Buffalo tops the difficulty list for Detroit’s newly released 2026 slate, with the Lions facing a Week 2 road game on Thursday night at the Bills’ new Highmark Stadium.
That matchup stands out because Detroit gets a short week, Buffalo should still be healthy early in the season, and Joe Brady’s offense may offer little fresh tape despite his familiarity with Josh Allen.
New England in Munich ranks No. 2, with the Lions losing a home game and getting no bye around the international trip, while Week 18 at Green Bay and late games at Chicago and Minnesota round out the hardest stretch.
The softest matchups on paper are home against the Jets, at Miami and home against Tennessee, reflecting the fourth-place schedule Detroit drew after finishing 9-8 the previous season.
The ranking still warns that Detroit’s apparent scheduling edge could fade once the season starts, especially in NFC North games and a year-end gauntlet that may shape the playoff race.
Could the so-called 'easy' matchups mask hidden dangers that threaten Detroit's path to the postseason, especially with opponents' offseason changes?
How might the Lions' international game in Munich and back-to-back cold-weather finales impact their playoff hopes compared to past dome teams?
Will the Lions' AI-influenced schedule and late-season challenges derail their quest for an NFC North title, or can their revamped roster deliver historic success?