đ Which brands won the Super Bowl this year?
GET THE REPORTSuper Bowl LX didnât just deliver big game action. It delivered one of the most eclectic and expensive advertising lineups in the eventâs history. In 2026, the price of a 30-second commercial has climbed to around $8 million, with some premium placements reportedly exceeding $10 million â up from roughly $7 million just a couple of years ago.
This yearâs spots also reflect shifting creative and strategic priorities. While familiar categories like food, beverage and automotive still dominate, technology platforms, healthcare and wellness brands as well as challengers have a stronger presence than in many past games.
Weâve compiled a complete list of the Super Bowl LX ads â from big legacy brands to first-time advertisers â as well as some key observations about what todayâs marketers can learn from how brands showed up on advertisingâs biggest night.
What can you learn from Super Bowl advertisers this year? Get our exclusive report with the best tips and takeaways.
Hereâs the complete list of all the national and streaming advertisers weâve gathered from this yearâs big game:Â
Campaign / Title: âIntroducing AI.comâ
About the ad: Shows their logo coming together and a call to claim your domain on their website.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: First time advertiser at the Big Game.
Campaign / Title: âAlexaaaa+â
About the ad: Chris Hemsworth is initially unsure about Amazonâs new Alexa+ being in his home and is paranoid itâs trying to kill him â until she offers to book him a spa package.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Amazon has specifically advertised its Alexa product at the Super Bowl for several years, starting with a 2016 spot featuring Alec Baldwin.
Campaign / Title: âBad Bunny Takes the Worldâs Biggest Stageâ
About the ad: Apple Music is fronting the Bad Bunny Super Bowl LX Halftime Show, promoting it with trailers and âRoad to Halftimeâ content that highlights Bad Bunnyâs performance and invites global audiences to tune in and dance.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Apple Music has been the official sponsor of the NFL Super Bowl Halftime Show since 2023 and instead of running a traditional paid commercial, they promote their Halftime Show partnership.
Campaign / Title: âA Time and a Placeâ
About the ad: This spot from Anthropic shows a hilarious in-person interaction between AI and a young man looking to get into shape, with the promise that Clause will never include ads.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the brandâs debut spot at the Super Bowl.
Campaign / Title: âItâs App to You.âÂ
About the ad: Illustrates how anyone, from a team member creating a budgeting app to coworkers spontaneously building social apps, can bring their ideas to life using Base44.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: The brand is making its first-ever Super Bowl appearance during Super Bowl LX.
Campaign / Title: âSticky NoteâÂ
About the ad: Depicts a Jewish student in a school hallway discovering a hateful note on his backpack, and a fellow student covering it with a blue square â a symbol promoted by the Alliance to show solidarity and reject antisemitism and hate more broadly.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the third consecutive year the Blue Square Alliance Against Hate (formerly the Foundation to Combat Antisemitism) has aired a message during the Super Bowl.Â
Campaign / Title: âMission: SOSâÂ
About the ad: Stars Octavia Spencer and SofĂa Vergara in a funny but informative spot promoting screenings for diabetes and kidney health.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: First big game ad for the brand.
Campaign / Title: âThe More You BoschâÂ
About the ad: This spot stars culinary legend Guy Fieri and hilariously shows how products from Bosch can transform their users into a âBosch.âÂ
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the second time Bosch is advertising in the Super Bowl after making their debut last year.
Campaign / Title: âKegâ
About the ad: Peyton Manning, Post Malone and Shane Gillis reunite at a wedding where a Bud Light keg rolls downhill, sparking a chaotic, comedic chase.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Regular Super Bowl advertiser and official NFL sponsor with a long legacy of humorous and big-budget spots.
Campaign / Title: âAmerican Iconsâ
About the ad: A patriotic commercial featuring a Budweiser Clydesdale colt and his new friend, celebrating heritage.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: One of the most iconic big game advertisers; famous for Clydesdale-themed and patriotic spots.
Campaign / Title: âThe Mission Beginsâ
About the ad: Features audio from John F. Kennedyâs iconic âWe Choose to go to the Moonâ speech as their racecar comes together to debut their livery on another planet.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: First Super Bowl ad together as Cadillac F1.
Campaign / Title: âEverybody Coinbaseâ
About the ad: A simple karaoke-style spot with the lyrics to Backstreet Boysâ âEverybody.â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This the brandâs second highly unique spot at the Super Bowl.
Campaign / Title: âThe Game Is Oursâ
About the ad: An empowering spot that celebrates body confidence for young girls in sports with over 90 young athletes spotlighted.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Recurring advertiser focusing on social impact.
Campaign / Title: âLive-ish at Super Bowl LXâ
About the ad: Shows SNL stars Colin Jost and Michael Che filming an ad for DraftKings âliveâ at the game.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: The betting app has been in the Super Bowl lineup at least five times.
Campaign / Title: âGood Will Dunkinâ
About the ad: A 90s sitcom spoof off of Good Will Hunting taking place inside A Dunkin store and starring Ben Affleck, Matt LeBlanc, Jennifer Aniston, Tom Brady and more. Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: The coffee brand has advertised at the Super Bowl for four consecutive years.
Campaign / Title: âMelisaâ
About the ad: Melissa McCarthy stars in a telenovela-inspired Super Bowl spot where she plays a character learning Spanish in a dramatic soap-style storyline to prepare for Bad Bunnyâs halftime show â all while featuring e.l.f.âs Glow Reviver Lip Oil.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: While e.l.f. has marketed heavily around pop culture, 2026 marks its first major Super Bowl commercial on national broadcast.
Campaign / Title: âIs It Pistachio?â
About the ad: SNL star Mikey Day stars in this spot that plays on the viral âIs it Cake?â game show trend to show how good their products smell.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the body care brand's second Super Bowl campaign after making its debut in last year's lineup.
Campaign / Title: âBet on Kendallâ
About the ad: Stars Kendall Jenner in a bookkeeping-themed spot playing off big game hype and sportsbook culture.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: First time advertiser as a sportsbook.
Campaign / Title: âSpeechâ
About the ad: While âSpeechâ was released just before kickoff, it is actually the end of a three-part series that celebrates the âlast call for football.âÂ
Brand history with the Super Bowl: FanDuel has advertised for three consecutive years with this spot.
Campaign / Title: âTake Monday Off!â
About the ad: The brand tells people to take the day off and let Genspark do the work in this spot featuring Matthew Broderick.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the first time the brand is advertising at the Super Bowl.
Campaign / Title: âNew Homeâ
About the ad: A feel-good ad that follows a mother using Google Gemini to help prepare her young son for their move to a new home.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: While Google has advertised at the big game since 2010, this is their second year advertising for Gemini specifically.
Campaign / Title: âThe Feestâ
About the ad: George Clooney appears in a spot where Grubhub âeats the feesâ â eliminating delivery/service fees.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: First time advertiser!
Campaign / Title: âMoreâÂ
About the ad: A cinematic PSA-style commercial focusing on everyday personal pressures and expectations to connect people, shot on film for an emotional feel.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Fourth consecutive year the campaign is airing at Super Bowl LX.
Campaign / Title: âSweet Sandwich Timeâ
About the ad: Andy Samberg parodies Neil Diamond in an over-the-top ode to mayo.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Multiple past appearances leaning into quirky humor.
Campaign / Title: âRich People Live Longerâ
About the ad: Challenges healthcare inequality by contrasting elite healthcare perks with average access, using satire and symbolic characters.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Returning advertiser after controversial debut ad last year.
Campaign / Title: âCan't Live Thereâ
About the ad: Stars familiar brand faces Jeff Goldblum and Heidi Gardner who promote both their Homes.com and Apartments.com sites and all the places you can find to live there (or canât).Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the third time this overall brand has advertised at the Super Bowl.
Campaign / Title: âBananasâÂ
About the ad: Focuses on its grocery delivery service (how they allow you to choose your bananas) with creative storytelling & celebrity appearances from Ben Stiller and Benson Boone.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Returning advertiser after debut last year.
Campaign / Title: âYes BuenoâÂ
About the ad: Astronauts, aliens and more go back and forth on âNo buenoâ and âYes, Kinder Buenoâ reactions as a spaceship careens through space.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: First-ever advertising appearance at the Super Bowl.
Campaign / Title: âThe Last Harvestâ and âThe Layâs ChallengeâÂ
About the ads: Their first ad, âThe Last Harvestâ continues on from last yearâs âThe Little Farmer,â highlighting the farmers who bring Layâs potato chips to life. The second ad, âThe Layâs Challenge,â which aired at the game, asks fans to scan a QR code for a bag of Layâs chips.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Layâs is a regular Super Bowl advertiser, but has chosen to run not one but two ads at this yearâs big game!
Campaign / Title: âBackstoryâ
About the ad: Set to James Brownâs âGet Up Offa That Thing,â this ad follows the backsides of many people wearing Leviâs jeans, from Toy Storyâs Woody to Bruce Springsteen to K-pop superstar RosĂŠ to DJ Questlove to Doechii and more
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is Leviâs first Super Bowl spot in 20 years!
Campaign / Title: âElevatorâ
About the ad: This family connection and safety app shows a husband who discovers his wife trapped between elevator doors, but is able to happily check their Life360 app while they wait for paramedics.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the appâs first Super Bowl ad that will be streaming only on Peacock.Â
Campaign / Title: âExploding Headsâ
About the ad: This PSA-style spot about their new line of energy drinks features the doctor who helped create the brandâs formula with a ridiculous concept that peopleâs heads can explode from drinking other energy drinks.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the second and consecutive time the brand has advertised at the Big Game.
Campaign / Title: âTake a Lookâ
About the ad: This spot shows a series of singing porcelain bowls with the message to check your pee to make sure youâre hydrated.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is Liquid I.V.âs first-ever Super Bowl appearance!Â
Campaign / Title: âReal Foodâ
About the ad: Black and white spot starring Mike Tyson that urges people to eat real food.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is their first Super Bowl ad.
Campaign / Title: âHair Balladâ
About the ad: A playful, satirical music-themed spot about grooming and self-care featuring the left behind hair clumps.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: First launch at this yearâs Super Bowl.
Campaign / Title: âAthletic Intelligence Is Hereâ
About the ad: Demonstrates AI wearable tech with athletes and creators using smart glasses in real moments.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: First time advertiser with this particular product, but has advertised in the Super Bowl before.
Campaign / Title: âThe ULTRA Instructorâ
About the ad: Features a ski training narrative where a young skier gets coached by Kurt Russell, blending humor with lifestyle themes.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Regular participant with beer ads that tie into lifestyle and sports.
Campaign / Title: âSimplify Data with Copilotâ
About the ad: Shows how NFL members can use Copilot to organize and chart player stats.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the tech giantâs sixth year advertising at the Super Bowl.
Campaign / Title: âTaste BudsâÂ
About the ad: Reality TV star Andy Cohen stars in this year's spot as Nerds Gummy Clustersâ new BFF.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the brandâs third year advertising at the Super Bowl.
Campaign / Title: âYou Are Specialâ and âChampionâ
About the ad: A continuation of the NFLâs âInspire Changeâ platform, featuring NFL players and community partners with a sing-along to Mr. Rogersâ âYou Are Special,â in the ad of the same title highlighting youth empowerment and community support. Their second spot âChampionâ shows the importance of youth coaches, with a young boy giving an inspirational speech to his toys like his coach.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: The NFL itself has frequently used Super Bowl air time to promote league initiatives rather than products â including social campaigns like Inspire Change.
Campaign / Title: âRelax Your Tight Endâ
About the ad: A PSA-style spot about prostate cancer screenings starring iconic NFL tight ends and coach Bruce Arians.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Second consecutive Super Bowl ad this year.
Campaign / Title: âA New Way to Wegovyâ
About the ad: Star-studded ad that shares how Wegovy is now available in pill form and how people shouldnât feel embarrassed about taking it.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Second consecutive Super Bowl ad this year.
Campaign / Title: âThe Big Hillâ
About the ad: Comedian and actress Kathryn Hahn and NFL star Derrick Henry struggle up a San Francisco cable car, illustrating strength (thanks to protein) in humorous action.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Seventh consecutive appearance.
Campaign / Title: âYou Can Just Build Thingsâ
About the ad: Tells a story of curiosity from kids learning and building things to the start of coding, promoting the brandâs coding assistant, Codex.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the second time OpenAI has advertised during the big game.
Campaign / Title: âThe Choiceâ
About the ad: A polar bear blind taste test between Pepsi Zero Sugar and Coke Zero Sugar in a playful narrative directed by Taika Waititi.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Frequent advertiser, often leaning into high-concept and celebrity-studded spots.
Campaign / Title: âWhatâs Your Favoriteâ
About the ad: Celebrates the seriesâ 30th year featuring some of their beloved characters alongside celebrities like Lady Gaga and Trevor Noah, who all share who their favourite PokĂŠmon is.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the second time since 2016 that they have advertised at the Super Bowl.
Campaign / Title: âVibesâ
About the ad: Takes place in a college classroom where popstar Charlie XCX and actor Rachel Sennott suddenly appear, as soon as a can of Poppi is opened, and start a party becauseâŚvibes.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the third consecutive time the brand has advertised during the Super Bowl.
Campaign / Title: âPringleleoâ
About the ad: Pop star Sabrina Carpenter uses Pringles chips to create her ideal man.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Recurring advertiser known for surreal, visual humor.
Campaign / Title: âWill Shatâ
About the ad: William Shatner stars as a âbran ambassadorâ in a fun sci-fi theme spot that spotlights the brandâs fiber benefits.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: First-ever Super Bowl commercial.
Campaign / Title: âMultiply Whatâs Possibleâ
About the ad: Brian Baumgartner reboots his âKevinâ persona from the hit TV show âThe Officeâ in a workplace comedy scenario.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: First big-game ad for this fintech/expense management platform.
Campaign / Title: âDog Dateâ Â
About the ad: In the brandâs typical hand-drawn animation style, this spot shows two dogs flirting with each other in the park, getting extra time together with the help of Red Bull.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the brandâs second Super Bowl appearance.
Campaign / Title: âBe a Hero in Your Neighborhoodâ Â
About the ad: Highlights Ringâs community safety tech and reunions with lost pets.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: First Super Bowl appearance for the Amazon smart home brand.
Campaign / Title: âThe Mastermindâ Â
About the ad: Stars Tim Robinson as a would-be corporate mastermind whose elaborate plans repeatedly fail because of fragmented, outdated software that keeps sabotaging simple business operations.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is Ripplingâs first ever Super Bowl appearance!
Campaign / Title: âRitz IslandâÂ
About the ad: Jon Hamm, Bowen Yang (a salty pair) and Scarlet Johansson all star in this star-studded spot that takes place on a surreal island thatâs one big party.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is Ritzâs second big game commercial.
Campaign / Title: âHealthier on Roâ
About the ad: Stars Serena Williams discussing her GLP-1 health journey â weight loss and wellness â to destigmatize medication.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: First Super Bowl appearance in 2026.
Campaign / Title: âAmerica Needs Neighbors Like Youâ
About the ad: Follows two families struggling to fit in after moving to a different neighborhood, who eventually come together in a heartwarming story to the soundtrack of âWonât You Be My Neighbor?â performed by Lady Gaga.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: The brand has advertised at the Super Bowl at least five times, starting in 2020.
Campaign / Title: âThe Vaultâ
About the ad: Featuring Mr. Beast, this spot encourages viewers to decipher a series of puzzles to win a $1 million cash prize.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Salesforce has run Super Bowl campaigns in 2025 and 2026.
Campaign / Title: âSofiĚa Vergara Kicks Off Big Game in Skechersâ
About the ad: Shows Modern Family star SofiĚa Vergara trying to put on regular sneakers in a fit of frustration in a PSA-style spot for Skechers Hands Free Slip-ins.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is Skechersâ 13th time advertising during the Super Bowl.Â
Campaign / Title: âDeliver the Rainbowâ
About the ad: Skittles skipped the traditional TV ad this year and traded it for a live, in-person ad featuring Elijah Wood as a mythical creature set to show up at a lucky fan's house.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is technically the sixth time Skittles has been in the Super Bowl.
Campaign / Title: âBoarding Nowâ
About the ad: Set to the sound of The Ramonesâ âBlitzkrieg Bop,â this ad playfully pokes at the chaos of Southwestâs open seating policy to share that it has officially switched to assigned seating this year.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the airline's first time advertising at the Super Bowl on Peacock and other regional areas.
Campaign / Title: âUnavailableâ
About the ad: A dark, cinematic ad shot in black and white ad that shows Emma Stone fighting with laptops in an attempt to acquire the domain emmastone.com.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: A seasoned Super Bowl advertiser that has aired commercials for 12 consecutive years.Â
Campaign / Title: âStop Livinâ on a PrayerâÂ
About the ad: Stars comedians Keegan-Michael Key and Danny McBride (with cameo from Hailee Steinfeld and KATSEYE) riffing on insurance reliability vs. insecurity, blending humor with brand messaging to the sound of Bon Joviâs âLivinâ On A Prayer.â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Long-time advertiser with memorable recurring characters and themes.
Campaign / Title: âShake Your Bots Offâ (AI-generated)
About the ad: AI-generated commercial featuring the brandâs Fembot and new robot BroBot dancing, symbolizing a human message about connection.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: First-ever Super Bowl ad for the vodka brand.
Campaign / Title: âTrue WestâÂ
About the ad: Continuation of its 2025 campaign, with cinematic western scenes, that asks viewers âwould it hurt to have a little bit more West in people?â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: First-ever Super Bowl ad.
Campaign / Title: âOwen Speaks FĂştbolâÂ
About the ad: Kicking off its World Cup campaign and starring SofĂa Vergara and Owen Wilson, this spot gives viewers a surprise Spanish lesson.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: First national Super Bowl ad.
Campaign / Title: âTell Me Whyâ
About the ad: In a surprise live performance, T-Mobile brings in The Backstreet Boys to tell you why to switch to T-Mobile.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the 13th consecutive year the brand is advertising at the Super Bowl.Â
Campaign / Title: âSuperhero Beltâ & âWhere Dreams Beganâ
About the ads: âSuperhero Beltâ is a generational story showing bonds made between grandfather and grandson over Toyota RAV4s and life lessons through seatbelt-tying imagery. âWhere Dreams Beganâ shows NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace, NFL star Puka Nacua and Paralympian Oksana Masters training alongside their younger selves.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Veteran advertiser with periodic big game commercials.
Campaign / Title: âThe ExpertâÂ
About the ad: This spot features actor Adrien Brody in a humorous take on tax season stress and TurboTax expertise.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is TurboTaxâs 13th year advertising!Â
Campaign / Title: âHungry for the Truthâ
About the ad: Matthew McConaughey and Bradley Cooper butt heads in a quirky story about football and hunger; fans can build their own version via the Uber Eats app.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Multiple appearances in recent years.
Campaign / Title: âLilâ Broâ
About the ad: Follows two brothers visiting Universal Orlandoâs theme parks for the first time. The younger sibling, tired of being teased as the âlittle bro,â gains confidence and even ends up teasing the older brother after braving thrilling rides.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: The brand has advertised at the Super Bowl before, but this is the first theyâve appeared in some time. Â
Campaign / Title: âThe Great Invitationâ
About the ad: Revives their âDrivers Wantedâ campaign in a nostalgic spot set in the 90s about getting out there plated to the sound of âJump Aroundâ
Brand history with the Super Bowl: The brand has a history of Super Bowl advertising, most notably in the 2010s, with a significant return in 2024 and this year. Â
Campaign / Title: âTaDaâ
About the ad: An eye-catching and uplifting spot set to âYouâve Got the Loveâ that shows how to easily create a website with Wix.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: This is the brandâs 14th time advertising at the Big Game!Â
Campaign / Title: âThe New Way to Createâ
About the ad: An eye-catching and uplifting spot set to âYouâve Got the Loveâ that shows how to easily create a website with Wix.Â
Brand history with the Super Bowl: The brand breaks their seven-year hiatus with this ad since their last spot in 2019.Â
Campaign / Title: âJurassic ParkâŚWorksâ
About the ad: Reunites Jurassic Park stars to demonstrate reliable Xfinity connectivity.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Regular advertiser highlighting connectivity.
Campaign / Title: âDon't Settle for Mehâ
About the ad: Stars Jason Kelce, Kylie Kelce, Gordon Ramsay and Christian McCaffrey in a humorous spot about not settling for less than YouTubeTV.
Brand history with the Super Bowl: Second time advertising at the Big Game.
Hereâs a few observations from this yearâs lineup of Super Bowl LX ads:Â
As usual, the food and beverage categories dominated this yearâs Super Bowl ads. But we also saw many ads in the tech and healthcare space.Â
What this suggests about competitive pressure
Food and beverage, tech and healthcare are all crowded, fast-moving categories where awareness matters as much as the product itself. Brands arenât just advertising for reach â theyâre fighting to stay top-of-mind, build trust quickly and signal category leadership in front of a massive audience.
For everyday purchases like snacks and drinks, thatâs about staying mentally available. For tech and digital services, itâs about breaking out of niche or B2B audiences into the mainstream. And for healthcare and wellness brands, itâs about normalizing new behaviors and building credibility at scale.
In all cases, the Super Bowl isnât just a splashy moment â itâs a competitive shortcut to relevance.
This year, we saw a few repeat themes from previous years but also some new ones. The standout themes we saw were:Â
Celebrities (of course)
Continuations of stories from last yearÂ
Great music choices
A general weirdness with some odd characters and musical numbers
Lots of AIÂ Â
We also saw some smaller bursts of themes worth noting throughout, like anthropomorphic characters, red carpet appearances and Mr. Rogers references.Â
Challenger brands (Think: Rippling, Hims & Hers, Ro, Poppi, Base44, Ramp) are showing up more frequently, especially across tech, wellness and better-for-you food and beverage. While the Super Bowl used to be dominated by legacy CPG and auto brands, newer companies are treating the game as a fast track to mass awareness.
For these challengers, the goal isnât just scale, itâs legitimacy. A Super Bowl spot signals that theyâve moved beyond âstartupâ status and are ready to compete with the big names. Their creative often leans more direct and benefit-led, clearly explaining what they do and why theyâre different, because many viewers are encountering the brand for the first time.
Established brands, on the other hand, tend to play a different game. With awareness already built, they focus more on emotional storytelling, entertainment and reinforcing distinctive brand assets.Â
In short: Challengers are appearing more to use the Super Bowl to introduce themselves, while incumbents use it to remind you why theyâre already part of your life.
Itâs easy to watch Super Bowl ads as entertainment. The smarter move is to treat them as signals about whatâs breaking through, how brands are positioning themselves and where competitive pressure is rising â and then translate those observations into action for your own strategy.
You donât need a $8M media buy to apply Super Bowl thinking.
At its core, the game rewards the same fundamentals any brand can use: Sharp positioning, clear messaging and creative thatâs distinctive enough to stick. Smaller brands can borrow the strategy without matching the spend, focusing on one strong idea, leaning into what makes them different and showing up consistently across the channels they can afford.
In many ways, constraints can even sharpen the work. When every dollar counts, clarity beats spectacle. A simple, memorable message delivered well will outperform a flashy concept that doesnât clearly say what the brand does.
One thing the best Super Bowl advertisers have in common: Their âbigâ creative rarely starts as a gamble.
Super Bowl-level production only works when the core idea is already strong. The brands that win tend to validate their messaging, positioning and creative direction early â well before committing to high-stakes, high-cost moments.
Thatâs where consumer research comes in. Connected insights platforms like Zappi help brands quickly test creative ideas, storylines and claims with real audiences, so teams know whatâs likely to resonate (and what isnât) before investing heavily in production or media. Instead of relying on instinct alone, marketers can make confident decisions backed by evidence.
Whether youâre spending $50,000 or $8 million, the principle is the same: Big ideas work best when theyâre proven first.
âSince partnering with Zappi, our creative effectiveness has improved by 30% across all our advertising. This equates to PepsiCo gaining hundreds of millions in value!â
- Stephan Gans, SVP Chief Consumer Insights & Analytics Office, PepsiCo
The biggest stage in advertising is no longer reserved for just legacy brands. From household names to fast-growing challengers, this yearâs lineup reflects a broader mix of industries, new competitors and brands using the moment to build awareness, credibility and even cultural relevance.
Weâve pulled together the complete list of ads along with key observations from this yearâs game â including which categories showed up most, how positioning differs between incumbents and challengers and what these creative choices signal about todayâs competitive pressure.
Whether youâre planning your own big-budget campaign or simply looking for smarter ways to stand out, thereâs plenty to learn from how brands showed up on advertisingâs biggest night.
What can you learn from Super Bowl advertisers this year? Get our exclusive report with the best tips and takeaways.