The 1948 Washington Redskins season was the franchise's 17th season in the National Football League (NFL) and their 12th in Washington, D.C. the team improved on their 4–8 record from 1947 and finished 7–5.
Although the NFL formally desegregated in 1946, many teams were slow to allow black athletes to compete even after the formal barrier had fallen.
None were less willing to desegregate than the Washington Redskins, who sought to be the "home team" for a vast Southern market.
The Redskins would remain the last bastion of racial segregation in the NFL, refusing to include a single black player on their roster until 1962.
This article relating to a Washington Commanders season is a stub.