It won't necessarily be for the router. The packet could be addressed to one of the machines on your LAN, in which case nothing NAT does will stop the router from happily forwarding it right through.
NAT does nothing to stop a router from forwarding any given packet -- and that's something that's still true regardless of what IP range you're using on the LAN side.
NAT does nothing to stop a router from forwarding any given packet -- and that's something that's still true regardless of what IP range you're using on the LAN side.