Yes, you can have plays reviewed in NFL overtime, but coaches cannot throw challenge flags in OT during either the regular season or the playoffs. All reviews in overtime are initiated by the replay official in the booth, not by coaches.

Basic answer

  • Coaches’ challenges are off the table once the game reaches overtime.
  • Any replay reviews (scoring plays, turnovers, close sideline catches, etc.) are buzzed down by the replay official.
  • This applies to both regular-season and postseason overtime formats.

How overtime reviews work

  • In OT, the replay official can stop the game to review plays that meet normal review criteria, just like in the final two minutes of each half.
  • Coaches don’t risk timeouts or flags in OT because they have no challenge rights at that point.

2025–2026 overtime context

  • Current OT rules give each team an opportunity to possess the ball, in both regular season and playoffs, with booth-initiated reviews only.
  • Regular-season OT is one 10-minute period; playoffs use 15-minute periods and can continue with multiple OTs until there is a winner.

Quick SEO-style notes

  • If you search ā€œcan you challenge in OT NFL,ā€ the key point is that the answer is no for coaches’ challenges, but yes in the sense that plays can still be reviewed from upstairs.
  • This is often a hot topic in forum discussion and ā€œdumb rulesā€ threads when controversial calls happen late in big games.

Bottom line: In NFL overtime, you still get replay — but it’s all from the booth, not from a coach’s red flag.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.