
How YOU can visit every NFL stadium for a game in the 2025 season… and the exact week-by-week travel itinerary to do it
The realistic schedule sees the ambitious person attending no more than two league games every weekend, with only the overseas trip to Spain, a mid-season trip to Charlotte, and the final week of the season containing one NFL contest.
The games were paired based on geography and scheduling windows to make the cross-country expedition as seamless as possible, per Bookies.com.
The NFL's final week was not included in the schedule to visit all 30 current NFL stadiums, with the Jets and Giants, as well as the Chargers and Rams, sharing league venues.
Using the cheapest flights available between all the cities listed with New York City 's three-major-area airports as a home base, on airfare alone, one fan would spend $5,148 flying to make every single game. That number skyrockets if someone wants comfortable accommodations in the air, ideal flight times, or less hassle for layovers.
Any fan would then have to worry about travel from the airport to stadiums, lodging, food, and plenty of other expenses to make the dream trip a reality. The above total also assumes all air travel goes without a hiccup, and if that were to occur, buy a lottery ticket with that level of luck.
NFL DREAM TRIP SCHEDULE
Week 1: Dolphins vs. Colts in Indianapolis, Vikings vs. Bears in Chicago
Week 2: Panthers vs. Cardinals in Phoenix (Glendale, Arizona), Chargers vs. Raiders in Las Vegas
Week 3: Raiders vs. Commanders in Washington D.C. (Landover, Maryland), Lions vs. Ravens in Baltimore
Week 4: Eagles vs. Buccaneers in Tampa, Jets vs. Dolphins in Miami
Week 5: Dolphins vs. Panthers in Charlotte
Week 6: Seahawks vs. Jaguars in Jacksonville, Bills vs. Falcons in Atlanta
Week 7: Steelers vs. Bengals in Cincinnati, Dolphins vs. Browns in Cleveland
Week 8: Buccaneers vs. Saints in New Orleans, Commanders vs. Chiefs in Kansas City
Week 9: Broncos vs. Texans in Houston, Cardinals vs. Cowboys in Dallas (Arlington, Texas)
Week 10: Ravens vs. Vikings in Minneapolis, Eagles vs. Packers in Green Bay
Week 11: Commanders vs. Dolphins in Madrid, Spain
Week 12: Buccaneers vs. Rams in Los Angeles (Inglewood, California), Panthers vs. 49ers in San Francisco (Santa Clara, California)
Week 13: Falcons vs. Jets in New York (East Rutherford, New Jersey), Giants vs Patriots in Foxborough
Week 14: Cowboys vs. Lions in Detroit, Bengals vs. Bills in Buffalo (Orchard Park, New York)
Week 15: Raiders vs. Eagles in Philadelphia and Dolphins vs. Steelers in Pittsburgh
Week 16: Rams vs. Seahawks in Seattle, Jaguars vs. Broncos in Denver
Week 17: Saints vs. Titans in Nashville
Following this schedule perfectly would see a fan witness most NFL teams multiple times live, with rare exceptions being the Seattle Seahawks and Tennessee Titans, who need their home games in Weeks 16 and 17 for the fan on this schedule to see Sam Darnold or Cam Ward play.
The Miami Dolphins appear the most on the schedule, appearing five times in the first 11 weeks, and with six games overall. Hope this fan enjoys Tyreek Hill and Tua Tagovailoa.
Week 18 is a dealer's choice, or the opportunity to rest at home before the postseason after a hectic travel schedule for the entire fall. A few cities would be tougher to travel between than others to make every single game work.
Week 3 would see an easy drive up Interstate 95 to visit the home grounds of the Commanders and Ravens in one go. Weekends with Cincinnati and Cleveland, Houston and Dallas, and the greater New York and Boston areas are easily feasible.
Other less traditional cities to combine like Kansas City and New Orleans, Seattle and Denver, Jacksonville and Atlanta, as well as Tampa and Miami are on the itinerary.
If traveling internationally, for what would be a spectacular, but unneeded game to see all 30 league stadiums, a few fun matchups exist that would help ease travel on the back half of the NFL slate including Jets-Patriots in Massachusetts and Lions-Eagles in Philadelphia.

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