The NFL’s TV ratings dive continues to show no signs of letting up.

According to FOX Sports’ chief of research, the dip in regional ratings is nothing compared to a dramatic slump for prime-time games headlined by the staggering 24 percent fall-off for ESPN’s “Monday Night Football.”

Regional ratings for Fox’s NFC package have shown the smallest drop at just 1 percent through seven weeks compared to 2015, while regional ratings for CBS’ AFC package are down 9 percent, FOX Sports executive vice president of research Michael Mulvihill tweeted Tuesday.

Although the ratings for “Monday Night Football” have fallen off a cliff compared to last season, ratings for “Thursday Night Football” on CBS and the NFL Network and for NBC’s “Sunday Night Football” aren’t much better.

The Thursday package is down 18 percent, while the Sunday prime-time package is off 19 percent.

NFL officials continue to say they can’t point to one particular factor for the big drops, although Mulvihill noted that cable news ratings are up on Sundays this fall in a sign that the presidential election is having a major impact.

Critics have also pointed to fans possibly being turned off by the anthem protests led by 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick and an early run of unattractive prime-time matchups, but NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said this weekend that it is too early to tell if the ratings slump is a full-blown crisis.

“Everyone has theories,” Goodell said before the Cardinals and Seahawks played to a 6-6 tie on Sunday night. “We’ll continue to look at the ratings and make sure we’re doing what we need to do to improve them.”

This weekend should make it easier for Goodell and the league to know whether it’s time to push the panic button. The 5-1 Cowboys — always a rating star — play host to the 4-2 Eagles in a traditional NFC East rivalry game Sunday night.