No. 1 overall is the Las Vegas Raiders, followed by the New York Jets at No. 2, the Arizona Cardinals at No. 3, the Tennessee Titans at No. 4, and the New York Giants at No. 5.
Several teams enter with multiple early picks. Cleveland owns two first-round selections (CLE 1st and AJX 1st) along with several mid-round options. Washington has first-, third-, and fifth-round selections plus additional late picks, while the New Orleans Saints boast three first-rounders (NO 1st, 2nd, and 3rd). Kansas City arrives with five picks in the first five rounds, and Cincinnati has four first-rounders (CIN 1st–4th) plus later picks (CIN 6th, DET 6th, CIN 7th).
In the 11th through 15th slots, the Miami Dolphins sit at 11, the Dallas Cowboys at 12, the Atlanta Falcons at 13 (no 1st due to a trade to the Rams), the Baltimore Ravens at 14, and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at 15. The 16th through 20th picks feature the Indianapolis Colts at 16, the Detroit Lions at 17, the Minnesota Vikings at 18, the Carolina Panthers at 19, and the Green Bay Packers at 20 (no first-round pick; multiple mid-round selections).
The 21st through 25th picks are held by the Pittsburgh Steelers (21), the Los Angeles Chargers (22), the Philadelphia Eagles (23), the Jacksonville Jaguars (24), and the Chicago Bears (25). The final seven slots run from the Buffalo Bills at 26 to the Seattle Seahawks at 32, with teams continuing to maneuver via trades and free agency.
This order, finalized after Championship Weekend, reflects trades and strategy as teams prepare for the 2026 NFL Draft. It will continue to evolve as the calendar moves toward draft weekend.