Super Bowl 59 (played in February 2025) drew about 127.7 million average viewers across TV and streaming in the U.S. , the largest audience ever measured so far.

Quick Scoop

  • Super Bowl 59 (Eagles vs. Chiefs) averaged 127.7 million viewers across all platforms, setting a new record for any U.S. telecast.
  • That total includes traditional TV plus streaming and out‑of‑home viewing as counted by Nielsen.
  • In general, recent Super Bowls have all topped 100 million viewers, with a clear upward trend over the last few years.

Recent Super Bowl audiences

Here’s a quick look at the last few years’ average viewership (all platforms, where available):

[8] [7][6]
Super Bowl Season / Year played Average viewers (approx.) Notes
LVIII (58) 2023 season / Feb 2024 123.7 million Chiefs vs. 49ers; at the time, most‑watched U.S. TV program ever.
LIX (59) 2024 season / Feb 2025 127.7 million New all‑time record across Fox and streaming platforms.
Because the 2026 game has not yet kicked off or had final ratings published, current numbers are projections only, but expectations are again in the 120–130 million range based on recent trends.

TL;DR: If you’re asking “how many viewers did the Super Bowl have” in the most recent confirmed year, the answer is about 127.7 million people watched Super Bowl 59.🕒

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