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 ā€œwhen will it be over,ā€ 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.