All NFL fields will have to meet the same surface standards by the end of the 2027 season.

Mark Maske of the Washington Post reported Thursday the NFL will implement a program next year requiring teams to choose a field surface that league spokesperson Nick Pappas said will come “from a library of approved and accredited NFL fields.”

Pappas also said “anyone who has an existing field will have to replace that … field by the end of the 2027 season.”

Pappas went on to compare the situation to the NFL’s helmet testing process in which players are eventually prevented from wearing low-performing models:

Field surfaces have been a major talking point across the league, and this figures to add some element of an acceptable standard for every team.

In 2024, former NFLPA executive director Lloyd Howell called out the league for its “hypocrisy” in agreeing to FIFA regulations for the 2026 World Cup and installing grass and then planning to revert back to artificial turf for football games, per ESPN’s Paul Gutierrez. 

“It’s really basic,” Howell said at the time. “It’s not rocket science. Ninety-two percent of our union wants grass. That’s compelling. The bottom line is, it’s unquestionable that our union wants to have a working condition where they play on grass.”

He also said the union has data proving injuries occur at a higher rate on artificial turf.

In October of this season, Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk reported players from both the Pittsburgh Steelers and Cleveland Browns contacted the union to express their “outrage” over the “embarrassing” conditions of the grass at Pittsburgh’s Acrisure Stadium.

“At a time when the grass vs. turf debate has been renewed, players prefer grass. But it must be high-quality grass,” Florio wrote. “The NFLPA continues to press the NFL to improve and to coordinate the grass maintenance practices across the entire league.”

Given Thursday’s update, it seems like the league is looking to make strides in the surface debate.