The New Landscape of College Football Realignment
The 2026 college football season will be defined by a wave of realignment that reshapes the traditional power structures across the sport, as conferences adjust to new memberships and market pressures.
North Dakota State, a program that has captured ten national championships with a dominant eight‑title run in just nine seasons, is set to transition from the Football Championship Subdivision to the Football Bowl Subdivision, bringing a legacy of excellence to the higher tier.
Sacramento State will join the Mid‑American Conference on a football‑only basis, but both newcomers will have to wait until the 2028 season before they become eligible for postseason competition under current NCAA bylaws.
The Mountain West, once a hub for programs like Boise State and San Diego State, will lose several of its flagship teams to the re‑imagined Pac‑12, which will shrink to eight members after absorbing five former Mountain West schools and Texas State from the Sun Belt.
Boise State, long regarded as the premier program of the Mountain West, is now projected to be the top contender in the new Pac‑12 lineup, while the conference’s overall competitiveness will be tested by the influx of new members.
Meanwhile, the Sun Belt and Conference USA will also see shifts in membership for the 2026 season, as schools jockey for positioning in a landscape that is increasingly defined by geographic dispersion and television market considerations.
The ripple effects extend beyond the field, influencing recruiting pipelines, financial distributions, and the strategic planning of athletic departments across the country.