Brock Purdyâs 2026 season is already being framed as more than a bounce-back year for the San Francisco 49ers quarterback.
NFL.comâs Dan Parr named Purdy the No. 1 dark-horse MVP candidate for the 2026 season, putting him ahead of Trevor Lawrence, Jared Goff, Jayden Daniels, Sam Darnold and Jalen Hurts on the list. Parr pointed to Purdyâs continuity with head coach Kyle Shanahan, a reworked receiver group and the quarterbackâs past MVP finish as reasons the 49ers passer has a real path into the race.
That is the part that should matter most to 49ers fans: this is not just an offseason compliment. It is a snapshot of where San Franciscoâs season could go if Purdy turns a rebuilt supporting cast into one of the NFLâs most efficient offenses again.
Purdy finished fourth in MVP voting in 2023, his first full season as San Franciscoâs starter. The 49ersâ current version of his case is different. This time, it is built around whether he can lift an offense that has changed around him and guide San Francisco through one of the leagueâs more unusual schedules.
The 49ers Gave Brock Purdy a New MVP Path
Purdyâs biggest advantage is still Shanahan. NFL.com noted that Purdy is entering his fifth straight season in the same offensive system, a level of stability most quarterbacks on the dark-horse list do not have.
But the 49ers did not simply run it back.
San Francisco added Mike Evans, Christian Kirk and rookie DeâZhaun Stribling to a receiver room that also includes Ricky Pearsall. Evans is the headline name, and for obvious reasons. The longtime Tampa Bay Buccaneers star gives Purdy a proven boundary target and red-zone weapon, which could change how defenses have to handle the 49ers near the goal line.
That matters in an MVP race because Purdyâs case is unlikely to be built on rushing highlights or off-script chaos. It would have to come from command, efficiency, touchdown production and wins. Evans can help with at least two of those immediately.
Purdy has already spoken positively about the group. During a May interview with 49ers team reporter Laura Britt, Purdy said San Francisco was excited about the receiving corps and noted that âeveryoneâs healthy and good.â
That optimism now has to become production.
GettySEATTLE, WASHINGTON – JANUARY 17: Brock Purdy #13 of the San Francisco 49ers throws a pass against the Seattle Seahawks during the second quarter in the NFC Divisional Playoff game at Lumen Field on January 17, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)
George Kittle and Christian McCaffrey Still Shape the Ceiling
The new receivers are only part of the equation. Purdyâs ceiling still depends heavily on how much the 49ers get from George Kittle and Christian McCaffrey.
NFL.com flagged Kittleâs recovery from an Achilles tear as something to monitor, while also noting that backup Jake Tonges played well when given opportunities last season. Kittle continues to target Week 1 for his return.
A healthy Kittle would give Purdy the kind of middle-of-the-field answer that has long made Shanahanâs offense difficult to defend. If Kittle is limited early, the pressure shifts toward Evans, Kirk, Pearsall and McCaffrey to keep the passing game on schedule.
McCaffrey remains the piece that can turn good Purdy numbers into MVP-adjacent numbers. He gives Purdy layups, punishes light boxes and forces defenses to declare their intentions before the snap. If Evans expands the red-zone menu and McCaffrey keeps defenses honest, Purdyâs efficiency case becomes easier to imagine.
The Schedule Could Help or Hurt Purdyâs Case
The challenge is that Purdyâs MVP candidacy will not be judged in a vacuum.
The 49ers are scheduled to become the first NFL team to play two international games in non-consecutive weeks, with games in Melbourne and Mexico City. They also open the season against the Los Angeles Rams in Melbourne on September 10.
That gives Purdy a high-profile runway, but it also raises the degree of difficulty. San Francisco shares a division with the reigning champion Seattle Seahawks and a Rams team that NFL.com described as a Super Bowl favorite in its Purdy write-up.
That is why the MVP framing is useful. Purdy does not need to be the NFLâs most physically overwhelming quarterback to enter the conversation. He needs the 49ers to win enough games, the offense to look dangerous again and his own production to make it clear he is driving the operation rather than simply benefiting from it.
That has always been the debate around Purdy. The 2026 season gives him a clean chance to answer it.
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