
Although it wont officially be revealed until they unveil their new uniforms in April, multiple sources have confirmed the Tennessee Titans’ new logo was leaked in product listing on Fanatics over the weekend.
The listing of a “player pal” plush football – which has since been removed – showed the roundel from the Titans’ current logo, including the “T” and three stars from the Tennessee state flag, though the “T” no longer features beveling or sharp, sword-like points.

The logo was also rendered in the franchise’s original Columbia blue and red color scheme, an obvious nod to their 37 seasons as the Houston Oilers, as well as their first two years in Tennessee, where the nickname remained until they adopted the Titans moniker in 1999.
It will replace the logo that has been in use since that season, which leans heavily into Greek mythology with light blue, red and navy flames trailing the roundel. It appeared on their white helmets from 1999-2017, as well as navy blue helmets from 2018 through last season.
The three stars and roundel were also featured on their secondary logo, which included a sword that doubled as a “T.” It was displayed on the sleeves of their 1999-2017 uniforms, while the two-tone shading of the sword was used to create a yoke-like effect on the shoulders of their 2018-25 design.
That said, it’s no surprise to see the Titans go this route given the overwhelmingly positive response to their Oilers throwback uniforms, which were reintroduced in 2023, and the never-ending debate with the city of Houston over the rightful ownership of the franchise’s original name, logo and color scheme.

Hall of Fame quarterback Warren Moon revealed that new uniforms were in the works last year, though it was widely expected that they wouldn’t arrive until the Titans moved into their new stadium in 2027. He even said they were “very similar, so there might not even be a reason to wear the Oilers uniforms again.”
With that, the Titans didn’t wear the throwback threads at all last season and actually wore their light blue alternate jerseys in every home game after promoting them to full-time status, further indicating a desire to lean back into the Oilers’ color scheme.
“We’re talking to fans and we’re listening, and there’s a clear appetite to have the Titans, their team, represented on the field in this noticeable color that has been with this team from 1960 in Houston, into Memphis, at Vanderbilt and as we’ve played at Nissan Stadium,” team president Burke Nihill said last spring.
“(Light) blue has always been a part of this organization, and there is something that is uniquely this organization when that color is the dominant color. You see it, and you know the team that is being represented – it’s the Titans.”

What remains to be seen is if the new uniforms be a one-for-one replication of the Oilers’ design – including white helmets, light blue and white jerseys with red trim and white pants with stripes that match the helmet and sleeve cuffs – with the new logo on the sides of the helmets instead of an oil derrick or if the new look will be a modern evolution of those uniforms.
Photos courtesy of @Titans on X/Twitter.