The Super Bowl LX, held last Sunday and won by the Seattle Seahawks, averaged 124.9 million viewers in the United States, a slight drop from 2025. Despite the decline in viewership, Super Bowl LX was the second most-watched in U.S. history, behind the all-time record of 127.7 million viewers set in the previous edition, according to Tuesday data from Nielsen. The Seahawks won 29-13 over the New England Patriots and claimed their second Super Bowl in franchise history. The peak audience occurred during the second quarter with 137.8 million viewers across NBC networks, which was an all-time record. Telemundo's Spanish-language broadcast also set a record with an average of 3.3 million viewers. The halftime show featuring Bad Bunny averaged 128.2 million viewers, also below the all-time record set by Kendrick Lamar last year with 133.5 million audience.
Super Bowl LX averages 124.9 million viewers in US
Super Bowl LX becomes the second most-watched event in U.S. history, trailing only last year's record. Peak audience reached 137.8 million viewers.