US Trends

how long is the superbowl usually

The Super Bowl broadcast is usually about 3.5 to 4 hours long from kickoff to final whistle, including the halftime show and all the commercials.

Quick Scoop

  • Most Super Bowls last around 3 hours 30–40 minutes on average.
  • A typical kickoff is about 6:30 p.m. ET, and the game often ends a bit after 10 p.m. ET.
  • Regulation NFL play is 60 minutes (four 15‑minute quarters), but halftime, reviews, timeouts, and commercials stretch the TV time.
  • The last 20 Super Bowls have averaged roughly 3 hours 37–38 minutes, with only a few going over 4 hours.

Why it takes that long

  • Extended halftime show : Super Bowl halftime can be close to 30 minutes, longer than a normal NFL halftime.
  • Commercials and breaks : Premium ads and stoppages add roughly 40–50 minutes of non‑game time.
  • Extras : Pre‑game ceremonies, post‑game trophy presentation, and possible overtime can push the broadcast toward four hours.

If you just want to know “when will it be over,” planning on about 3.5 hours from kickoff is a safe bet, with the possibility it runs closer to 4 hours on some years.

TL;DR: Expect the Super Bowl to run about 3.5 hours on average, sometimes stretching up to 4 hours with a long halftime, lots of commercials, and post‑game coverage.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.