Can the Kansas City Chiefs Still Make the Playoffs? Here Is the Roadmap
The image of Patrick Mahomes walking off the field following a loss has become an uncomfortably familiar sight for fans at Arrowhead Stadium this season. Following a Sunday night defeat against the Houston Texans, the Kansas City Chiefs sit at a 6-7 record. For the first time in the Mahomes era, the franchise is staring down the very real possibility of a season ending in early January.
Head coach Andy Reid took public responsibility for costly fourth-down calls. Travis Kelce, usually the picture of reliability, has been scrutinized for critical drops. The offense has sputtered in moments where it used to soar. The mathematics of the NFL standings are cold and unfeeling, and right now, they are not in Kansas City’s favor.
However, the door is not shut. While the probability models have dropped the Chiefs’ playoff chances to roughly 9 to 15 percent, a path remains. It is a narrow road that requires help from other teams and a sudden reversal of fortune for Kansas City, but it is technically possible. Here is the exact mathematical roadmap required for the Chiefs to secure a spot in the 2025 postseason.
Kansas City Must Win Out
The first requirement is the only one fully within the Chiefs’ control. To have any realistic shot at the No. 7 seed, Kansas City must win all four of its remaining games. This would bring their final record to 10-7.
The remaining schedule offers a mix of opportunity and danger. They host the Los Angeles Chargers and the Denver Broncos, while traveling to face the Tennessee Titans and the Las Vegas Raiders.
The home games are the pivot point. Arrowhead Stadium has long been a fortress, but the team is just 5-2 at home this year. They must sweep the Chargers and Broncos to stay alive. The road games appear more manageable on paper, as the Titans and Raiders have struggled significantly this season. If Kansas City can rediscover its offensive rhythm and secure four consecutive victories, they place the pressure squarely on the teams ahead of them in the standings.
The Chargers Must Stumble Down the Stretch
The Chiefs have officially lost the AFC West title, meaning the Wild Card is their only entry point. The Los Angeles Chargers, currently sitting at 9-4, are the primary obstacle. For Kansas City to leapfrog Los Angeles, the Chargers must finish the season with a 1-3 record or worse over their final four games.
This scenario hinges on specific outcomes. First, Kansas City must defeat Los Angeles in their upcoming head-to-head matchup. Second, the Chargers must lose to the Broncos in Week 18. These two specific losses would leave the Chargers with a 4-2 division record, identical to what the Chiefs would hold if they win out.
If the Chargers finish 10-7 and the Chiefs finish 10-7, the tiebreaker process begins. With identical division records, the next step involves common games. For the math to work in Kansas City’s favor, the Chargers need to drop one more game against either the Dallas Cowboys or the Houston Texans. If Los Angeles loses three of their last four, including the divisional matchups, Kansas City would hold the advantage and overtake them in the standings.
Indianapolis Needs to Fall Back
The Indianapolis Colts currently hold an 8-5 record and sit in the driver’s seat for a Wild Card spot. For the Chiefs to pass them, the Colts need to collapse. Kansas City needs Indianapolis to finish the season 10-7 or worse.
The schedule makers have done the Chiefs a favor here. The Colts have the most difficult remaining strength of schedule in the league, with games against the Seattle Seahawks, San Francisco 49ers, Jacksonville Jaguars and Houston Texans.
Personnel issues also plague Indianapolis. With starting quarterback Daniel Jones out for the season due to an Achilles injury, the Colts are in a precarious position. Even with the reported signing of veteran Philip Rivers, integrating a 44-year-old quarterback into the lineup with four weeks remaining is a massive variable. If the Colts lose two of their final four games, they open the door for a 10-7 Chiefs team to slide past them based on conference standings and strength of victory tiebreakers.
Navigating the Logjam with Baltimore and Miami
The Chiefs are not the only team sitting at 6-7. The Baltimore Ravens and Miami Dolphins share the same record, creating a potential traffic jam for the final playoff seed.
If multiple teams finish at 10-7, the NFL tiebreaker rules become complex. In a three-way tie involving the Chiefs, Dolphins, and Ravens, head-to-head records are thrown out if one team has not played the others. The tiebreaker then reverts to conference record.
Currently, the Ravens hold a slight edge in conference record at 4-5, compared to 3-5 for Kansas City. For the Chiefs to win a multi-team tiebreaker, they need to win their remaining AFC matchups to boost their conference record to 7-5. Simultaneously, they need the Ravens and Dolphins to stumble against AFC opponents. The Ravens face a gauntlet against the Bengals, Packers, Patriots, and Steelers. It is highly probable Baltimore drops at least one of these contests, which would help clear the path for Kansas City.
The Reality of the Situation
The path is laid out, but the margin for error is zero. This is unfamiliar territory for a franchise that has hosted five consecutive AFC Championship games. The human element cannot be ignored. The players are pressing. The coaching staff is searching for answers. The swagger that defined the Chiefs for half a decade has been replaced by urgency.
Patrick Mahomes has a career record of 9-0 in the Wild Card and Divisional rounds. He knows how to win when the stakes are highest. However, before they can think about Super Bowl runs, they simply need to survive the next month. The math says there is a chance. Now, the Chiefs must prove they still have the fight required to take it.
