The Chiefs-49ers Super Bowl delivered the largest (official) audience in television history.
Sunday’s Chiefs-49ers Super Bowl 58 averaged 123.4 million viewers across CBS, Nickelodeon and Univision, per Nielsen fast-nationals, the largest official Nielsen audience in U.S. television history. Viewership increased 7% from the previous high set by last year’s Chiefs-Eagles Super Bowl on FOX and Fox Deportes (115.1M). The primary CBS broadcast averaged 120 million viewers, marking the largest single-network television audience on record, ahead of the previous high set by Patriots-Seahawks on NBC in 2015 (114.4M).
While this year’s game holds the official records, the largest Nielsen-measured audience in history remains 124.6 million for the 2017 Patriots-Falcons Super Bowl, including 123.9 million on FOX alone. The official 2017 audience is 112 million viewers (111.3 million on FOX), but that does not include out-of-home viewing — which was tracked in 2017, but not included in Nielsen final nationals.
(It should also be noted that out-of-home viewing was not measured at all for the first 50 editions of the Super Bowl, including the 2015 Patriots-Seahawks game that averaged 114.4 million on an in-home basis alone. Given the typical out-of-home lift of 12-13 million viewers, it is likely that game would also rank ahead all things being equal.)
Whether or not it is truly the most-watched program in television history, the Chiefs’ overtime win is at the very least in the neighborhood — delivering an audience on par with some the most dramatic Super Bowl games ever played. The 2017 matchup, featuring a historic New England comeback, was the previous Super Bowl to go to overtime. The 2015 game was decided on a last-second interception at the goal line.
This year’s audience would have been hard to imagine as recently as three years ago, when the Buccaneers’ COVID-era rout of the Chiefs averaged an official Nielsen audience of just under 96 million (101 million including streaming viewership tracked by Adobe Analytics). The NFL’s recovery from its COVID-era lull exceeds that of any other major pro sport.
Beyond the average minute audience that is typically reported, 202.4 million viewers watched “all or part” (at least six minutes) of the Super Bowl, up 10% from last year (184 million) and also the highest official figure on record.
Specific viewership figures for the Spongebob Squarepants-themed Nickelodeon simulcast were not immediately available. Spanish-language coverage on Univision averaged 2.3 million, the largest Spanish-language network Super Bowl audience on record. The previous high was 1.9 million for the 2022 game on Telemundo. This year and 2022 are the only years that the Super Bowl aired on a major Spanish-language network, with the other games having aired on cable outlets Fox Deportes, ESPN Deportes or NBC’s Universo.
The last time the Chiefs and 49ers met in the Super Bowl four years ago, the official viewership figure was 101.32 million. (Including out-of-home viewing for that game, which as in 2017 was not included in the official number, the 2020 game averaged 114.3 million.)
Additional details on Sunday’s numbers will be available when the final nationals are released.










