2025 Pittsburgh Steelers season
| 2025 Pittsburgh Steelers season | |
|---|---|
| Owner | The Rooney Family |
| General manager | Omar Khan |
| Head coach | Mike Tomlin |
| Offensive coordinator | Arthur Smith |
| Defensive coordinator | Teryl Austin |
| Home stadium | Acrisure Stadium |
| Results | |
| Record | 10–7 |
| Division place | 1st AFC North |
| Playoffs | Lost Wild Card Playoffs (vs. Texans) 6–30 |
| All-Pros | DT Cameron Heyward (2nd team) |
| Pro Bowlers | FS Jalen Ramsey ST Ben Skowronek OLB T. J. Watt |
| Team MVP | RB Kenneth Gainwell |
| Team ROY | DE Derrick Harmon |
| Uniform | |
The 2025 season was the Pittsburgh Steelers' 93rd in the National Football League (NFL), their fourth under general manager Omar Khan, their 25th playing their home games at Acrisure Stadium and their 19th and final season under head coach Mike Tomlin. They matched their 10–7 records from both 2023 and 2024 and made the playoffs for the third consecutive season, and ended their four-year AFC North title drought with a win over the Baltimore Ravens during Week 18.
Since quarterbacks Justin Fields and Russell Wilson left, Aaron Rodgers started for Pittsburgh in his 21st season in the league. With a Week 16 win over the Detroit Lions, head coach Mike Tomlin reached his 200th total career win, and the Steelers secured its 22nd consecutive non-losing season, breaking the record set by the 1965–1985 Dallas Cowboys.
In the playoffs, the Steelers lost to the Houston Texans in the Wild Card round, and it extended their postseason losing streak to seven straight games dating back to the 2016–17 playoffs. On January 13, the day following the loss and the end of Pittsburgh's season, Tomlin announced that he stepped down as Steelers head coach. Tomlin compiled a 193–114–2 regular season record during his 19-year coaching tenure in Pittsburgh, tying him with Chuck Noll as the winningest head coach in franchise history. Tomlin also led Pittsburgh to 13 playoff appearances, 8 AFC North division titles, and the franchise's sixth Super Bowl title in Super Bowl XLIII. His win-loss record in the playoffs was 8–12.
The Pittsburgh Steelers drew an average home attendance of 67,440, the 18th-highest of all NFL teams.