The coldest Super Bowl ever played was Super Bowl VI at Tulane Stadium in New Orleans, Louisiana, with a kickoff temperature of about 39°F (around 4°C).

Quick Scoop

Where was the coldest Super Bowl played?

  • Super Bowl VI was held at Tulane Stadium in New Orleans, Louisiana.
  • It was played on January 16, 1972, between the Dallas Cowboys and the Miami Dolphins.
  • The temperature at kickoff was about 39°F, officially recognized as the coldest Super Bowl game-time temperature on record.

A bit of context

Despite New Orleans being known for warm, humid weather, a strong cold front pushed in that weekend and turned the usually mild city into an unexpectedly chilly Super Bowl host. Players still wore short sleeves, and on film the game does not look brutally cold, which often surprises fans who only later learn it holds the “coldest Super Bowl” record.

Other notably cold Super Bowls

  • Super Bowl IX – also at Tulane Stadium, New Orleans; around 46°F at kickoff.
  • Super Bowl XLVIII – MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey; about 49°F at kickoff.

Even colder air temperatures have occurred in host cities like Minneapolis, but those games were played indoors, so they do not count as the coldest played Super Bowls on the field.

Mini table of the coldest Super Bowls

Super Bowl Location & Stadium Kickoff Temperature
VI (1972) Tulane Stadium, New Orleans, LA 39°F
IX (1975) Tulane Stadium, New Orleans, LA 46°F
XLVIII (2014) MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, NJ 49°F
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“You’d think Green Bay or Minnesota would own the ‘coldest Super Bowl’ crown, but thanks to domes and scheduling, that honor still belongs to an outdoor game in New Orleans.”

TL;DR: When people ask “where was the coldest Super Bowl played?” the answer is Tulane Stadium in New Orleans, Louisiana, for Super Bowl VI at about 39°F.

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