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How the NFL Playoff Format Actually Works (And Why It's the Whole Point of 20-0)

By 20-0 Editorial Updated July 16, 2026

If you’re only casually familiar with the NFL postseason, the format explains a lot about why this game’s whole premise — and its name — center on the number 20, not 17. Here’s exactly how it works.

Fourteen teams, seven per conference

Each conference (AFC and NFC) sends seven teams to the playoffs: the four division winners, seeded 1 through 4 by regular-season record, and three wild card teams — the next-best records regardless of division — seeded 5 through 7.

Only one seed skips a round

This is the detail that actually matters for “20-0.” The #1 seed in each conference — the team with the best overall record — gets a bye through the Wild Card round. Every other seed has to play (and win) a Wild Card game just to advance to the Divisional round.

That means the #1 seed’s path to the Super Bowl is exactly three games: Divisional round, Conference Championship, Super Bowl. Every other seed’s path is four: Wild Card, Divisional, Conference Championship, Super Bowl.

Every round is single elimination

There’s no best-of-anything in the NFL playoffs. Lose once, and the season ends immediately, regardless of how dominant the regular season was. This is a genuinely different structure from sports where playoff “perfect runs” get built around best-of-seven series — in the NFL, a single bad half in the Divisional round can end a run that started 17-0.

Why this makes “20-0” the right number, not “17-0”

Put the pieces together: a truly perfect NFL season means winning all 17 regular-season games, finishing as the #1 seed (which a perfect regular season essentially guarantees), taking the bye, and then winning exactly three more single-elimination games. 17 plus 3 is 20 — which is the entire reason this game (and its name) treats “20-0” as the real finish line, not the 17-0 regular-season record that most competing games stop at.

It’s also why no team has done it since the schedule expanded to 17 games in 2021 — and why only one team in NFL history has ever finished a complete, undefeated season under any format. See our full history of perfect and near-perfect seasons for exactly how close (and how rarely) it’s happened.

How this maps onto the game

20-0.online’s own playoff simulation mirrors this exactly. Finish the regular season with a strong enough record to qualify, and your seed determines your path: the #1 seed gets the bye and needs three wins; every other seed plays a full four-round gauntlet starting at a Wild Card-equivalent game. Lose any single game, and the run ends — there’s no recovering in a best-of-anything the way some other sports’ roster-builder games allow. See our full rules walkthrough for how the draft feeds into all of this.

Frequently asked questions

How many teams make the NFL playoffs?+

14 total — seven from each conference. Four are division winners (seeded 1 through 4 based on record), and three are wild cards (seeded 5 through 7).

Does every playoff team play the same number of games?+

No. The #1 seed in each conference gets a bye through the Wild Card round, so they only need to win three games (Divisional, Conference Championship, Super Bowl) to complete a perfect postseason. Every other seed needs to win four straight elimination games starting from Wild Card weekend.

Is the NFL playoffs single elimination?+

Yes, every round. Unlike sports that use best-of-seven series, one loss in any round ends a team's season immediately — which is exactly why finishing a perfect season is so much harder than just having a strong regular season.

Sources

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