SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Jan. 3, 2026: The script couldn’t be written any better if the NFL tried. Saturday night at Levi’s Stadium isn’t just a regular-season finale; it is a de facto playoff game with the highest possible stakes.
For the San Francisco 49ers (12-4) and the Seattle Seahawks (13-3), the math is brutally simple: Win, and the road to Super Bowl 60 goes through your stadium. Lose, and you are instantly demoted to a road warrior in the Wild Card round.
The Levi’s Stadium Advantage
The 49ers enter Week 18 with a unique motivation. With Super Bowl 60 set to be played on their own turf in Santa Clara next month, the path to hoisting the Lombardi Trophy at home begins tonight.
Despite trailing the Seahawks by one game in the standings, San Francisco controls its own destiny. A victory would tie both teams at 13-4, but the 49ers would claim the division title and the NFC’s No. 1 seed via the head-to-head tiebreaker, thanks to their gritty Week 1 victory in Seattle.
“We know what’s at stake. It’s not just a division title; it’s about staying home for the month,” head coach Kyle Shanahan said, aiming to secure his fifth playoff berth in the last seven seasons. After painful exits in two Super Bowls and two NFC Championship Games during this era, the 49ers are desperate to make the road easier this time around.
The Nightmare Scenario
While a win solves everything, a loss creates chaos. If the 49ers stumble tonight, they won’t just lose the division; they could plummet down the seeding ladder.
A loss drops San Francisco to the No. 5 seed immediately. However, disaster strikes if the Los Angeles Rams (11-5) also win their finale against the Cardinals on Sunday. In that scenario, the Rams would leapfrog the 49ers for the No. 5 spot based on common-games tiebreakers, pushing San Francisco all the way down to the No. 6 seed.
It is a dizzying swing: The 49ers could wake up Sunday morning as the kings of the NFC enjoying a bye week, or as a sixth-seed underdog packing their bags for a road trip.
A Rivalry Renewed
The 49ers have successfully clawed back from an injury-riddled mid-season slump to put themselves in this position. Now, they face a Seahawks team that has looked dominant for much of 2025. But history favors the bold—and in this rivalry, it favors the team that lands the first punch.
Kickoff is set for Saturday night. The winner takes the West. The loser takes the long road.

