Professional football The
National Football League teams play three preseason games a year, with the exception of two teams each year who play a fourth game, the
Pro Football Hall of Fame Game (previously before the
2021 season expansion, four games). These exhibition games, most of which are held in the month of August, are played for the purpose of helping coaches narrow down the roster from the offseason limit of 90 players to the regular season limit of 53 players. While the scheduling formula is not as rigid for preseason games as they are for the regular season, there are numerous restrictions and traditions that limit the choices of preseason opponents; teams are also restricted on what days and times they can play these games. Split-squad games, a practice common in baseball and hockey, where a team that is scheduled to play two games on the same day splits their team into two squads, are prohibited. The NFL has played exhibition games in
Europe,
Japan,
Canada,
Australia (including the
American Bowl in 1999) and
Mexico to spread the league's popularity (a game of this type was proposed for
China but, due to financial and logistical problems, was eventually canceled). The league has tacitly forbidden the playing of non-league opponents, with the last interleague game having come in 1972 between the NFL's
New York Jets and the
Seaboard Football League's Long Island Chiefs and the last game against a team other than an NFL team (the all-NFL rookie
College All-Stars) was held in 1976. Exhibition games are quite unpopular with many fans, who resent having to pay regular-season prices for two home exhibition games as part of a season-ticket package. Numerous lawsuits have been brought by fans and classes of fans against the NFL or its member teams regarding this practice, but none have been successful in halting it. The
Pro Bowl, traditionally played after the end of the NFL season (since 2010 played the week prior to the Super Bowl), is also considered an exhibition game. The
Arena Football League briefly had a two-game exhibition season in the early 2000s, a practice that ended in 2003 with a new television contract. Exhibition games outside of a structured season are relatively common among
indoor American football leagues; because teams switch leagues frequently at that level of play, it is not uncommon to see some of the smaller leagues schedule exhibition games against teams that are from another league, about to join the league as a probational franchise, or a semi-pro outdoor team to fill holes in a schedule.
College and high school football After their spring practice, many
college football teams play a public
intramural exhibition game commonly called the "Spring Game." The purpose of this game is to promote the team and give new recruits an early chance at public game action. Many of these spring games are nationally televised, though not to the same level of prominence as intercollegiate play. True exhibition games between opposing colleges at the highest level do not exist in college football; due to the importance of
opinion polling in the top level of college football, even exhibition games would not truly be exhibitions because they could influence the opinions of those polled. Intramural games are possible because a team playing against itself leaves little ability for poll participants to make judgments, and at levels below the
Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), championships are decided by objective formulas and thus those teams can play non-league games without affecting their playoff hopes. Since the 2024 season, some sportswriters have referred to the
Army–Navy Game as an exhibition because it is played after the
College Football Playoff selection and does not affect either
American Athletic Conference standings or postseason bids.
High school football teams frequently participate in controlled scrimmages with other teams during preseason practice, but full exhibition games are rare because of league rules and concerns about finances, travel and player injuries, along with enrollments not being registered until the early part of August in most school districts under the traditional September–June
academic term. Some states hold preseason events known as "jamborees" in which several pairs of high school football squads take turns playing one half (usually 24 minutes of game time) to give players some experience before the first official game. Another high school football exhibition contest is the
all-star game, which usually brings together top players from a region. These games are typically played by graduating seniors after the regular season or in the summer. Many of these games, which include the
U.S. Army All-American Bowl and
Under Armour All-America Game, are used as showcases for players to be seen by colleges and increase their
college recruiting profile, or for athletes to confirm their choice and sign their
National Letter of Intent outside of
National Signing Day.
Teams outside North America Outside North America, teams will sometimes organize exhibition games as part of their pre season preparations –
German Football League teams for example often schedule games against second or third tier opponents ahead of their regular season. Exhibition games are also sometimes scheduled between teams from different countries which would otherwise never play each other – including on occasion between non-North American teams and North American college teams. As a result of the
COVID-19 pandemic leading to the cancellation of regular league play in many places, some teams scheduled exhibition games instead, including the
Dresden Monarchs hosting the
Wroclaw Panthers on September 20, 2020. == Canadian football ==