Non-fullerene acceptor (NFA) molecules attracted huge attention from the photovoltaic community for their potential use in organic solar cells (OSCs). Herein, we designed a series of NFA materials (AR1–AR9) for OSCs by altering end-capped moieties. We employed various advanced density functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent (TD-DFT) approaches to characterize this designed AR1–AR9 series. Compared to the synthetic reference molecule ([Formula: see text], designed molecules AR1–AR9 revealed a smaller bandgap (1.85 eV), and improved absorption spectra ([Formula: see text] 741 nm) in comparison to [Formula: see text] ([Formula: see text] 668 nm), indicating the better potential for the tailored molecules. Furthermore, the designed series (AR1–AR9) shows lower reorganization energy values (for holes and electrons) and lower binding energies (0.323 eV), whereas, improved charge mobilities, showing them better candidates for OSCs. Moreover, frontier molecular orbitals (FMO), open-circuit voltages ([Formula: see text] and improved charge-transfer characteristics have also been investigated. These findings revealed that all developed NFAs exhibited a wide range of exciton dissociation constants and enhanced absorption efficiency with a relatively lower LUMO energy level. Therefore, we believe that these materials will be beneficial in boosting the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of OSC devices by improving their optoelectronic and photophysical properties.