets range from around 50 US dollars for smaller programmes to several hundred dollars for top-tier matchups and marquee neutral-site games.
Frequently Asked Questions
When does College Football Week 1 start?
Week 1 begins with Thursday night openers on 3 September 2026 and runs through Sunday 6 September.
Where is College Football Week 1 played?
Games are staged at each host university’s stadium across the United States plus neutral-site kickoff fixtures.
How can I watch College Football Week 1?
ESPN family networks, Fox, CBS Sports, NBC and Peacock in the US, ESPN and Sky Sports NFL in the UK, TSN in Canada.
Who won the last college football national championship?
Georgia won the 2025-26 College Football Playoff national championship under Kirby Smart.