AFC East

The American Football Conference – Eastern Division or AFC East is one of the four divisions of the American Football Conference (AFC) in the National Football League (NFL). There are currently four teams that reside in the division: the Buffalo Bills (based in Orchard Park, New York); the Miami Dolphins (based in Miami Gardens, Florida); the New England Patriots (based in Foxborough, Massachusetts); and the New York Jets (based in East Rutherford, New Jersey).

AFC East
ConferenceAmerican Football Conference
LeagueNational Football League
SportAmerican football
Founded1960 (as the American Football League Eastern Division)
Teams
No. of teams4
Championships
Most recent champion(s)New England Patriots (2019)
Most titlesNew England Patriots (21 titles)

Both perfect regular seasons in professional football since the adoption of a 14-game schedule in the inaugural AFL season and by the NFL in 1961 have been achieved by teams in this division – the 1972 Dolphins, who completed the only perfect season in professional football at 17–0, and the 2007 Patriots, who reached 18–0 before losing Super Bowl XLII.[lower-alpha 1] Since the division's enfranchisement in 1960, with the creation of the American Football League, the division has been represented in twenty Super Bowls and won nine of them. The most recent appearance in the Super Bowl by an AFC East team was the Patriots victory in Super Bowl LIII.

At the end of 2018, the Patriots had the most wins in the division's history, with a record of 500–392–9, with a playoff record of 35–19 (6–5 in Super Bowls) entering the playoffs of that season.[1] The Dolphins were second at 446–350–4 (having played 84 fewer games than their division rivals) with a playoff record of 20–21 (2–3 in Super Bowls).[2] The Bills were at 406–470–8 with a playoff record of 14–15 (with two American Football League titles) and 0–4 in four consecutive Super Bowls.[3] The Jets held a record of 396–480–8, with a playoff record of 12–13 including a victory in Super Bowl III.[4]

In 2012, the Patriots broke a tie with the Dolphins for winning the most division titles; with subsequent division titles in 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018 the Patriots have won 21 AFL/AFC East division titles to Miami's 14. The Bills have won ten division titles, and the Jets have won four. As of 2019, the last season which the Patriots did not win the AFC East was in 2008, when the Dolphins beat them in a tiebreaker.

Two teams formerly in the division combined for ten AFL/AFC East titles – the Houston Oilers (now the Tennessee Titans) won four division titles (and the 1960 and 1961 league titles) during the AFL era[5] while the BaltimoreIndianapolis Colts won six division titles (and Super Bowl V) in the 32 seasons they were in the division.[6]

AFL Eastern Division

The American Football League Eastern Division was formed during the inaugural season of the American Football League in 1960, as a counterpart to the AFL Western Division. The divisional alignment consisted of the Buffalo Bills, New England Patriots, New York Titans and Houston Oilers. The Miami Dolphins entered the AFL in 1966 as part of its Eastern division.[7]

Locale of the current 4 AFC East teams

The division was absorbed nearly intact with the AFL–NFL merger in 1970, but Houston was moved to the AFC Central (formerly the NFL Century Division, now the AFC North) and replaced by the closer Baltimore Colts (from the NFL Coastal Division, which became the NFC West). Despite relocating to Indianapolis, Indiana in 1984, the Colts continued to play in the AFC East until NFL expansion from 31 to 32 teams with the addition of the Houston Texans (successor club in Houston to the Oilers) and 2002 re-alignment when they were moved to the AFC South (the successor franchise to the Oilers, the Tennessee Titans, is also in the AFC South).[8]

Although Miami is farther south than the home cities of the other three teams, all of which are in the Northeast, all four AFC East teams have historical rivalries among them, dating from their years in the AFL during the 1960s.[9] All four teams in this division are based in the Eastern Time Zone.

None of the AFC East teams currently play within the central city of their metropolitan area (in New England's case, they also reflect the region they are based in):

Almost analogously, three out of the four NFC East teams do not actually play within the city of their naming (only the Philadelphia Eagles do so).

All of the teams are or were coached by a first or second generation member of the Bill Parcells coaching tree: the Patriots have Bill Belichick; the Dolphins had Tony Sparano; the Jets had Eric Mangini (who served as an assistant with both Belichick and Parcells); and the Bills had Dick Jauron (fired on November 17, 2009), who served as an assistant with former Parcells assistant Tom Coughlin. The Jets were coached by Todd Bowles (2015-2018) and the Bills were coached by Rex Ryan for 31 games (the entire 2015-16 season, and he was fired before the last game of the 2016–17 season and replaced with interim Head Coach Anthony Lynn). Parcells himself coached the Patriots (1993–96) and the Jets (1997–99) and was Vice President of Football Operations for the Dolphins until the summer of 2010.[10]

ESPN's Chris Berman often calls this division the "AFC Adams" due to its geographical similarity to the old Adams Division of the NHL, now succeeded by the Atlantic Division.

Along with the AFC (formerly AFL) West, the AFC East is the oldest NFL division in terms of creation date (1960).

Division lineups

Place cursor over year for division champ or Super Bowl team.

AFL Eastern Division
1900s
60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69
Buffalo Bills
Boston Patriots
New York Titans New York Jets [C]
Houston Oilers [B]
  Miami Dolphins [D]
AFC East Division
1900s2000s
70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01
Buffalo Bills
Boston Patriots New England Patriots [A]
New York Jets
Baltimore Colts [E] Indianapolis Colts [F]
Miami Dolphins
AFC East Division
2000s
02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
New England Patriots
Buffalo Bills
New York Jets
Miami Dolphins
     Team not in division      Division Won AFL Championship      Division Won AFC Championship      Division Won Super Bowl
A Boston Patriots renamed to New England Patriots.
B Houston Oilers move to newly created AFC Central division (1970 season) and later are renamed the Tennessee Oilers (1997 season), then Tennessee Titans (1999 season). Moved to AFC South in 2002.
C New York Titans renamed to New York Jets (1963 season)
D Miami Dolphins enfranchised (1966 season)
E Baltimore Colts merge from NFL's Coastal Division (1970 season)
F Baltimore Colts relocate to Indianapolis subsequently renamed Indianapolis Colts (1984 season). Moved to AFC South in 2002.

Division champions

SeasonTeamRecordPlayoff Results
1960Houston Oilers10–4Won AFL Championship (Chargers) 24–16
1961Houston Oilers10–3–1Won AFL Championship (at Chargers) 10–3
1962Houston Oilers11–3Lost AFL Championship (Texans) 17–20 (2OT)
1963Boston Patriots7–6–1Won Divisional playoffs (at Bills) 26–8
Lost AFL Championship (at Chargers) 10–51
1964Buffalo Bills12–2Won AFL Championship (Chargers) 20–7
1965Buffalo Bills10–3–1Won AFL Championship (at Chargers) 23–0
1966Buffalo Bills9–4–1Lost AFL Championship (Chiefs) 7–31
1967Houston Oilers9–4–1Lost AFL Championship (at Raiders) 7–40
1968New York Jets11–3Won AFL Championship (Raiders) 27–23
Won Super Bowl III (vs. Colts) 16–7
1969New York Jets10–4Lost Divisional playoffs (Chiefs) 6–13
1970Baltimore Colts11–2–1Won Divisional Playoffs (Bengals) 17–0
Won AFC Championship (Raiders) 27–17
Won Super Bowl V (vs. Cowboys) 16–13
1971Miami Dolphins10–3–1Won Divisional Playoffs (at Chiefs) 27–24 (2OT)
Won AFC Championship (Colts) 21–0
Lost Super Bowl VI (vs. Cowboys) 3–24
1972Miami Dolphins14–0Won Divisional Playoffs (Browns) 20–14
Won AFC Championship (at Steelers) 21–17
Won Super Bowl VII (vs. Redskins) 14–7
1973Miami Dolphins12–2Won Divisional Playoffs (Bengals) 34–16
Won AFC Championship (Raiders) 27–10
Won Super Bowl VIII (vs. Vikings) 24–7
1974Miami Dolphins11–3Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Raiders) 26–28
1975Baltimore Colts10–4Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Steelers) 10–28
1976Baltimore Colts11–3Lost Divisional Playoffs (Steelers) 14–40
1977Baltimore Colts10–4Lost Divisional Playoffs (Raiders) 31–37 (2OT)
1978New England Patriots11–5Lost Divisional Playoffs (Oilers) 14–31
1979Miami Dolphins10–6Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Steelers) 14–34
1980Buffalo Bills11–5Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Chargers) 14–20
1981Miami Dolphins11–4–1Lost Divisional Playoffs (Chargers) 38–41 (OT)
1982+Miami Dolphins7–2Won First Round Playoffs (Patriots) 28–13
Won Second Round Playoffs (Chargers) 34–13
Won AFC Championship (Jets) 14–0
Lost Super Bowl XVII (vs. Redskins) 17–27
1983Miami Dolphins12–4Lost Divisional Playoffs (Seahawks) 20–27
1984Miami Dolphins14–2Won Divisional Playoffs (Seahawks) 31–10
Won AFC Championship (Steelers) 45–28
Lost Super Bowl XIX (vs. 49ers) 16–38
1985Miami Dolphins12–4Won Divisional Playoffs (Browns) 24–21
Lost AFC Championship (Patriots) 14–31
1986New England Patriots11–5Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Broncos) 22–17
1987Indianapolis Colts9–6Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Browns) 21–38
1988Buffalo Bills12–4Won Divisional Playoffs (Oilers) 17–10
Lost AFC Championship (at Bengals) 10–21
1989Buffalo Bills9–7Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Browns) 30–34
1990Buffalo Bills13–3Won Divisional Playoffs (Dolphins) 44–34
Won AFC Championship (Raiders) 51–3
Lost Super Bowl XXV (vs. Giants) 19–20
1991Buffalo Bills13–3Won Divisional Playoffs (Chiefs) 37–14
Won AFC Championship (Broncos) 10–7
Lost Super Bowl XXVI (vs. Redskins) 24–37
1992Miami Dolphins11–5Won Divisional Playoffs (Chargers) 31–0
Lost AFC Championship (Bills) 10–29
1993Buffalo Bills12–4Won Divisional Playoffs (Raiders) 29–23
Won AFC Championship (Chiefs) 30–13
Lost Super Bowl XXVIII (vs. Cowboys) 13–30
1994Miami Dolphins10–6Won Wild Card Playoffs (Chiefs) 27–17
Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Chargers) 21–22
1995Buffalo Bills10–6Won Wild Card Playoffs (Dolphins) 37–22
Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Steelers) 21–40
1996New England Patriots11–5Won Divisional Playoffs (Steelers) 28–3
Won AFC Championship (Jaguars) 20–6
Lost Super Bowl XXXI (vs. Packers) 21–35
1997New England Patriots10–6Won Wild Card Playoffs (Dolphins) 17–3
Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Steelers) 6–7
1998New York Jets12–4Won Divisional Playoffs (Jaguars) 34–24
Lost AFC Championship (at Broncos) 10–23
1999Indianapolis Colts13–3Lost Divisional Playoffs (Titans) 16–19
2000Miami Dolphins11–5Won Wild Card Playoffs (Colts) 23–17 (OT)
Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Raiders) 0–27
2001New England Patriots11–5Won Divisional Playoffs (Raiders) 16–13 (OT)
Won AFC Championship (at Steelers) 24–17
Won Super Bowl XXXVI (vs. Rams) 20–17
2002New York Jets9–7Won Wild Card Playoffs (Colts) 41–0
Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Raiders) 10–30
2003New England Patriots14–2Won Divisional Playoffs (Titans) 17–14
Won AFC Championship (Colts) 24–14
Won Super Bowl XXXVIII (vs. Panthers) 32–29
2004New England Patriots14–2Won Divisional Playoffs (Colts) 20–3
Won AFC Championship (at Steelers) 41–27
Won Super Bowl XXXIX (vs. Eagles) 24–21
2005New England Patriots10–6Won Wild Card Playoffs (Jaguars) 28–3
Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Broncos) 13–27
2006New England Patriots12–4Won Wild Card Playoffs (Jets) 37–16
Won Divisional Playoffs (at Chargers) 24–21
Lost AFC Championship (at Colts) 34–38
2007New England Patriots16–0Won Divisional Playoffs (Jaguars) 31–20
Won AFC Championship (Chargers) 21–12
Lost Super Bowl XLII (vs. Giants) 14–17
2008Miami Dolphins11–5Lost Wild Card Playoffs (Ravens) 9–27
2009New England Patriots10–6Lost Wild Card Playoffs (Ravens) 14–33
2010New England Patriots14–2Lost Divisional Playoffs (Jets) 21–28
2011New England Patriots13–3Won Divisional Playoffs (Broncos) 45–10
Won AFC Championship (Ravens) 23–20
Lost Super Bowl XLVI (vs. Giants) 17–21
2012New England Patriots12–4Won Divisional Playoffs (Texans) 41–28
Lost AFC Championship (Ravens) 13–28
2013New England Patriots12–4Won Divisional Playoffs (Colts) 43–22
Lost AFC Championship (at Broncos) 16–26
2014New England Patriots12–4Won Divisional Playoffs (Ravens) 35–31
Won AFC Championship (Colts) 45–7
Won Super Bowl XLIX (vs. Seahawks) 28–24
2015New England Patriots12–4Won Divisional Playoffs (Chiefs) 27–20
Lost AFC Championship (at Broncos) 18–20
2016New England Patriots14–2Won Divisional Playoffs (Texans) 34–16
Won AFC Championship (Steelers) 36–17
Won Super Bowl LI (vs. Falcons) 34–28 (OT)
2017New England Patriots13–3Won Divisional Playoffs (Titans) 35–14
Won AFC Championship (Jaguars) 24–20
Lost Super Bowl LII (vs. Eagles) 33–41
2018New England Patriots11–5Won Divisional Playoffs (Chargers) 41–28
Won AFC Championship (at Chiefs) 37–31 (OT)
Won Super Bowl LIII (vs. Rams) 13–3
2019New England Patriots12–4Lost Wild Card Playoffs (Titans) 13–20
  • + – A players' strike in 1982 reduced the regular season to nine games. Thus, the league used a special 16-team playoff tournament just for this year. Division standings were ignored, Miami had the best record of the division teams.

Wild Card qualifiers

SeasonTeamRecordPlayoff Results
1969Houston Oilers6–6–2Lost Divisional playoffs (at Raiders) 7–56
1970Miami Dolphins10–4Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Raiders) 14–21
1971Baltimore Colts10–4Won Divisional Playoffs (at Browns) 20–3
Lost AFC Championship (at Dolphins) 0–21
1974Buffalo Bills9–5Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Steelers) 14–32
1976New England Patriots11–3Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Raiders) 21–24
1978Miami Dolphins11–5Lost Wild Card Playoffs (Oilers) 9–17
1981New York Jets10–5–1Lost Wild Card Playoffs (Bills) 27–31
Buffalo Bills10–6Won Wild Card Playoffs (at Jets) 31–27
Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Bengals) 21–28
1982+New York Jets6–3Won First Round Playoffs (at Bengals) 44–17
Won Second Round Playoffs (at Raiders) 17–14
Lost AFC Championship (at Dolphins) 0–14
New England Patriots5–4Lost First Round Playoffs (at Dolphins) 13–28
1985New York Jets11–5Lost Wild Card Playoffs (Patriots) 14–26
New England Patriots11–5Won Wild Card Playoffs (at Jets) 26–14
Won Divisional Playoffs (at Raiders) 27–20
Won AFC Championship (at Dolphins) 31–14
Lost Super Bowl XX (vs. Bears) 10–46
1986New York Jets10–6Won Wild Card Playoffs (Chiefs) 35–15
Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Browns) 20–23 (2OT)
1990Miami Dolphins12–4Won Wild Card Playoffs (Chiefs) 17–16
Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Bills) 34–44
1991New York Jets8–8Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at Oilers) 10–17
1992Buffalo Bills11–5Won Wild Card Playoffs (Oilers) 41–38 (OT)
Won Divisional Playoffs (at Steelers) 24–3
Won AFC Championship (at Dolphins) 29–10
Lost Super Bowl XXVII (vs. Cowboys) 17–52
1994New England Patriots10–6Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at Browns) 13–20
1995Indianapolis Colts9–7Won Wild Card Playoffs (at Chargers) 35–20
Won Divisional Playoffs (at Chiefs) 10–7
Lost AFC Championship (at Steelers) 16–20
Miami Dolphins9–7Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at Bills) 22–37
1996Buffalo Bills10–6Lost Wild Card Playoffs (Jaguars) 27–30
Indianapolis Colts9–7Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at Steelers) 14–42
1997Miami Dolphins9–7Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at Patriots) 3–17
1998Miami Dolphins10–6Won Wild Card Playoffs (Bills) 24–17
Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Broncos) 3–38
Buffalo Bills10–6Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at Dolphins) 17–24
New England Patriots9–7Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at Jaguars) 10–25
1999Buffalo Bills11–5Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at Titans) 16–22
Miami Dolphins9–7Won Wild Card Playoffs (at Seahawks) 20–17
Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Jaguars) 7–62
2000Indianapolis Colts10–6Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at Dolphins) 17–23 (OT)
2001Miami Dolphins11–5Lost Wild Card Playoffs (Ravens) 3–20
New York Jets10–6Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at Raiders) 24–38
2004New York Jets10–6Won Wild Card Playoffs (at Chargers) 20–17 (OT)
Lost Divisional Playoffs (at Steelers) 17–20 (OT)
2006New York Jets10–6Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at Patriots) 16–37
2009New York Jets9–7Won Wild Card Playoffs (at Bengals) 24–14
Won Divisional Playoffs (at Chargers) 17–14
Lost AFC Championship (at Colts) 17–30
2010New York Jets11–5Won Wild Card Playoffs (at Colts) 17–16
Won Divisional Playoffs (at Patriots) 28–21
Lost AFC Championship (at Steelers) 19–24
2016Miami Dolphins10–6Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at Steelers) 12–30
2017Buffalo Bills9–7Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at Jaguars) 3–10
2019Buffalo Bills10–6 Lost Wild Card Playoffs (at (Texans) 19–22 (OT)
  • + – A players' strike in 1982 reduced the regular season to nine games. Thus, the league used a special 16-team playoff tournament just for this year. Division standings were ignored, Miami had the best record of the division teams.

Total playoff berths while in the AFL/AFC East

(AFC East records 1960–2019 seasons)
Reflects Colts & Oilers results only while in the East Division.
In the sortable table below, teams can be ordered by name, number of division wins, playoff berths, or titles.

TeamDivision
Titles
Playoff
Berths
AFL
Titles
AFC
Championships
Super Bowl
Championships
New England Patriots22270116
Miami Dolphins1423052
Buffalo Bills1019240
New York Jets414101
Indianapolis Colts1*610011
Houston Oilers2*45200
AFC East-Division--
Titles
-Playoff-
Berths
AFL
-Titles-
AFC
-Championships-
Super Bowl
-Championships-
Totals- 1960–2019609852110

1 Realigned from NFL Coastal in 1970 merger. Known as the Baltimore Colts before 1984. Realigned into the AFC South beginning with the 2002 NFL season.
2 Realigned into the AFC Central in 1970 merger, and into the AFC South in 2002. Known as Tennessee Oilers from 1997–98, and Tennessee Titans since 1999.

Season results

(#) Denotes team that won the Super Bowl
(#) Denotes team that won the AFC Championship
(#) Denotes team that won the AFL Championship
(#) Denotes team that qualified for the NFL Playoffs or AFL Playoffs
SeasonTeam (record)
1st2nd3rd4th5th
AFL Eastern
  • 1960: The AFL was established with 4 teams, the Boston Patriots, Buffalo Bills, Houston Oilers, and New York Titans filled the Eastern Division.
1960 Houston (10–4) N.Y. Titans (7–7) Buffalo (5–8–1) Boston (5–9)
1961 Houston (10–3–1) Boston (9–4–1) N.Y. Titans (7–7) Buffalo (6–8)
1962 Houston (11–3) Boston (9–4–1) Buffalo (7–6–1) N.Y. Titans (5–9)
1963 Boston (7–6–1) Buffalo (7–6–1) Houston (6–8) N.Y. Jets (5–8–1)
1964 Buffalo (12–2) Boston (10–3–1) N.Y. Jets (5–8–1) Houston (4–10)
1965 Buffalo (10–3–1) N.Y. Jets (5–8–1) Boston (4–8–2) Houston (4–10)
1966 Buffalo (9–4–1) Boston (8–4–2) N.Y. Jets (6–6–2) Houston (3–11) Miami (3–11)
1967 Houston (9–4–1) N.Y. Jets (8–5–1) Buffalo (4–10) Miami (4–10) Boston (3–10–1)
1968 N.Y. Jets (11–3) Houston (7–7) Miami (5–8–1) Boston (4–10) Buffalo (1–12–1)
1969 N.Y. Jets (10–4) Houston (6–6–2) Boston (4–10) Buffalo (4–10) Miami (3–10–1)
AFC East
  • 1970: As part of AFL–NFL merger, AFL Eastern became adopts current name with the Houston Oilers moved to the AFC Central while the Baltimore Colts moved from the NFL Coastal.
1970 Baltimore (11–2–1) Miami (10–4) N.Y. Jets (4–10) Buffalo (3–10–1) Boston (2–12)
1971 Miami (10–3–1) Baltimore (10–4) New England (6–8) N.Y. Jets (6–8) Buffalo (1–13)
1972 Miami (14–0) N.Y. Jets (7–7) Baltimore (5–9) Buffalo (4–9–1) New England (3–11)
1973 Miami (12–2) Buffalo (9–5) New England (5–9) N.Y. Jets (4–10) Baltimore (4–10)
1974 Miami (11–3) Buffalo (9–5) New England (7–7) N.Y. Jets (7–7) Baltimore (2–12)
1975 (3) Baltimore (10–4) Miami (10–4) Buffalo (8–6) N.Y. Jets (3–11) New England (3–11)
1976 (2) Baltimore (11–3) (4) New England (11–3) Miami (6–8) N.Y. Jets (3–11) Buffalo (2–12)
1977 (2) Baltimore (10–4) Miami (10–4) New England (9–5) Buffalo (3–11) N.Y. Jets (3–11)
1978 (2) New England (11–5) (4) Miami (11–5) N.Y. Jets (8–8) Buffalo (5–11) Baltimore (5–11)
1979 (3) Miami (10–6) New England (9–7) N.Y. Jets (8–8) Buffalo (7–9) Baltimore (5–11)
1980 (3) Buffalo (11–5) New England (10–6) Miami (8–8) Baltimore (7–9) N.Y. Jets (4–12)
1981 (2) Miami (11–4–1) (4) N.Y. Jets (10–5–1) (5) Buffalo (10–6) Baltimore (2–14) New England (2–14)
1982^ (2) Miami (7–2) (6) N.Y. Jets (6–3) (7) New England (5–4) Buffalo (4–5) Baltimore (0–8–1)
1983 (2) Miami (12–4) New England (8–8) Buffalo (8–8) Baltimore (7–9) N.Y. Jets (7–9)
1984 (1) Miami (14–2) New England (9–7) N.Y. Jets (7–9) Indianapolis (4–12) Buffalo (2–14)
1985 (2) Miami (12–4) (4) N.Y. Jets (11–5) (5) New England (11–5) Indianapolis (5–11) Buffalo (2–14)
1986 (3) New England (11–5) (4) N.Y. Jets (10–6) Miami (8–8) Buffalo (4–12) Indianapolis (3–13)
1987 (3) Indianapolis (9–6) New England (8–7) Miami (8–7) Buffalo (7–8) N.Y. Jets (6–9)
1988 (2) Buffalo (12–4) Indianapolis (9–7) New England (9–7) N.Y. Jets (8–7–1) Miami (6–10)
1989 (3) Buffalo (9–7) Indianapolis (8–8) Miami (8–8) New England (5–11) N.Y. Jets (4–12)
1990 (1) Buffalo (13–3) (4) Miami (12–4) Indianapolis (7–9) N.Y. Jets (6–10) New England (1–15)
1991 (1) Buffalo (13–3) (6) N.Y. Jets (8–8) Miami (8–8) New England (6–10) Indianapolis (1–15)
1992 (2) Miami (11–5) (4) Buffalo (11–5) Indianapolis (9–7) N.Y. Jets (4–12) New England (2–14)
1993 (1) Buffalo (12–4) Miami (9–7) N.Y. Jets (8–8) New England (5–11) Indianapolis (4–12)
1994 (3) Miami (10–6) (5) New England (10–6) Indianapolis (8–8) Buffalo (7–9) N.Y. Jets (6–10)
1995 (3) Buffalo (10–6) (5) Indianapolis (9–7) (6) Miami (9–7) New England (6–10) N.Y. Jets (3–13)
1996 (2) New England (11–5) (4) Buffalo (10–6) (6) Indianapolis (9–7) Miami (8–8) N.Y. Jets (1–15)
1997 (3) New England (10–6) (6) Miami (9–7) N.Y. Jets (9–7) Buffalo (6–10) Indianapolis (3–13)
1998 (2) N.Y. Jets (12–4) (4) Miami (10–6) (5) Buffalo (10–6) (6) New England (9–7) Indianapolis (3–13)
1999 (2) Indianapolis (13–3) (5) Buffalo (11–5) (6) Miami (9–7) N.Y. Jets (8–8) New England (8–8)
2000 (3) Miami (11–5) (6) Indianapolis (10–6) N.Y. Jets (9–7) Buffalo (8–8) New England (5–11)
2001 (2) New England (11–5) (4) Miami (11–5) (6) N.Y. Jets (10–6) Indianapolis (6–10) Buffalo (3–13)
2002 (4) N.Y. Jets (9–7) New England (9–7) Miami (9–7) Buffalo (8–8)
2003 (1) New England (14–2) Miami (10–6) Buffalo (6–10) N.Y. Jets (6–10)
2004 (2) New England (14–2) (5) N.Y. Jets (10–6) Buffalo (9–7) Miami (4–12)
2005 (4) New England (10–6) Miami (9–7) Buffalo (5–11) N.Y. Jets (4–12)
2006 (4) New England (12–4) (5) N.Y. Jets (10–6) Buffalo (7–9) Miami (6–10)
2007 (1) New England (16–0) Buffalo (7–9) N.Y. Jets (4–12) Miami (1–15)
2008 (3) Miami (11–5) New England (11–5) N.Y. Jets (9–7) Buffalo (7–9)
2009 (3) New England (10–6) (5) N.Y. Jets (9–7) Miami (7–9) Buffalo (6–10)
2010 (1) New England (14–2) (6) N.Y. Jets (11–5) Miami (7–9) Buffalo (4–12)
2011 (1) New England (13–3) N.Y. Jets (8–8) Miami (6–10) Buffalo (6–10)
2012 (2) New England (12–4) Miami (7–9) N.Y. Jets (6–10) Buffalo (6–10)
2013 (2) New England (12–4) N.Y. Jets (8–8) Miami (8–8) Buffalo (6–10)
2014 (1) New England (12–4) Buffalo (9–7) Miami (8–8) N.Y. Jets (4–12)
2015 (2) New England (12–4) N.Y. Jets (10–6) Buffalo (8–8) Miami (6–10)
2016 (1) New England (14–2) (6) Miami (10–6) Buffalo (7–9) N.Y. Jets (5–11)
2017 (1) New England (13–3) (6) Buffalo (9–7) Miami (6–10) N.Y. Jets (5–11)
2018 (2) New England (11–5) Miami (7–9) Buffalo (6–10) N.Y. Jets (4–12)
2019 (3) New England (12–4) (5) Buffalo (10–6) N.Y. Jets (7–9) Miami (5–11)

See also

Notes

  1. The other two perfect regular seasons in NFL history were both by the Chicago Bears – currently of the NFC North – in 1934 and 1942 – although in both seasons the Bears lost their sole playoff game.

References

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