The SEC is moving to a nine-game conference schedule starting next season. It’s a historic move for the conference, but it joins the likes of the Big 12 and Big Ten to play a nine-game conference schedule.
In the modern College Football Playoff era, conferences are doing whatever it takes to make a favorable impression on the selection committee. But with the new nine-game conference schedule comes a few changes.
For starters, the league will assign four annual opponents to teams across the conference. Those games will be played for the next four years, and then will be re-evaluated by the conference every four years.
In advance of the SEC’s unveiling of the nine-game conference schedule on Tuesday evening, On3’s Chris Low received the annual opponents for each team.
While some teams’ annual opponents are traditional rivals, others are not, which leads to plenty of speculation surrounding the perseverance of traditional rivalries in the new nine-game SEC schedule.
Let’s take a look at the SEC annual opponents for the 2026-2030 seasons.
More: College football picks, predictions against the spread for Week 5 matchups
SEC annual opponents, explained
Here’s a look at each annual opponent for each SEC team. As Low reports, the annual opponents, for now, just represent three guaranteed matchups for each team for the next four years. Low added that these are “annual” opponents—not permanent on Monday.
Entire 9-game schedules will be announced Tuesday on SEC Network. Keep in mind the three annual opponents will be re-evaluated every four years. Lotta factors involved, including protecting traditional rivalries. https://t.co/SPebiSy8wK
— Chris Low (@clowfb) September 22, 2025
When the full nine-game schedules are released, there’s a chance that permanent rivals—like LSU-Florida and Alabama-LSU could be included in the full nine-game slates.
Team | Annual Opponents |
Alabama | Auburn, Tennessee, Mississippi State |
Arkansas | Missouri, Texas, LSU |
Auburn | Georgia, Alabama, Vanderbilt |
Florida | Georgia, South Carolina, Kentucky |
Georgia | Auburn, Florida, South Carolina |
Kentucky | South Carolina, Tennessee, Florida |
LSU | Arkansas, Ole Miss, Texas A&M |
Mississippi State | Ole Miss, Alabama, Vanderbilt |
Missouri | Arkansas, Texas A&M, Oklahoma |
Oklahoma | Texas, Ole Miss, Missouri |
Ole Miss | Mississippi State, LSU, Oklahoma |
South Carolina | Georgia, Kentucky, Florida |
Tennessee | Alabama, Vanderbilt, Kentucky |
Texas | Texas A&M, Arkansas, Oklahoma |
Texas A&M | Texas, LSU, Missouri |
Vanderbilt | Tennessee, Mississippi State, Auburn |
More: Week 5 college football first look: Penn State-Oregon, Alabama-Georgia and more
Notable SEC matchups not scheduled
So yes, for now, it appears as if rivalries such as LSU-Alabama, LSU-Florida and Tennessee-Georgia may not be happening.
It’s not yet official if SEC commissioner Greg Sankey will let these beloved conference rivalries die after adding one extra conference game to the schedule. Plus, the SEC was very clear in its initial announcement that traditional rivalries will be protected. But obviously, moving to a new scheduling format means there will be some changes regardless.
LSU-Alabama
This one is by far the most notable. Alabama holds a 57-5-27 overall record over the Tigers, and the Tide won eight straight from 2011-2018. Heck, the “Game of the Century” from 2011 was so good—a gritty 9-6 LSU victory—that it gave us the first-ever BCS Championship rematch. That in itself was the catalyst for the new CFP era.
Brian Kelly’s LSU team defeated the Tide 32-31 in overtime in 2022, but Alabama has won the last two straight.
Tennessee-Georgia
Although this has been an annual rivalry since 1992, it’s gotten heated in recent years. It’s particularly a shame that the rivalry is seemingly ending after this year’s thriller, a Georgia 44-41 victory in overtime. The win gave the Dawgs a ninth-straight win over the Vols. Tennessee dominated the series in the 1990s with Philip Fulmer, but Georgia has a 30-2-23 overall edge in the series.
Florida-LSU
Although Florida has notable, big rivals like Florida State and Georgia, LSU is by far the most heated. It’s been filled with bad blood and chippiness, especially in the last 15 years.
Tennessee-Florida
Florida not playing Tennessee is equally surprising. The two have played every year since 1990, and Florida had an FBS-record 11-straight wins from 2005-2015.