PITTSBURGH — Mike Tomlin has stepped down as Pittsburgh Steelers head coach, ending a 19-year run during which he never had a losing season.
The Steelers announced Tomlin’s decision Tuesday afternoon, saying his track record “will likely never be duplicated.”
Tomlin said in a statement that he decided to step down “after much thought and reflection.”
“This organization has been a huge part of my life for many years, and it has been an absolute honor to lead this team,” he said. “I am deeply grateful to Art Rooney II and the late Ambassador Rooney for their trust and support. I am also thankful to the players who gave everything they had every day, and to the coaches and staff whose commitment and dedication made this journey so meaningful.
“I want to also thank Steelers Nation. Your passion, loyalty, and high expectations represent what makes this franchise truly special. Coaching in Pittsburgh is unlike anywhere else, and I will always take great pride in having been a steward of this team.”
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Tomlin, who has two years remaining on his contract, informed Steelers players of his decision to walk away at their 2 p.m. ET meeting Tuesday, one day after Pittsburgh was eliminated from the playoffs with a 30-6 loss to the Texans in the AFC wild-card round.
“During our meeting today, Coach Tomlin informed me that he has decided to step down as our Head Coach,” Steelers president Art Rooney II said in a statement. “Obviously, I am extremely grateful to Mike for all the hard work, dedication and success we have shared over the last 19 years.”
Tomlin, 53, leaves Pittsburgh with the unprecedented accomplishment of never having a losing season in nearly two decades at the helm of the franchise. He clinched his 200th career NFL victory in Week 16 against the Lions and tied Chuck Noll for ninth with 193 regular-season wins in a Week 18 victory against the Ravens that clinched the AFC North title.
With Tomlin’s departure, the Steelers will begin the search for just their fourth head coach since 1969. Tomlin signed an extension in 2024 that could’ve kept him with the team through the 2027 season, including a club option that had a decision date of March 1, 2026.
Because Tomlin resigned while still under contract, the Steelers will retain his coaching rights and could negotiate compensation if he returns to an NFL sideline before the end of the 2027 season.
“While this chapter comes to a close, my respect and love for the Pittsburgh Steelers will never change,” Tomlin said in his statement. “I am excited for what the future holds for this organization, and I will forever be grateful for my time coaching in Pittsburgh.”
CoachSeasonsTom Landry (1965-85)21Mike Tomlin (2007-25)19Bill Belichick (2001-19)19George Halas (1933-51)16– ESPN Research
Before his resignation, Tomlin was the longest-tenured head coach of a single North American professional sports franchise.
“It is hard for me to put into words the level of respect and appreciation I have for Coach Tomlin,” Rooney said in his statement. “He guided the franchise to our sixth Super Bowl championship and made the playoffs 13 times during his tenure, including winning the AFC North eight times in his career. His track record of never having a losing season in 19 years will likely never be duplicated.
“My family and I, and everyone connected to Steelers management, are forever grateful for the passion and dedication Mike Tomlin has devoted to Steelers football.”
For all his accomplishments, Tomlin ended his historic tenure in Pittsburgh with a frustrating nine-year postseason victory drought. Despite winning a Super Bowl, two conference championships and seven division titles, Tomlin’s teams went a cumulative 8-12 in postseason play. His last postseason win was an 18-16 victory against the Kansas City Chiefs in 2016.
The Steelers followed up that win over the Chiefs with a 36-17 loss to the New England Patriots in the AFC Championship Game, their last conference title game appearance. Since then, the Steelers have been one-and-done in six postseason appearances, and they’ve been outscored 131-58 in their last three wild-card losses.
Tomlin’s final game in Pittsburgh ended with choruses of boos as fans resurrected chants to fire the coach as he and Aaron Rodgers walked off the field, descended down the field-level stairs and disappeared into the tunnel just after 11 p.m.
“When you don’t get it done, words are cheap,” Tomlin said Monday night, responding to a question about his message to fans after the game. “It’s about what you do or you don’t do. And so, I appreciate the question, but people talk too much in our business. You either do or you don’t.”
At his postgame news conference Monday night, Tomlin offered little assurance that he would return to the Steelers, a departure from his message after previous season-ending losses. Players, though, supported their head coach in the aftermath of the loss, including Rodgers, who signed a one-year contract in May 2025.
“Mike T has had more success than damn near anybody in the league for the last 19, 20 years,” Rodgers said. “And more than that, though, when you have the right guy and the culture is right, you don’t think about making a change, but there’s a lot of pressure that comes from the outside, and obviously that sways decisions from time to time.
Mike Tomlin did not have a losing season in 19 years with Pittsburgh and is tied with fellow Steelers coach Chuck Noll for ninth on the NFL’s career list with 193 regular-season wins. (Photo by Joe Sargent/Getty Images)
“But it’s not how I would do things and not how the league used to be.”
Longtime defensive captain Cameron Heyward, drafted at No. 31 by the Steelers in 2011, also stumped for Tomlin in the face of external noise.
“I don’t really care about that noise because they don’t know what Mike T puts into this,” an emotional Heyward said, standing in a nearly empty locker room late Monday night. “They don’t know how he goes out of his way to prepare every man. They don’t know about the countless nights that man is in there studying film. Coaching is only going to do so much, players have to play better. And in those critical moments, players are going to step up.”
Marked by improbable wins and hard-to-fathom losses, Tomlin’s final season was a microcosm of his nearly two-decade tenure in Pittsburgh.
After a nontraditional Steelers offseason that saw the high-profile acquisitions of Rodgers, wide receiver DK Metcalf and cornerback Jalen Ramsey, Pittsburgh opened the 2025 season with a 4-1 start and a two-game lead in a division rife with significant injuries. But a loss to the Cincinnati Bengals in Week 7 kicked off a rocky stretch marked by blowout losses to the Los Angeles Chargers and Buffalo Bills and an upset victory over the Indianapolis Colts.
Fans vocally expressed their displeasure with Tomlin in the second half of the 26-7 loss to the Bills as chants of “Fire Tomlin” filled Acrisure Stadium and boos drowned out Steelers anthem “Renegade” by Styx.
The Steelers rebounded from the Week 13 loss against the Bills with three consecutive wins against the Ravens, Dolphins and Lions to avoid a losing season and put themselves in the divisional driver’s seat.
An unconventional hire when he took over the head coach position in 2007 following a one-year stint as the Minnesota Vikings’ defensive coordinator, Tomlin had near-instant success in Pittsburgh.
At 36, he won Super Bowl XLIII in his second season and, at the time, was the youngest head coach to raise the Lombardi Trophy. (Sean McVay was a younger 36 when his Rams won Super Bowl LVI in February 2022.) Tomlin returned to the Super Bowl a year later but fell to Rodgers’ Green Bay Packers. He never made it back in his final 15 seasons as head coach.
Known for his hard-hitting defenses and continuing the Steelers’ organizational tradition of dominant run games, Tomlin struggled to find consistency at quarterback following Ben Roethlisberger’s retirement in 2022. The Steelers drafted Kenny Pickett with a 2022 first-round pick, but the Pitt product was traded away after two seasons.
Including Roethlisberger’s final season as a starter, the Steelers have had five different Week 1 starting quarterbacks over the past five seasons.
With the loss to the Texans, Tomlin, who went 10-7 in each of his final three seasons, became the first head coach in franchise history to go nine consecutive seasons without a postseason victory. Nine seasons without a playoff win also marks the team’s longest postseason winless streak in the Super Bowl era. The Steelers also became the first team in NFL history to lose five straight playoff games by double digits.