1995 NFL season

The 1995 NFL season was the 76th regular season of the National Football League. The league expanded to 30 teams with the addition of the Carolina Panthers and the Jacksonville Jaguars. The two expansion teams were slotted into the two remaining divisions that had only four teams (while the other four had five teams): the AFC Central (Jaguars) and the NFC West (Panthers).

Meanwhile, the two teams in Los Angeles relocated to other cities: the Rams transferred to St. Louis and the Raiders moved back to Oakland. During the course of the season it emerged that the Cleveland Browns would relocate to Baltimore for the 1996 season. The Raiders move was not announced until after the schedule had been announced, which resulted in a problem in the third week of the season when both the Raiders and the San Francisco 49ers had games scheduled to air on NBC which ended up overlapping each other.

The season ended with Super Bowl XXX when the Dallas Cowboys defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers to become the first team in NFL history to win three Super Bowls in four years.

Major rule changes

 * An eligible receiver forced out of bounds by a defensive player may return to the field and automatically become eligible to legally be the first player to touch a forward pass.
 * Quarterbacks may now receive communications from the bench from a small radio receiver in their helmets, partly repealing a rule that had been in force since 1956

Final regular season standings
W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, PCT = Winning Percentage, PF= Points For, PA = Points Against Clinched playoff seeds are marked in parentheses and shaded in green

Tiebreakers

 * Indianapolis finished ahead of Miami in the AFC East based on head-to-head sweep (2–0).
 * San Diego was the first AFC Wild Card based on head-to-head victory over Indianapolis (1–0).
 * Cincinnati finished ahead of Houston in the AFC Central based on better division record (4–4 to Oilers' 3–5).
 * Seattle finished ahead of Denver and Oakland in the AFC West based on best head-to-head record (3–1 to Broncos' 2–2 and Raiders' 1–3).
 * Denver finished ahead of Oakland in the AFC West based on head-to-head sweep (2–0).
 * Philadelphia was the first NFC Wild Card ahead of Detroit based on better conference record (9–3 to Lions' 7–5).
 * San Francisco was the second NFC playoff seed ahead of Green Bay based on better conference record (8–4 to Packers' 7–5).
 * Atlanta was the third NFC Wild Card ahead of Chicago based on better record against common opponents (4–2 to Bears' 3–3).
 * St. Louis finished ahead of Carolina and New Orleans in the NFC West based on best head-to-head record (3–1 to Panthers' 1–3 and Saints' 2–2).
 * Carolina finished ahead of New Orleans in the NFC West based on better conference record (4-8 to 3–9).

Playoffs

 * Home team in capitals Winner in bold

AFC

 * Wild-Card playoffs: BUFFALO 37, Miami 22; Indianapolis 35, SAN DIEGO 20
 * Divisional playoffs: PITTSBURGH 40, Buffalo 21; Indianapolis 10, KANSAS CITY 7
 * AFC Championship: PITTSBURGH 20, Indianapolis 16 at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania January 14, 1996

NFC

 * Wild-Card playoffs: PHILADELPHIA 58, Detroit 37; GREEN BAY 37, Atlanta 20
 * Divisional playoffs: Green Bay 27, SAN FRANCISCO 17; DALLAS 30, Philadelphia 11
 * NFC Championship: DALLAS 38, Green Bay 27 at Texas Stadium, Irving, Texas, January 14, 1996

Super Bowl

 * Super Bowl XXX: DALLAS (NFC) 27, Pittsburgh (AFC) 17, at Sun Devil Stadium, Tempe, Arizona, January 28, 1996

Milestones
The following players set all-time records during the season: