Super Bowl LIX Reached Record 182.8M Viewing For At Least A Minute

Nielsen's new Big Data + Panel measurement says the “Super Bowl LIX” reached 182.8 million viewers -- a record -- for at least one minute on February 9.

Nielsen previously announced that the big game earned a record 127.7 million viewers on Fox Television Network, Tubi, Fox Deportes, Telemundo and NFL digital properties using its average minute audience metric across the entire game.

Super Bowl LIX had the previous record -- at 182.2 million viewers -- for last year’s game.

For that result -- and others previously, the "reach" of the Super Bowl came from using the Nielsen Total Audience Metric -- which Nielsen retired last month in favor of Big Data + Panel reach. Nielsen says this more precisely measures out-of-home viewing.

Last week, Fox Corp. said “Super Bowl LIX” on Fox and Tubi generated over $800 million in gross revenue from advertising sales across all platforms. Media analysts say specific 30-second inventory deals went for $8 million.

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Tubi's simulcast of the game posted an average 13.6 million average minute audience.

Pre-game coverage earned 23.4 million viewers -- also a record result. The "pre-kick" portion of pre-game -- the minutes before kickoff -- averaged 82.5 million viewers, up 9% over last year’s 75.8 million.

Super BowlNetwork(s)Total Viewers P2+HHLD RatingDate
LIXFOX, Tubi, 
Telemundo, FOX Deportes
127,713,00041.7Feb. 9, 2025
LVIIICBS, Univision,
Nickelodeon, NAN, Paramount+
123,714,00043.5Feb. 11, 2024
LVIIFOX
FOX Deportes
115,096,00040.7Feb. 12, 2023
LVINBC
Telemundo
101,470,00037.9Feb. 13, 2022
LVCBS
ESPN Deportes
95,877,00038.4Feb. 7, 2021
LIVFOX
FOX Deportes
102,086,00042.0Feb. 2, 2020
LIIICBS
ESPN Deportes
98,950,00041.4Feb. 3, 2019
LIINBC
Universo
104,016,00043.1Feb. 4, 2018
LIFOX
FOX Deportes
111,973,00045.3Feb. 5, 2017
SB 50CBS
ESPN Deportes
112,336,00046.6Feb. 7, 2016
XLIXNBC
Universo
114,810,00047.5Feb. 1, 2015
XLVIIIFOX
FOX Deportes
112,752,00046.7Feb. 2, 2014
XLVIICBS108,693,00046.4Feb. 3, 2013
XLVINBC111,346,00047.1Feb. 5, 2012
XLVFOX111,041,00046.0Feb. 6, 2011
XLIVCBS106,476,00045.0Feb. 7, 2010
XLIIINBC98,732,00042.0Feb. 1, 2009
XLIIFOX97,448,00043.1Feb. 3, 2008
XLICBS93,184,00042.6Feb. 4, 2007
XLABC90,745,00041.6Feb. 5, 2006
XXXIXFOX86,072,00041.1Feb. 6, 2005
XXXVIIICBS89,795,00041.4Feb. 1, 2004
XXXVIIABC88,637,00040.7Jan. 26, 2003
XXXVIFOX86,801,00040.4Feb. 3, 2002
XXXVCBS84,335,00040.4Jan. 28, 2001
XXXIVABC88,465,00043.3Jan. 30, 2000
XXXIIIFOX83,720,00040.2Jan. 31, 1999
XXXIINBC90,000,00044.5Jan. 25, 1998
XXXIFOX87,870,00043.3Jan. 26, 1997
XXXNBC94,080,00046.0Jan. 28, 1996
XXIXABC83,420,00041.3Jan. 29, 1995
XXVIIINBC90,000,00045.5Jan. 30, 1994
XXVIINBC90,990,00045.1Jan. 31, 1993
XXVICBS79,590,00040.3Jan. 26, 1992
XXVABC79,510,00041.9Jan. 27, 1991
XXIVCBS73,852,00039.0Jan. 28, 1990
XXIIINBC81,590,00043.5Jan. 22, 1989
XXIIABC80,140,00041.9Jan. 31, 1988
XXICBS87,190,00045.8Jan. 25, 1987
XXNBC92,570,00048.3Jan. 26, 1986
XIXABC85,530,00046.4Jan. 20, 1985
XVIIICBS77,620,00046.4Jan. 22, 1984
XVIINBC81,770,00048.6Jan. 30, 1983
XVICBS85,240,00049.1Jan. 24, 1982
XVNBC68,290,00044.4Jan. 25, 1981
XIVCBS76,240,00046.3Jan. 20, 1980
XIIINBC74,740,00047.1Jan. 21, 1979
XIICBS78,940,00047.2Jan. 15, 1978
XINBC62,050,00044.4Jan. 9, 1977
XCBS57,710,00042.3Jan. 18, 1976
IXNBC56,050,00042.4Jan. 12, 1975
VIIICBS51,700,00041.6Jan. 13, 1974
VIINBC53,320,00042.7Jan. 14, 1973
VICBS56,640,00044.2Jan. 16, 1972
VNBC46,040,00039.9Jan. 17, 1971
IVCBS44,270,00039.4Jan. 11, 1970
IIINBC41,660,00036.0Jan. 12, 1969
IICBS39,120,00036.8Jan. 14, 1968
ICBS26,750,00022.6Jan. 15, 1967
INBC24,430,00018.5Jan. 15, 1967

Source: Nielsen. 

The first Super Bowl to include Out-of-Home (OOH) viewing was SB LV. Nielsen began including OOH viewing into its National TV measurement in September 2020. As of Feb. 2025, Nielsen’s OOH measurement covers 100% of the U.S. contiguous television population.

Super Bowl XLVIII included the first Spanish-language broadcast for a Super Bowl.

Super Bowl I (January 15, 1967) aired on both CBS and NBC.

3 comments about "Super Bowl LIX Reached Record 182.8M Viewing For At Least A Minute".
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  1. Marcelo Salup from Iffective LLC, February 18, 2025 at 11:51 a.m.

    I usually laugh at vanity metrics in the digital world: impressions (served), open rates on email and, now, "reached for at least 1 minute". This is the epitome of a vanity metric. Really... who cares? If I were an advertiser all I would care about is how many people saw my ad (and, naturally, outside of the SB, did my PR firm get my ad tons and tons of traction?). From the POV of a company that is paying $8 million per spot and having to buy a package to obtain premium positioning, what I want is people watching my spot.

    I would love to hear why anyone would think that "at least 1 minute" is valuable.

  2. Ed Papazian from Media Dynamics Inc, February 18, 2025 at 12:58 p.m.

    Marcello, not all rating info is about ads. Nielsen was using the 1+ minutes rule way back in the 1950s as a way to indicate the "holding power" of TV show content. It has some uses. For example if half hour Show A holds those who sampled it for at least 60 seconds for 85% of its content while  Show B's samplers remained tuned in for only 75% of its half hour content and both programs are in the same program genre, than Show B is less engaging. What's more if Show A begins to trend downward in its holding power stats acroiss a succession of episodes that could be a sign of trouble for the producer and network.

    Sample size permitting holding power indices can also  be developed by age or income or ethnic groupings, offering additional insights.  In the case of the last SB, all Nielsen is telling us is that those homes who sampled the show consumed 70% of its content in terms of set usaage.

  3. Ed Papazian from Media Dynamics Inc, February 18, 2025 at 4:01 p.m.

    Sorry about misspelling your name, Marcelo.

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