The NCAA Division I FBS passing leaders comprise the career, single-season, and single-game leaders in passing yards, touchdowns, passer efficiency, completions, and completion percentage.[1] These lists are disproportionately represented by more recent players for several structural and historical reasons:
- Since 1955, the length of the regular season has expanded from 10 games to 11 and later to 12 games, with some programs now playing additional postseason games, including conference championship games, bowl games, and the College Football Playoff.
- The NCAA did not permit freshmen to compete in varsity football until 1972 (with the exception of World War II–era seasons), preventing earlier players from accumulating statistics over four full seasons.
- Bowl games were not included in single-season or career statistics until 2002.[2] As a result, many pre-2002 players are underrepresented; for example, Ty Detmer would have 16,206 passing yards and 127 passing touchdowns if bowl statistics were included, which would improve his rank in both categories.
- Beginning with the Southeastern Conference in 1992, FBS conferences introduced championship games, which have always counted toward official single-season and career statistics.
- The NCAA ruled that the 2020 season, which was heavily disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, would not count against a player’s athletic eligibility, effectively granting an additional year of eligibility to players active that season.
- Since 2018, players have been allowed to participate in as many as four games in a redshirt season; previously, playing in even one game "burned" the redshirt.[3] Since 2024, postseason games have not counted against the four-game limit.[4] These changes to redshirt rules have given very recent players several extra games to accumulate statistics.
- Only statistics accumulated while a player’s team competed in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) are included. For example, Cam Ward threw 158 combined touchdowns across Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) (71) and FBS (87) competition, but only his 87 FBS touchdowns are counted here. Several other players—including Shedeur Sanders, Taylor Heinicke, Chad Pennington, Vernon Adams, and Bailey Zappe—also spent portions of their careers at the FCS level. In some cases, excluding FCS statistics alters statistical outcomes; for example, Sanders would have a lower career completion percentage and Zappe a lower passer efficiency rating if those seasons were included.
| Legend
|
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Active FBS Player
|
|
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Current Record Holder
|
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Previous Record Holder
|
All statistics are current through the completion of the 2025 NCAA Division I FBS football season.
Passing yards
Career
Houston's Case Keenum is the NCAA career passing yards leader and the only player to throw for over 5,000 yards in three seasons. Like Timmy Chang of Hawaii, Keenum received a fifth year of eligibility after an early-career injury, which allowed him to surpass Chang, who had also benefited from a fifth year in 2001. Chang had broken BYU's Ty Detmer record, who had previously overtaken Todd Santos of San Diego State, now outside the top 50 in career passing yards.
| #
|
Player
|
Yards
|
Seasons
|
| 1
|
Case Keenum
|
19,217
|
2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Houston
|
| 2
|
Dillon Gabriel
|
18,722
|
2019 2020 2021 UCF ᛫ 2022 2023 Oklahoma ᛫ 2024 Oregon
|
| 3
|
Timmy Chang
|
17,072
|
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Hawaii
|
| 4
|
Landry Jones
|
16,646
|
2009 2010 2011 2012 Oklahoma
|
| 5
|
Graham Harrell
|
15,793
|
2005 2006 2007 2008 Texas Tech
|
| 6
|
Sam Hartman
|
15,656
|
2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 Wake Forest ᛫ 2023 Notre Dame
|
| 7
|
Bo Nix
|
15,352
|
2019 2020 2021 Auburn ᛫ 2022 2023 Oregon
|
| 8
|
Ty Detmer
|
15,031
|
1988 1989 1990 1991 BYU
|
| 9
|
Will Rogers
|
14,773
|
2020 2021 2022 2023 Mississippi State ᛫ 2024 Washington
|
| 10
|
Kellen Moore
|
14,667
|
2008 2009 2010 2011 Boise State
|
| 11
|
Baker Mayfield
|
14,607
|
2013 Texas Tech ᛫ 2015 2016 2017 Oklahoma
|
| 12
|
Luke Falk
|
14,486
|
2014 2015 2016 2017 Washington State
|
| 13
|
Seth Henigan
|
14,278
|
2021 2022 2023 2024 Memphis
|
| 14
|
Colt Brennan
|
14,193
|
2005 2006 2007 Hawaii
|
| 15
|
Rakeem Cato
|
14,079
|
2011 2012 2013 2014 Marshall
|
| 16
|
Holton Ahlers
|
13,927
|
2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 East Carolina
|
| 17
|
Michael Penix Jr.
|
13,741
|
2018 2019 2020 2021 Indiana ᛫ 2022 2023 Washington
|
| 18
|
Mason Rudolph
|
13,618
|
2014 2015 2016 2017 Oklahoma State
|
| 19
|
Sean Mannion
|
13,600
|
2011 2012 2013 2014 Oregon State
|
| 20
|
Brett Rypien
|
13,581
|
2015 2016 2017 2018 Boise State
|
| 21
|
Philip Rivers
|
13,484
|
2000 2001 2002 2003 NC State
|
| 22
|
Corey Robinson
|
13,477
|
2010 2011 2012 2013 Troy
|
| 23
|
Colt McCoy
|
13,253
|
2006 2007 2008 2009 Texas
|
| 24
|
Aaron Murray
|
13,166
|
2010 2011 2012 2013 Georgia
|
| 25
|
Kevin Kolb
|
12,964
|
2003 2004 2005 2006 Houston
|
|
| #
|
Player
|
Yards
|
Seasons
|
| 26
|
Dan LeFevour
|
12,905
|
2006 2007 2008 2009 Central Michigan
|
| 27
|
Cooper Rush
|
12,894
|
2013 2014 2015 2016 Central Michigan
|
| 28
|
Brandon Doughty
|
12,855
|
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Western Kentucky
|
| 29
|
Derek Carr
|
12,843
|
2009 2011 2012 2013 Fresno State
|
| 30
|
Jayden Daniels
|
12,749
|
2019 2020 2021 Arizona State ᛫ 2022 2023 LSU
|
| 31
|
Tim Rattay
|
12,746
|
1997 1998 1999 Louisiana Tech
|
| 32
|
Ryan Lindley
|
12,690
|
2008 2009 2010 2011 San Diego State
|
| 33
|
Luke McCown
|
12,666
|
2000 2001 2002 2003 Louisiana Tech
|
| 34
|
Chris Redman
|
12,541
|
1996 1997 1998 1999 Louisville
|
| 35
|
Chase Daniel
|
12,515
|
2005 2006 2007 2008 Missouri
|
| 36
|
Mason Fine
|
12,505
|
2016 2017 2018 2019 North Texas
|
| 37
|
Brent Stockstill
|
12,495
|
2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 Middle Tennessee
|
| 38
|
Trevor Vittatoe
|
12,439
|
2007 2008 2009 2010 UTEP
|
| 39
|
Kliff Kingsbury
|
12,429
|
1999 2000 2001 2002 Texas Tech
|
| 40
|
Connor Bazelak
|
12,349
|
2019 2020 2021 Missouri ᛫ 2022 Indiana ᛫ 2023 2024 Bowling Green
|
| 41
|
Matt Barkley
|
12,327
|
2009 2010 2011 2012 USC
|
| 42
|
Kenny Pickett
|
12,303
|
2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 Pittsburgh
|
| 43
|
Jake Browning
|
12,296
|
2015 2016 2017 2018 Washington
|
| 44
|
Jared Goff
|
12,200
|
2013 2014 2015 California
|
| 45
|
Drew Lock
|
12,193
|
2015 2016 2017 2018 Missouri
|
| 46
|
Chevan Cordeiro
|
12,191
|
2018 2019 2020 2021 Hawaii ᛫ 2022 2023 San Jose State
|
| 47
|
Brock Purdy
|
12,170
|
2018 2019 2020 2021 Iowa State
|
| 48
|
Zach Terrell
|
12,088
|
2013 2014 2015 2016 Western Michigan
|
| 49
|
Zac Dysert
|
12,013
|
2009 2010 2011 2012 Miami (OH)
|
| 50
|
Clayton Tune
|
11,996
|
2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 Houston
|
|
Single season
The single-season leader in passing yards is Bailey Zappe, who transferred to Western Kentucky for his final year of eligibility after starting his career at FCS Houston Baptist (now Houston Christian). He broke a record that had stood for 18 years from Texas Tech's B. J. Symons. Prior to Symons, the record had been held by Detmer, who edged out Houston's David Klingler in 1990.
| #
|
Player
|
Yards
|
Season
|
| 1
|
Bailey Zappe
|
5,967
|
2021 Western Kentucky
|
| 2
|
B. J. Symons
|
5,833
|
2003 Texas Tech
|
| 3
|
Graham Harrell
|
5,705
|
2007 Texas Tech
|
| 4
|
Case Keenum
|
5,671
|
2009 Houston
|
| Joe Burrow
|
5,671
|
2019 LSU
|
| 6
|
Case Keenum
|
5,631
|
2011 Houston
|
| 7
|
Anthony Gordon
|
5,579
|
2019 Washington State
|
| 8
|
Colt Brennan
|
5,549
|
2006 Hawaii
|
| 9
|
Ty Detmer
|
5,188
|
1990 BYU
|
| 10
|
David Klingler
|
5,140
|
1990 Houston
|
|
| #
|
Player
|
Yards
|
Season
|
| 11
|
Graham Harrell
|
5,111
|
2008 Texas Tech
|
| 12
|
Derek Carr
|
5,082
|
2013 Fresno State
|
| 13
|
Paul Smith
|
5,065
|
2007 Tulsa
|
| 14
|
Brandon Doughty
|
5,055
|
2015 Western Kentucky
|
| 15
|
Patrick Mahomes
|
5,052
|
2016 Texas Tech
|
| 16
|
Bryant Moniz
|
5,040
|
2010 Hawaii
|
| 17
|
Case Keenum
|
5,020
|
2008 Houston
|
| 18
|
Kliff Kingsbury
|
5,017
|
2002 Texas Tech
|
| 19
|
Matt Johnson
|
4,946
|
2015 Bowling Green
|
| 20
|
Tim Rattay
|
4,943
|
1998 Louisiana Tech
|
|
| #
|
Player
|
Yards
|
Season
|
| 21
|
Mason Rudolph
|
4,904
|
2017 Oklahoma State
|
| 22
|
Michael Penix Jr.
|
4,903
|
2023 Washington
|
| 23
|
Bryce Young
|
4,872
|
2021 Alabama
|
| 24
|
Dwayne Haskins
|
4,831
|
2018 Ohio State
|
| 25
|
Brandon Doughty
|
4,830
|
2014 Western Kentucky
|
| 26
|
Gardner Minshew
|
4,779
|
2018 Washington State
|
| Kyle McCord
|
4,779
|
2024 Syracuse Orange
|
| 28
|
Austin Reed
|
4,744
|
2022 Western Kentucky
|
| 29
|
Sonny Cumbie
|
4,742
|
2004 Texas Tech
|
| 30
|
Will Rogers
|
4,739
|
2021 Mississippi State
|
|
Single game
The first player to pass for 600 yards in a single game was Illinois' Dave Wilson, whose record stood for eight years. The 700-yard barrier was first breached in 1990 by David Klingler. The current single-game record of 734 is shared by Connor Halliday and Patrick Mahomes.
| #
|
Player
|
Yards
|
Date / Team
|
| 1
|
Connor Halliday
|
734
|
Oct. 4, 2014 Washington State
|
| Patrick Mahomes
|
734
|
Oct. 22, 2016 Texas Tech
|
| 3
|
David Klingler
|
716
|
Dec. 2, 1990 Houston
|
| 4
|
Matt Vogler
|
690
|
Nov. 3, 1990 TCU
|
| 5
|
B. J. Symons
|
661
|
Sep. 27, 2003 Texas Tech
|
| 6
|
Geno Smith
|
656
|
Sep. 29, 2012 West Virginia
|
| 7
|
Graham Harrell
|
646
|
Sep. 22, 2008 Texas Tech
|
| 8
|
Cody Hodges
|
643
|
Oct. 15, 2005 Texas Tech
|
| 9
|
Brian Lindgren
|
637
|
Oct. 6, 2001 Idaho
|
| 10
|
Scott Mitchell
|
631
|
Oct. 15, 1988 Utah
|
| 11
|
K. J. Costello
|
623
|
Sep. 26, 2020 Mississippi State
|
| 12
|
Jeremy Leach
|
622
|
Nov. 11, 1989 New Mexico
|
| 13
|
Dave Wilson
|
621
|
Nov. 8, 1980 Illinois
|
| 14
|
John Walsh
|
619
|
Oct. 30, 1993 BYU
|
| 15
|
Jimmy Klingler
|
613
|
Nov. 28, 1992 Houston
|
|
| #
|
Player
|
Yards
|
Date / Team
|
| 16
|
David Neill
|
611
|
Oct. 10, 1998 Nevada
|
| 17
|
Drew Mestemaker
|
608
|
Oct. 24, 2025 North Texas
|
| 18
|
Anthony Gordon
|
606
|
Nov. 23, 2019 Washington State
|
| 19
|
Alan Bowman
|
605
|
Sep. 15, 2018 Texas Tech
|
| 20
|
Luke Falk
|
601
|
Nov. 22, 2014 Washington State
|
| Daniel Meager
|
601
|
Sep. 7, 2007 North Texas
|
| Dillon Gabriel
|
601
|
Oct. 17, 2020 UCF
|
| 23
|
Ty Detmer
|
599
|
Nov. 16, 1991 BYU
|
| 24
|
Patrick Mahomes
|
598
|
Nov. 29, 2014 Texas Tech
|
| Baker Mayfield
|
598
|
Nov. 4, 2017 Oklahoma
|
| 26
|
Drew Anderson
|
597
|
Oct. 7, 2017 Buffalo
|
| 27
|
Brandon Doughty
|
593
|
Sep. 13, 2014 Western Kentucky
|
| 28
|
Chris Redman
|
592
|
Nov. 14, 1998 Louisville
|
| 29
|
Nick Mullens
|
591
|
Oct. 1, 2016 Southern Miss
|
| 30
|
Tim Rattay
|
590
|
Aug. 26, 1998 Louisiana Tech
|
|
Passing touchdowns
Career
In 2024, Dillon Gabriel tied Case Keenum's passing touchdowns record of 155. Gabriel played in 64 career games compared to Keenum's 57.
Single season
Bailey Zappe holds the NCAA single-season passing touchdowns record with 62, surpassing the mark set by Joe Burrow two seasons earlier.
Single game
The single-game record holder is Houston's David Klingler, who threw for 11 touchdowns in a 1990 game against Eastern Washington. Five quarterbacks (including Klingler himself) have had a 9-touchdown game, and 7 quarterbacks have had an 8-touchdown game. Many quarterbacks have passed for 7 touchdowns in a game, too many to list here.
| #
|
Player
|
TDs
|
Date / Team
|
| 1
|
David Klingler
|
11
|
Nov. 17, 1990 Houston
|
| 2
|
Dennis Shaw
|
9
|
Nov. 15, 1969 San Diego State
|
| David Klingler
|
9
|
Aug. 31, 1991 Houston
|
| Case Keenum
|
9
|
Oct. 27, 2011 Houston
|
| Anthony Gordon
|
9
|
Sep. 21, 2019 Washington State
|
| Tanner Mordecai
|
9
|
Nov. 5, 2022 SMU
|
| 7
|
Jason Martin
|
8
|
Oct. 19, 1996 Louisiana Tech
|
| Pat Barnes
|
8
|
Nov. 2, 1996 California
|
| Nick Rolovich
|
8
|
Dec. 8, 2001 Hawaii
|
| B. J. Symons
|
8
|
Oct. 4, 2003 Texas Tech
|
| Giovanni Vizza
|
8
|
Nov. 10, 2007 North Texas
|
| Geno Smith
|
8
|
Sep. 29, 2012 West Virginia
|
| Brandon Doughty
|
8
|
Nov. 28, 2014 Western Kentucky
|
Passing efficiency
Passing efficiency is a measure of quarterback performance based on the following formula:
Only passing statistics are included in the formula. Any yards or touchdowns gained rushing or by any other method are not a factor in the formula, and neither are fumbles. Players tend to rank highly on the list when they have a high completion percentage, high yards per completion, and many touchdowns to few interceptions.
Career
Alabama quarterback Tua Tagovailoa holds the highest career passer efficiency rating among players with at least 325 career pass completions. The career leaderboard is dominated by modern-era quarterbacks, with no players who debuted before the 21st century appearing in the top 25.[5]
Single season
To qualify for the single-season passer efficiency leaderboard, a quarterback must average at least 14 pass attempts per game.[6] The current record is held by Jayden Daniels of LSU, who set the mark in 2023. From 2016 through 2021, the single-season record was broken in six consecutive seasons, with a new leader each year.
Single game
The NCAA does not officially recognize a single-game passer efficiency leaderboard, so records are based on documented box scores rather than an official list. Among the highest recorded single-game performances, Cincinnati quarterback Gunner Kiel holds the top mark with a 388.6 rating after completing 15 of 15 passes for 319 yards and five touchdowns in a 2015 game against UCF,[7] while the highest rating with at least 20 attempts was by Oklahoma quarterback Kyler Murray against Baylor in 2018, marking Baylor’s second appearance as an opponent on this informal list; Murray completed 17 of 21 passes for 432 yards and six touchdowns for a 348.0 rating.
The NCAA doesn't recognize a full list for single games, but top performances include:
- Minimum 12 attempts – 403.4: – Tim Clifford of 1980 Indiana (11/14, 345 yards, 5 TD)[8]
- Minimum 15 attempts – 388.6: – Gunner Kiel of 2015 Cincinnati (15/15, 319 yards, 5 TD)[9]
- Minimum 20 attempts – 348.0 – Kyler Murray of 2018 Oklahoma (17/21, 432 yards, 6 TD)[10]
- Minimum 25 attempts – 317.4 – Bruce Gradkowski of 2003 Toledo (23/25, 435 yards, 6 TD)[11]
- Minimum 50 attempts – 248.0 – Geno Smith of 2012 West Virginia (45/51, 656 yards, 8 TD)[12]
Completions
Career
Keenum holds the NCAA Division I FBS career record for completions, surpassing the mark previously set by Harrell.
| #
|
Player
|
Comp
|
Seasons
|
| 1
|
Case Keenum
|
1,546
|
2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Houston
|
| 2
|
Will Rogers
|
1,521
|
2020 2021 2022 2023 Mississippi State ᛫ 2024 Washington
|
| 3
|
Luke Falk
|
1,404
|
2014 2015 2016 2017 Washington State
|
| 4
|
Graham Harrell
|
1,403
|
2005 2006 2007 2008 Texas Tech
|
| 5
|
Timmy Chang
|
1,388
|
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Hawaii
|
| Landry Jones
|
1,388
|
2009 2010 2011 2012 Oklahoma
|
| 7
|
Dillon Gabriel
|
1,376
|
2019 2020 2021 UCF ᛫ 2022 2023 Oklahoma ᛫ 2024 Oregon
|
| 8
|
Bo Nix
|
1,286
|
2019 2020 2021 Auburn ᛫ 2022 2023 Oregon
|
| 9
|
Kliff Kingsbury
|
1,231
|
1999 2000 2001 2002 Texas Tech
|
| 10
|
Sean Mannion
|
1,187
|
2011 2012 2013 2014 Oregon State
|
| 11
|
Corey Robinson
|
1,179
|
2010 2011 2012 2013 Troy
|
| 12
|
Dan LeFevour
|
1,171
|
2006 2007 2008 2009 Central Michigan
|
| 13
|
Colt McCoy
|
1,157
|
2006 2007 2008 2009 Texas
|
| Kellen Moore
|
1,157
|
2008 2009 2010 2011 Boise State
|
| 15
|
Rakeem Cato
|
1,153
|
2011 2012 2013 2014 Marshall
|
| 16
|
Connor Bazelak
|
1,151
|
2019 2020 2021 Missouri ᛫ 2022 Indiana ᛫ 2023 2024 Bowling Green
|
| 17
|
Seth Henigan
|
1,148
|
2021 2022 2023 2024 Memphis
|
| 18
|
Sam Hartman
|
1,135
|
2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 Wake Forest ᛫ 2023 Notre Dame
|
| 19
|
Holton Ahlers
|
1,127
|
2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 East Carolina
|
| 20
|
Colt Brennan
|
1,115
|
2005 2006 2007 Hawaii
|
| 21
|
Chase Daniel
|
1,094
|
2005 2006 2007 2008 Missouri
|
| 22
|
Philip Rivers
|
1,087
|
2000 2001 2002 2003 NC State
|
| Derek Carr
|
1,087
|
2009 2011 2012 2013 Fresno State
|
| 24
|
Chase Holbrook
|
1,086
|
2006 2007 2008 New Mexico State
|
| 25
|
Michael Penix Jr.
|
1,067
|
2018 2019 2020 2021 Indiana ᛫ 2022 2023 Washington
|
|
| #
|
Player
|
Comp
|
Seasons
|
| 26
|
Zac Dysert
|
1,066
|
2009 2010 2011 2012 Miami (OH)
|
| 27
|
Luke McCown
|
1,063
|
2000 2001 2002 2003 Louisiana Tech
|
| 28
|
Brent Stockstill
|
1,055
|
2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 Middle Tennessee
|
| 29
|
Shane Carden
|
1,052
|
2011 2012 2013 2014 East Carolina
|
| 30
|
Kenny Pickett
|
1,045
|
2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 Pittsburgh
|
| 31
|
Mason Fine
|
1,039
|
2016 2017 2018 2019 North Texas
|
| 32
|
Brett Rypien
|
1,036
|
2015 2016 2017 2018 Boise State
|
| 33
|
Keith Wenning
|
1,035
|
2010 2011 2012 2013 Ball State
|
| 34
|
Frank Harris
|
1,034
|
2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 UTSA
|
| 35
|
Chris Redman
|
1,031
|
1996 1997 1998 1999 Louisville
|
| 36
|
Baker Mayfield
|
1,026
|
2013 Texas Tech ᛫ 2015 2016 2017 Oklahoma
|
| 37
|
Brandon Doughty
|
1,023
|
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Western Kentucky
|
| 38
|
Cooper Rush
|
1,022
|
2013 2014 2015 2016 Central Michigan
|
| 39
|
Tim Rattay
|
1,015
|
1997 1998 1999 Louisiana Tech
|
| 40
|
Connor Halliday
|
1,014
|
2011 2012 2013 2014 Washington State
|
| 41
|
Tim Hiller
|
1,013
|
2005 2007 2008 2009 Western Michigan
|
| 42
|
Matt Barkley
|
1,001
|
2009 2010 2011 2012 USC
|
| 43
|
Jarret Doege
|
996
|
2017 2018 Bowling Green ᛫ 2019 2020 2021 West Virginia ᛫ 2022 Troy
|
| 44
|
Alan Bowman
|
994
|
2018 2019 2020 Texas Tech ᛫ 2021 2022 Michigan ᛫ 2023 2024 Oklahoma State
|
| 45
|
Brock Purdy
|
993
|
2018 2019 2020 2021 Iowa State
|
| 46
|
Clayton Thorson
|
991
|
2008 2009 2010 2011 Northwestern
|
| 47
|
Kedon Slovis
|
989
|
2019 2020 2021 USC ᛫ 2022 Pittsburgh ᛫ 2023 BYU
|
| 48
|
Geno Smith
|
988
|
2009 2010 2011 2012 West Virginia
|
| E. J. Warner
|
988
|
2022 2023 Temple ᛫ 2024 Rice ᛫ 2025 Fresno State
|
| 50
|
Curtis Painter
|
987
|
2005 2006 2007 2008 Purdue
|
|
Single season
Harrell holds the single season record. Of the top 17 players on the list, 13 played under head coach Mike Leach.
Single game
The single-game record is tied between Eastern Michigan's Andy Schmidt and Washington State's Connor Halliday.
| #
|
Player
|
Comp
|
Date / Team
|
| 1
|
Andy Schmitt
|
58
|
Nov. 28, 2008 Eastern Michigan
|
| Connor Halliday
|
58
|
Oct. 19, 2013 Washington State
|
| 3
|
Case Keenum
|
56
|
Dec. 5, 2009 Houston
|
| Connor Halliday
|
56
|
Oct. 25, 2014 Washington State
|
| 5
|
Rusty LaRue
|
55
|
Oct. 28, 1995 Wake Forest
|
| Drew Brees
|
55
|
Oct. 10, 1998 Purdue
|
| Luke Falk
|
55
|
Sep. 10, 2016 Washington State
|
| 8
|
David Piland
|
53
|
Sep. 8, 2012 Houston
|
| 9
|
Derek Carr
|
52
|
Aug. 29, 2013 Fresno State
|
| Deshaun Watson
|
52
|
Nov. 12, 2016 Clemson
|
| Patrick Mahomes
|
52
|
Oct. 22, 2016 Texas Tech
|
| Gardner Minshew
|
52
|
Nov. 12, 2017 East Carolina
|
| 13
|
Case Keenum
|
51
|
Oct. 3, 2009 Houston
|
| 14
|
Rusty LaRue
|
50
|
Nov. 18, 1995 Wake Forest
|
| Andy Schmitt
|
50
|
Nov. 22, 2008 Eastern Michigan
|
| Luke Falk
|
50
|
Oct. 10, 2015 Washington State
|
| Anthony Gordon
|
50
|
Nov. 23, 2019 Washington State
|
| Will Rogers
|
50
|
Sep. 18, 2021 Mississippi State
|
|
| #
|
Player
|
Comp
|
Date / Team
|
| 19
|
Brian Lindgren
|
49
|
Oct. 6, 2001 Idaho
|
| Kliff Kingsbury
|
49
|
Oct. 5, 2002 Texas Tech
|
| Kliff Kingsbury
|
49
|
Oct. 19, 2002 Texas Tech
|
| Bruce Gradkowski
|
49
|
Sep. 20, 2003 Toledo
|
| Chase Holbrook
|
49
|
Oct. 15, 2006 New Mexico State
|
| Connor Halliday
|
49
|
Oct. 4, 2014 Washington State
|
| Dwayne Haskins
|
49
|
Oct. 20, 2018 Ohio State
|
| Carson Strong
|
49
|
Oct. 23, 2021 Nevada
|
| 27
|
Chase Holbrook
|
48
|
Sep. 30, 2006 New Mexico State
|
| Graham Harrell
|
48
|
Sep. 8, 2007 Texas Tech
|
| Anthony Gordon
|
48
|
Nov. 29, 2019 Washington State
|
|
Completion percentage
Career
The NCAA does not officially recognize a full list for career completion percentage leaders.[13] Instead, they are ranked by completion percentage based on number of attempts. References such as Sports Reference and StatMuse provide more comprehensive lists for various minimum attempt thresholds.[14][15]
Career leaders for pass completion percentage include:
Single season
To qualify for the single-season completion percentage leaderboard, a player must average at least 14 pass attempts per game. Mac Jones held the NCAA single-season record for completion percentage until 2023, when it was broken by Bo Nix of Oregon. At the end of the 20th century, the record was held by Daunte Culpepper; he remains ninth on the all-time list and is the only player who debuted before the 21st century to appear.[16]
Single game
The NCAA doesn't recognize a full list for single games, but top performances include:
Most wins by a starting quarterback
Career
This table lists the top Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) quarterbacks ranked by career wins in games they started. Only victories earned while the player was the designated starting quarterback are counted (relief appearances are excluded), with ties included where applicable.[17] Kellen Moore is the FBS record holder in this category, surpassing Colt McCoy’s previous mark in 2011; McCoy had broken David Greene’s record of 42 career wins as a starter in 2009 with a victory over Kansas.[18] Some sources list Moore with 50 career wins, but he did not start against Fresno State in the regular season finale of his redshirt freshman year on Senior Day; the start (and win) for that game is officially credited to Bush Hamdan.[19] The milestone was publicly celebrated following the victory over UNLV on November 5, 2011; however, based on official starter records, Moore officially surpassed McCoy’s career wins mark two weeks later against San Diego State on November 19, 2011.[20][21]
Although Mark Gronowski holds the NCAA all-division record for career wins as a starting quarterback with 58 victories, he is not included on this list because his total was accumulated across both the FCS and FBS levels.[22]
Bo Nix previously held the FBS record for career starts by a quarterback until it was surpassed by Dillon Gabriel in 2024.[23]
| #
|
Player
|
Seasons
|
GP
|
GS
|
W
|
L
|
T
|
%
|
| 1 |
Kellen Moore |
2007–2011 |
53 |
52 |
49 |
3 |
0 |
94.2
|
| 2 |
Dillon Gabriel |
2019–2024 |
64 |
63 |
46 |
17 |
0 |
73.0
|
| 3 |
Colt McCoy |
2005–2009 |
53 |
53 |
45 |
8 |
0 |
84.9
|
| 4 |
Bo Nix |
2019–2023 |
61 |
61 |
43 |
18 |
0 |
70.5
|
| 5 |
42 – many times
|
Single season
This table lists FBS quarterbacks with the highest number of wins in a single season as a starter. Only victories earned while the player was the designated starting quarterback are counted, with ties included where applicable. Joe Burrow was the first player to surpass 15 wins in a single season in 2019, and the current single-season record is held by Fernando Mendoza with 16 wins in 2025. Both Burrow and Mendoza won a national championship and the Heisman Trophy in their respective seasons, while Stetson Bennett (2022) and J. J. McCarthy (2023) also captured national championships.[24] Single-season win totals are higher and more common in recent years due to expanded schedules and extended playoff formats, which give quarterbacks more opportunities to earn victories.
See also
References
- ^ "Football Bowl Subdivision Records" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved January 5, 2023.
- ^ "NCAA changes policy on football stats". ESPN.com. AP. August 28, 2002. Retrieved September 11, 2014.
- ^ "DI football to offer more participation opportunities" (Press release). NCAA. June 13, 2018. Retrieved July 27, 2018.
- ^ "DI football oversight committees propose one transfer window" (Press release). NCAA. August 27, 2024. Retrieved September 1, 2024.
- ^ "Passing Efficiency Rating Career Leaders and Records". sports-reference.com. Retrieved January 1, 2026.
- ^ "CFB Passing Rating Player Season Leaders". Sports Reference. Retrieved February 25, 2026.
- ^ "Cincinnati pummels Central Florida, 52–7". ESPN.com. October 31, 2015. Retrieved September 5, 2022.
- ^ "Quarterback Tim Clifford tossed five touchdown passes on just". UPI. September 27, 1980.
- ^ "UCF at Cincinnati Box Score, October 31, 2015". Sports Reference CFB. Retrieved January 20, 2026.
- ^ "Baylor at Oklahoma Box Score, September 29, 2018". sports-reference.com. September 29, 2018. Retrieved January 1, 2026.
- ^ "Buffalo at Toledo Box Score, November 1, 2003". Sports Reference CFB. Retrieved January 20, 2026.
- ^ "Baylor at West Virginia Box Score, September 29, 2012". Sports Reference CFB. Retrieved January 20, 2026.
- ^ "Football Statistics and Records". NCAA.org. National Collegiate Athletic Association. Retrieved January 5, 2026.
- ^ "College Football Completion Percentage Leaders – Minimum 500 Passes". StatMuse. Retrieved February 25, 2026.
- ^ "CFB Career Completion Percentage Leaders". Sports Reference. Retrieved February 25, 2026.
- ^ "Pass Completion Percentage Single Season Leaders and Records". sports-reference.com. January 15, 2025.
- ^ "Most Wins By A Starting Qb In College Football History". StatMuse. statmuse.com. Retrieved February 16, 2026.
- ^ "Texas defeats Kansas 51‑20". University of Texas Athletics. texaslonghorns.com. November 21, 2009. Retrieved February 15, 2026.
- ^ Slant, Scott (November 28, 2008). "This Day in Sports: Boise State Football vs Fresno State, Perfect Season, Ian Johnson, Senior Night". KTVB. Retrieved January 7, 2025.
- ^ "Boise State Quarterback Kellen Moore Breaks NCAA Wins Record". NESN. nesn.com. November 6, 2011. Retrieved February 16, 2026.
- ^ "Moore has made history; now, Boise State looks to as well". Sports Illustrated. si.com. November 11, 2011. Retrieved February 16, 2026.
- ^ "Iowa football's Mark Gronowski breaks NCAA Div. I quarterback career wins record". Blue Water Healthy Living. bluewaterhealthyliving.com. September 13, 2025. Retrieved February 16, 2026.
- ^ "Gabriel Named Big Ten Offensive Player of the Year, Quarterback of the Year". University of Oregon Athletics. goducks.com. December 3, 2024. Retrieved February 16, 2026.
- ^ "Indiana's Fernando Mendoza Wins 2025 Manning Award". Allstate Sugar Bowl. allstatesugarbowl.org. January 30, 2026. Retrieved February 16, 2026.
NCAA Division I FBS statistical leaders |
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| Annual | |
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