10 most-watched college football games of the 2025-26 season
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The 2025-26 college football season didn’t just break records on the field; it shattered them on the screen. The second year of the 12-team College Football Playoff (CFP) proved to be the ultimate catalyst for viewership, turning once-sleepy postseason windows into appointment television. While traditional powers like Ohio State and Georgia continued to draw massive crowds, the real story was the so-called “Indiana Effect,” as Curt Cignetti’s Hoosiers became a national obsession. From Week 1 blockbusters to a title game that rivaled the World Series in reach, here are the ten most-watched college football games of the 2025-26 season that defined a historic year for the sport (via On3).
10. Orange Bowl (CFP Quarterfinal): Oregon vs. Texas Tech
Viewers: 15.9 Million
Oregon’s defensive masterclass in a 23-0 shutout of the Red Raiders proved that the “Ducks in the Big Ten” experiment was a frightening success this year as well. Despite the lopsided score, fans stayed glued to the screen to see if Texas Tech’s high-flying offense could crack the code on a rainy New Year’s Day. This matchup comfortably rounded out the top 10, outdrawing every first-round game and proving the quarterfinal round is the new gold standard for holiday viewing.
9. Week 1: Texas vs. Ohio State
Viewers: 16.6 Million
This Labor Day weekend clash set the tone for the season, marking the largest Week 1 audience ever recorded for a non-conference matchup. The Longhorns’ visit to the Horseshoe lived up to the hype, as Quinn Ewers and Will Howard traded blows in a physical contest that felt like a January game in August. It was the first sign that the expanded 12-team playoff was incentivizing teams to schedule “all-in” matchups that fans clearly crave.
8. SEC Championship: Georgia vs. Alabama
Viewers: 16.9 Million
Even in a world where conference championships no longer grant automatic byes for everyone, the SEC’s crown jewel still commanded the attention of the Deep South. Georgia’s clinical 28-7 dismantling of the Crimson Tide was a statement of dominance that temporarily quieted the “Alabama is back” whispers. The numbers reflect a slight dip from previous years, mainly because the outcome felt decided by the third quarter, but it remained a titan of the ABC/ESPN portfolio.
7. Peach Bowl (CFP Semifinal): Indiana vs. Oregon
Viewers: 18.0 Million
The Hoosiers officially became America’s team during this Friday night semifinal, as Indiana systematically picked apart Dan Lanning’s vaunted defense. Viewership peaked in the fourth quarter when it became clear that the Big Ten’s newest powerhouse was being out-executed by the conference’s “basketball school.” While semifinal ratings were slightly down compared to the quarterfinal “New Year’s Six” slate, Indiana’s presence kept the momentum high enough to dominate the night.
6. Big Ten Championship: Indiana vs. Ohio State
Viewers: 18.3 Million
For the first time in history, the Big Ten Championship was the most-watched conference title game of the year, narrowly edging out the SEC. A record-breaking audience on FOX watched Lucas Oil Stadium turn into “Cignetti Central” as the Hoosiers secured their first Big Ten title since 1967. The game’s 18.3 million average was a testament to the sheer novelty of Indiana’s rise and the enduring massive draw of the Ohio State brand.
5. Week 14: Ohio State vs. Michigan
Viewers: 18.4 Million
“The Game” remains the king of the regular season, as the Buckeyes finally ended their losing streak against the Wolverines in front of a massive FOX audience. With both teams fighting for seeding in the 12-team bracket, the stakes felt as high as the 2006 “Game of the Century,” despite Michigan’s slightly down year. It was the most-watched regular-season telecast on any network since 2011, proving that tradition still pays the bills in the modern era.
4. Sugar Bowl (CFP Quarterfinal): Ole Miss vs. Georgia
Viewers: 18.7 Million
This New Year’s Day shootout was the perfect advertisement for the expanded playoff, featuring high-speed offenses and a raucous Superdome atmosphere. The Rebels and Bulldogs combined for 30 points in the fourth quarter alone, a chaotic finish that saw viewership peak north of 21 million in the final minutes. Ole Miss’s upset win provided the first major shock of the postseason, ensuring the remaining games would generate maximum curiosity among casual fans.
3. Cotton Bowl (CFP Quarterfinal): Miami vs. Ohio State
Viewers: 19.0 Million
The “U” officially announced its return to the elite tier in a New Year’s Eve thriller that delivered ESPN a 37% ratings increase over last year’s time slot. Mario Cristobal’s physical offensive line wore down the Buckeyes in the second half, a performance that resonated with 19 million viewers looking for a classic slugfest. It was the second-most-watched Cotton Bowl of the modern era, behind only the 2015 semifinal between Alabama and Michigan State.
2. Rose Bowl (CFP Quarterfinal): Indiana vs. Alabama
Viewers: 23.9 Million
The “Granddaddy of Them All” hosted the game that genuinely changed the season’s narrative, as Indiana blew out the Crimson Tide 38-3. The sight of an Indiana jersey dominating the Rose Bowl turf was so surreal that it became the most-watched non-championship game of the 12-team era. At the time, this 23.9 million figure was the highest sports rating of the year outside of the NFL, proving that the Hoosier Cinderella story had officially gone mainstream.
1. CFP National Championship: Indiana vs. Miami
Viewers: 30.1 Million
The championship game was a ratings white whale, becoming the first college football game to reach 30 million viewers in over a decade. Indiana’s 27-21 victory was the most-viewed non-NFL sports event since Game 7 of the 2016 World Series, peaking at 33.2 million viewers in a frantic first half. The combination of a 15-0 Indiana team and a resurgent Miami brand created a perfect storm for ESPN, cementing this season as the most successful in the network’s history.
Conclusion
The 2025-26 season proved that when you give more teams a seat at the table, more fans pull up a chair to watch. The meteoric rise of Indiana wasn’t just a fluke; it was a proof of concept for the expanded playoff, showing that new blood can generate old-school ratings. As we look ahead to the 2026 season, the bar for viewership has been set remarkably high, but given the sport’s current trajectory, don’t be surprised if these records are broken next January again.
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