NFL Hall of Famers by Team: Every Member, Every Franchise

The Pro Football Hall of Fame has 387 members counting this year’s class — the 2026 group headlined by Drew Brees and Larry Fitzgerald that gets enshrined in Canton this August — and the way they distribute across the NFL’s 32 franchises is a map of the league’s entire power history: the Bears and Packers, the league’s 1920s founders, still sit atop the list a century later; the Steelers and Cowboys turned the 1970s into permanent bronze; and at the other end, the Texans and Jaguars each have exactly one bust, having gained their first representation only in the last few years.

One thing to know before reading: unlike Cooperstown, Canton doesn’t induct anyone “as” a member of a team — every affiliation is listed equally on a member’s bust. So any by-team count is an editorial convention. This chart uses primary-franchise attribution: each of the 387 members counted once, under the franchise most associated with their career, which is the same convention behind the famous “the Bears lead the Hall” claim.

The chart below has the ranked totals for all 32 franchises up top, and the complete name-by-name rosters below it. Take a look, then we’ll break it all down.

NFL History
NFL Hall of Famers by team: every member, every franchise
387
total members in Canton
29
Bears: the most of any team
1
each: Texans & Jaguars
32/32
every franchise represented
The totals: every franchise, ranked
Rank Franchise Hall of Famers
1 Chicago Bears 29
2 Green Bay Packers 27
3 Pittsburgh Steelers 26
4 Dallas Cowboys 21
5 New York Giants 21
6 Las Vegas Raiders 18
7 Washington Commanders 17
8 Cleveland Browns 16
9 San Francisco 49ers 16
10 Los Angeles Rams 16
11 Detroit Lions 16
12 Minnesota Vikings 14
13 Kansas City Chiefs 13
14 Arizona Cardinals 13
15 Indianapolis Colts 13
16 Philadelphia Eagles 12
17 League, officials & pre-NFL era 12
18 Los Angeles Chargers 11
19 Miami Dolphins 10
20 Buffalo Bills 9
21 Denver Broncos 9
22 New York Jets 8
23 Tennessee Titans 7
24 New England Patriots 6
25 New Orleans Saints 5
26 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 5
27 Seattle Seahawks 5
28 Baltimore Ravens 3
29 Atlanta Falcons 2
30 Carolina Panthers 2
31 Cincinnati Bengals 2
32 Houston Texans 1
33 Jacksonville Jaguars 1
Primary-franchise attribution: each member counted once, under the team most associated with their career (multi-team greats like Deion Sanders or Reggie White appear where their legend was primarily built). Counting every affiliation instead would push the Bears past 40. Franchise totals include players, coaches, owners, and executives; league-level figures (commissioners, officials, NFL Films) are grouped separately at the bottom.
The full rosters: every Hall of Famer, team by team
Franchise Hall of Famers
Chicago Bears (29) George Halas, Bronko Nagurski, Red Grange, Sid Luckman, Bulldog Turner, George McAfee, George Trafton, Ed Healey, Link Lyman, George Musso, Danny Fortmann, Joe Stydahar, Bill Hewitt, George Connor, Bill George, Doug Atkins, Stan Jones, Mike Ditka, Gale Sayers, Dick Butkus, Walter Payton, Mike Singletary, Dan Hampton, Richard Dent, Jimbo Covert, Steve McMichael, Ed Sprinkle, Brian Urlacher, Devin Hester
Green Bay Packers (27) Curly Lambeau, Don Hutson, Johnny Blood McNally, Cal Hubbard, Clarke Hinkle, Mike Michalske, Arnie Herber, Tony Canadeo, Vince Lombardi, Bart Starr, Jim Taylor, Paul Hornung, Forrest Gregg, Jim Ringo, Ray Nitschke, Herb Adderley, Willie Davis, Willie Wood, Henry Jordan, Dave Robinson, Jerry Kramer, Bobby Dillon, James Lofton, Sterling Sharpe, LeRoy Butler, Brett Favre, Ron Wolf
Pittsburgh Steelers (26) Art Rooney, Dan Rooney, Chuck Noll, Bill Cowher, Bill Nunn, Joe Greene, Terry Bradshaw, Franco Harris, Lynn Swann, John Stallworth, Jack Lambert, Jack Ham, Mel Blount, Mike Webster, Donnie Shell, Ernie Stautner, Jack Butler, Bill Dudley, Walt Kiesling, John Henry Johnson, Rod Woodson, Dermontti Dawson, Kevin Greene, Jerome Bettis, Alan Faneca, Troy Polamalu
Dallas Cowboys (21) Tom Landry, Tex Schramm, Gil Brandt, Jerry Jones, Jimmy Johnson, Roger Staubach, Troy Aikman, Bob Lilly, Randy White, Tony Dorsett, Emmitt Smith, Michael Irvin, Larry Allen, Mel Renfro, Cliff Harris, Rayfield Wright, Drew Pearson, Chuck Howley, Bob Hayes, Charles Haley, DeMarcus Ware
New York Giants (21) Tim Mara, Wellington Mara, Steve Owen, Mel Hein, Ken Strong, Tuffy Leemans, Benny Friedman, Red Badgro, Arnie Weinmeister, Emlen Tunnell, Frank Gifford, Roosevelt Brown, Sam Huff, Andy Robustelli, Y.A. Tittle, Lawrence Taylor, Harry Carson, Michael Strahan, Bill Parcells, George Young, Eli Manning
Las Vegas Raiders (18) Al Davis, John Madden, Tom Flores, Jim Otto, Gene Upshaw, Art Shell, Fred Biletnikoff, Willie Brown, Ken Stabler, Dave Casper, Ted Hendricks, Howie Long, Marcus Allen, Ray Guy, Tim Brown, Cliff Branch, George Blanda, Charles Woodson
Washington Commanders (17) George Preston Marshall, Ray Flaherty, Sammy Baugh, Wayne Millner, Turk Edwards, Cliff Battles, Bobby Mitchell, Sonny Jurgensen, Charley Taylor, Chris Hanburger, John Riggins, Art Monk, Darrell Green, Russ Grimm, Joe Gibbs, George Allen, Bobby Beathard
Cleveland Browns (16) Paul Brown, Otto Graham, Jim Brown, Marion Motley, Lou Groza, Dante Lavelli, Mac Speedie, Bill Willis, Frank Gatski, Len Ford, Leroy Kelly, Gene Hickerson, Dick Schafrath, Paul Warfield, Ozzie Newsome, Joe Thomas
San Francisco 49ers (16) Bill Walsh, Eddie DeBartolo Jr., Joe Montana, Steve Young, Jerry Rice, Ronnie Lott, Terrell Owens, Bryant Young, Patrick Willis, Jimmy Johnson (CB), Leo Nomellini, Joe Perry, Hugh McElhenny, Bob St. Clair, Dave Wilcox, Roger Craig
Los Angeles Rams (16) Dan Reeves, Bob Waterfield, Norm Van Brocklin, Elroy Hirsch, Tom Fears, Deacon Jones, Merlin Olsen, Jack Youngblood, Jackie Slater, Tom Mack, Les Richter, Eric Dickerson, Marshall Faulk, Kurt Warner, Isaac Bruce, Orlando Pace
Detroit Lions (16) Dutch Clark, Bobby Layne, Doak Walker, Joe Schmidt, Yale Lary, Jack Christiansen, Lem Barney, Dick LeBeau, Dick (Night Train) Lane, Charlie Sanders, Lou Creekmur, Alex Wojciechowicz, Dick Stanfel, Alex Karras, Barry Sanders, Calvin Johnson
Minnesota Vikings (14) Bud Grant, Jim Finks, Fran Tarkenton, Alan Page, Carl Eller, Paul Krause, Ron Yary, Mick Tingelhoff, Randall McDaniel, Chris Doleman, John Randle, Cris Carter, Randy Moss, Jared Allen
Kansas City Chiefs (13) Lamar Hunt, Hank Stram, Len Dawson, Bobby Bell, Buck Buchanan, Willie Lanier, Emmitt Thomas, Johnny Robinson, Jan Stenerud, Curley Culp, Derrick Thomas, Will Shields, Tony Gonzalez
Arizona Cardinals (13) Charles Bidwill, Jimmy Conzelman, Paddy Driscoll, Ernie Nevers, Duke Slater, Charley Trippi, Ollie Matson, Larry Wilson, Jackie Smith, Dan Dierdorf, Roger Wehrli, Aeneas Williams, Larry Fitzgerald
Indianapolis Colts (13) Johnny Unitas, Raymond Berry, Lenny Moore, Jim Parker, Gino Marchetti, Art Donovan, John Mackey, Tony Dungy, Bill Polian, Marvin Harrison, Edgerrin James, Peyton Manning, Dwight Freeney
Philadelphia Eagles (12) Bert Bell, Greasy Neale, Chuck Bednarik, Steve Van Buren, Pete Pihos, Tommy McDonald, Bob Brown, Harold Carmichael, Reggie White, Eric Allen, Brian Dawkins, Dick Vermeil
League, officials & pre-NFL era (12) Jim Thorpe, Joe Guyon, Pete Henry, Guy Chamberlin, Fritz Pollard, Joe Carr, Pete Rozelle, Paul Tagliabue, Hugh (Shorty) Ray, Art McNally, Ed Sabol, Steve Sabol
Los Angeles Chargers (11) Sid Gillman, Don Coryell, Lance Alworth, Ron Mix, Dan Fouts, Kellen Winslow, Charlie Joiner, Fred Dean, Junior Seau, LaDainian Tomlinson, Antonio Gates
Miami Dolphins (10) Don Shula, Bob Griese, Larry Csonka, Nick Buoniconti, Jim Langer, Larry Little, Dwight Stephenson, Dan Marino, Jason Taylor, Zach Thomas
Buffalo Bills (9) Ralph Wilson, Marv Levy, O.J. Simpson, Joe DeLamielleure, Billy Shaw, Jim Kelly, Thurman Thomas, Andre Reed, Bruce Smith
Denver Broncos (9) Pat Bowlen, John Elway, Floyd Little, Randy Gradishar, Gary Zimmerman, Terrell Davis, Shannon Sharpe, Steve Atwater, Champ Bailey
New York Jets (8) Weeb Ewbank, Joe Namath, Don Maynard, Winston Hill, Joe Klecko, Curtis Martin, Kevin Mawae, Darrelle Revis
Tennessee Titans (7) Earl Campbell, Elvin Bethea, Ken Houston, Robert Brazile, Warren Moon, Mike Munchak, Bruce Matthews
New England Patriots (6) John Hannah, Mike Haynes, Andre Tippett, Ty Law, Richard Seymour, Adam Vinatieri
New Orleans Saints (5) Rickey Jackson, Sam Mills, Morten Andersen, Willie Roaf, Drew Brees
Tampa Bay Buccaneers (5) Lee Roy Selmon, Warren Sapp, Derrick Brooks, John Lynch, Ronde Barber
Seattle Seahawks (5) Steve Largent, Kenny Easley, Cortez Kennedy, Walter Jones, Steve Hutchinson
Baltimore Ravens (3) Jonathan Ogden, Ray Lewis, Ed Reed
Atlanta Falcons (2) Claude Humphrey, Deion Sanders
Carolina Panthers (2) Julius Peppers, Luke Kuechly
Cincinnati Bengals (2) Anthony Munoz, Ken Riley
Houston Texans (1) Andre Johnson
Jacksonville Jaguars (1) Tony Boselli
Franchise histories travel with the team: Cardinals totals span Chicago/St. Louis/Arizona, Commanders include the Redskins era, Titans include the Houston Oilers, Colts include Baltimore, and the Raiders and Chargers carry their Oakland and San Diego years. Jim Thorpe and the pre-NFL Canton Bulldogs legends anchor the league-era group.
Membership via the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Totals and rosters include the Class of 2026 — Drew Brees, Larry Fitzgerald, Adam Vinatieri, Luke Kuechly, and Roger Craig among the newest members, enshrined in Canton this August. This page updates with each new class, announced annually at Super Bowl week.

Why the 1920s Still Rule the Rankings

The top of the table is a century-old story that never changed. The Bears and Packers lead the Hall for the same reason they lead most all-time lists: they were there first, they were good immediately, and their founding decades came when rosters full of two-way legends could stack bronze busts fast — George Halas alone connects the 1920 founding meeting to the 1980s, and Green Bay’s 1960s Lombardi dynasty added an entire second wave (eleven members of those Packers teams, coach included, are in Canton).

The next tier is the dynasty math of the Super Bowl era: Pittsburgh’s 1970s teams put nine players plus the Rooneys, Noll, and scout Bill Nunn in the Hall, and the Cowboys’ twin dynasties (Landry’s and Jimmy Johnson’s) built a similar shelf, with the entire triplets era now enshrined. What the ranking punishes is youth and what it rewards is time: the bottom of the table isn’t a list of bad franchises, it’s a list of recent ones. The Texans (founded 2002) waited until 2024 for Andre Johnson to become their first bust; the Jaguars got Tony Boselli in 2022; the Ravens, despite two Super Bowls, have just three primary members because their history only starts in 1996 — and all three are inner-circle: Ogden, Reed, and Ray Lewis.

The Counting Problem Canton Built On Purpose

Any “Hall of Famers by team” list has to solve a problem Canton deliberately created: unlike baseball’s Hall, where plaques wear a single cap, the Pro Football Hall of Fame lists every affiliation equally, so a player like Deion Sanders is a Falcon, 49er, Cowboy, Redskin, and Raven all at once, and a literal count of affiliations gives the Bears forty-plus and produces more than 600 team-listings from 387 humans.

This chart uses the primary-franchise convention instead, one placement per member, which keeps the totals honest and the arguments interesting, because some primaries are genuine debates: Reggie White played more seasons in Philadelphia but won his ring in Green Bay (he’s an Eagle here); Charles Woodson split his career almost evenly between Oakland and Green Bay (a Raider here); Adam Vinatieri kicked longer in Indianapolis but made his legend in New England (a Patriot here). Those coin-flips move individual totals by one or two but never the shape of the list, and the shape is the point: a century of NFL history, sorted by which franchises manufactured the most immortality. The next names arrive with the Class of 2027, announced Super Bowl week, and the table updates the same day.

Final Word

NFL Hall of Famers by team: 387 members in Canton distributed across every one of the 32 franchises, led by the Bears (29) and Packers (27) on century-old head starts, the Steelers (26) and Cowboys (21) on dynasty math, with the Giants rounding out the top five, and the Texans and Jaguars holding one apiece at the other end as the league’s youngest franchises. Full name-by-name rosters for every team are in the chart above, one placement per member under their primary franchise, complete through the Class of 2026. Updated every February when the new class is announced.

For more from the sport’s history shelf, see what the Hall of Fame Game is, the NFL triplets, explained, and the greatest sports comebacks of all time.