Nashville to Host Super Bowl LXIV in 2030 at New Nissan Stadium
Music City Is Getting the Super Bowl — Nashville Officially Lands the NFL's Biggest Stage in 2030
The NFL made it official at the Spring League Meeting in Orlando. Super Bowl LXIV is coming to Nashville's brand-new $2.1 billion Nissan Stadium on Feb. 10, 2030 — and it will be unlike any Super Bowl the league has ever thrown.
ORLANDO, Fla. — May 19, 2026
The NFL has awarded Super Bowl LXIV to Nashville, Tennessee. The league announced Monday that the new Nissan Stadium will host the championship game on Feb. 10, 2030, marking the first time in league history that Music City will host the Super Bowl.
The announcement came at the NFL Spring League Meeting in Orlando following a review by the league's Fan Engagement and Major Events Committee and a vote by full ownership. It caps years of planning, political negotiation and more than $2.1 billion in construction investment that transformed Nashville's East Bank into one of the most ambitious stadium projects in NFL history.
Super Bowl LXIV Nashville: What the New Nissan Stadium Brings to the Table
The new Nissan Stadium is currently under construction on the East Bank of the Cumberland River in Nashville, running parallel to the existing stadium that has served as the Titans' home since 1999. The $2.1 billion facility will seat approximately 60,000 fans and features a translucent ETFE roof — the enclosed design that makes it viable for major events year-round and, specifically, for a February Super Bowl in Tennessee. The new stadium is projected to open by early 2027, with the Titans playing the 2026 season at the current Nissan Stadium before the old venue is demolished in phases immediately following that season.
While the seating capacity is smaller than the current stadium, the new Nissan Stadium will feature modern seating options, expansive concourses and significantly more elevators and escalators than the current venue. The enclosed roof creates the opportunity to host some of the world's largest sporting events, which had previously been beyond the reach of a city that has increasingly established itself as one of America's premier sports destinations.
How Nashville Earned the Right to Host Super Bowl LXIV
Nashville did not arrive at this moment by accident. The NFL's view of the city changed permanently when the 2019 NFL Draft set an attendance record with a three-day total of 600,000 fans — more than double the previous mark — as Lower Broadway transformed into one of the most electric outdoor venues the league had ever seen. That weekend generated $224 million in economic impact and put Nashville in a category of its own as a host city.
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell acknowledged as much Monday. "The 2019 NFL Draft in Nashville was one of the greatest fan events in our history," Goodell said. "Super Bowl LXIV at the new stadium is the next step in this remarkable football journey. The vision of Amy Adams Strunk and the Tennessee Titans helped make this moment possible. With great partners at the Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp. and Tennessee Titans, we can't wait to put on an unforgettable show in 2030."
What Super Bowl LXIV Week Will Look Like in Nashville
Beyond the game itself, Super Bowl LXIV week will include NFL Honors, the Super Bowl Experience presented by Jersey Mike's, Super Bowl Opening Night fueled by Gatorade and a series of community initiatives. Among those is NFL Source, the league's procurement program connecting local and underrepresented businesses to Super Bowl spending opportunities.
Deana Ivey, president and CEO of the Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp., framed the magnitude of the moment for the city. "Hosting the Super Bowl is a defining moment for Nashville and Tennessee and reflects years of work to build Music City into a globally recognized destination for music, entertainment and live events," Ivey said. "This event is an incredible opportunity to showcase the dynamic and creative character of Nashville to a global audience and to deliver a Super Bowl experience that is distinctly Music City, where music, sports, culture and hospitality come together in a way few cities can match."
Tennessee Titans controlling owner Amy Adams Strunk echoed the sentiment. "This is an exciting moment for our city and our entire state," Strunk said. "We cannot wait for our community to experience an event of this magnitude and for the world to see the energy, hospitality and culture that make our city so special on a global stage."
How to Secure Super Bowl LXIV Nashville Tickets
On Location, the official hospitality partner of the NFL, launched its Priority Access deposit program Monday for Super Bowl LXIV hospitality packages. The program offers fans the first opportunity to guarantee seats to the game. Packages include premium seating, high-end food and beverage service, exclusive entertainment and access to experiences not available through standard ticket channels. A fully refundable, time-stamped Priority Access deposit secures a fan's first choice of tickets and hospitality packages. More information and deposits are available at OnLocationExp.com/SuperBowlLXIV.
Super Bowl LXIV Nashville: The Bigger Picture
In a little less than four years, Nashville's East Bank will be the center of the sports world. The new Nissan Stadium represents the largest stadium subsidy in United States history at $1.26 billion in public funding — a reflection of how seriously Nashville and the state of Tennessee committed to building a venue worthy of the NFL's biggest stage. That investment now has its defining moment. Super Bowl LXIV. Feb. 10, 2030. Music City.
