The news: Super Bowl LX fell short of last year’s record but still delivered one of the largest audiences in US media history. Live football once again proved its unmatched scale across broadcast and streaming, even without surpassing last year’s peak.
- Seattle’s 29–13 win over New England averaged 124.9 million viewers across NBC, Peacock, Telemundo, NBC Sports Digital, and NFL+, per Nielsen’s Big Data + Panel ratings.
- The total trails last year’s 127.7 million on Fox but ranks as the most-watched program in NBCUniversal history.
- Viewership peaked at 137.8 million during the second quarter, setting a new US TV record.
- Bad Bunny’s halftime show averaged 128.2 million viewers, the fourth-largest halftime audience on record, and generated 4 billion social media views within 24 hours, up 137% YoY, according to the NFL and Ripple Analytics.
- Telemundo averaged 3.3 million viewers, the largest Spanish-language Super Bowl audience on record, with a 4.8 million halftime peak.
- The game led into NBC’s “Primetime in Milan” Winter Olympics coverage, which averaged 42 million viewers, the network’s largest Winter Olympics audience since 2014.
Why it matters: Live football remains the most reliable mass-reach vehicle in US media.
Even as viewing fragments across platforms, the NFL continues to aggregate simultaneous audiences at a scale no other property matches.
- EMARKETER/Inscape data shows digital reaches nearly 70% of live sports viewers but accounts for just over one-third of total live sports viewing time, illustrating linear TV’s continued dominance in time spent.
- Live sports represented 43.3% of US national TV ad spending in Q4 2024, per iSpot.tv, highlighting football’s central role in ad pricing and demand.
- Two in three avid US sports fans are very likely to add a streaming subscription to watch sports, per Hub Research, highlighting how critical live sports is to CTV's future.
- Although viewership dipped YoY, this marks the fifth straight Super Bowl averaging more than 100 million viewers, reinforcing the NFL’s stability at scale.
Implications for marketers: The slight audience decline does not weaken the NFL’s leverage. The Super Bowl remains one of the few properties capable of delivering synchronized mass reach across linear and streaming.
Streaming via Peacock and digital extensions adds incremental reach, but monetization and peak scale remain anchored in linear distribution. At the same time, social amplification now rivals traditional ratings as a measure of cultural impact, with Bad Bunny’s halftime show generating billions of global views, more than half from outside the US.
For advertisers, the takeaway is practical: Football still justifies premium pricing because it concentrates attention at unmatched levels. Long-term growth, however, will depend on how effectively broadcasters convert hybrid viewers into sustained streaming engagement beyond the tentpole event.