
Where to Watch the Super Bowl in Miami: Your Guide to Sunday's Big Game (But Really, Bad Bunny's Halftime Show)
Bad Bunny is performing at the Super Bowl LX halftime show on February 8th and that's really all Miami needs to know. Sure, the Patriots and Seahawks will be playing football, but let's be honest, you're tuning in for Benito. Here's everything you need to know about the big game, some wildly unnecessary food statistics, and where to watch across Miami.
February 4, 2026 — Rolando

Let's be honest. You're not here for the New England Patriots vs. Seattle Seahawks breakdown. You're here because Bad Bunny is performing at halftime and that's the only reason half of Miami is tuning in on February 8th.
The Patriots are making their 12th Super Bowl appearance. A win gives them a record seventh title. Quarterback Drake Maye, 23, took over late in 2024 and turned a four-win disaster into a championship run. The Seahawks haven't been to the Super Bowl since 2015. Sam Darnold is having his redemption arc. It's a good storyline. Cool. Great. Moving on.
Benito is performing at halftime.
That's it. That's the headline. The game is just the opening act and the closing credits for what really matters: Bad Bunny on the biggest stage in American sports. If you think Miami isn't about to lose its collective mind when that man walks out, you haven't been paying attention.
Super Bowl Sunday By the Numbers (Because We Know You Love Useless Facts)
Over 121 million people are expected to host or attend a party this Sunday. Americans will spend roughly $20.2 billion on the day, averaging about $95 per person. Most of that is going straight to food and drinks because Super Bowl Sunday is the second biggest eating day in America after Thanksgiving.
Here's what the country will consume:
- 1.48 billion chicken wings. Enough to circle the Earth three times.
- 112 million pounds of snacks before the game even starts.
- Over 3 million pizzas from Domino's and Pizza Hut alone.
- Millions of gallons of alcohol and enough beer to fill several Olympic swimming pools.
And the aftermath? More than 18 million people will skip work on Monday. That's a $4 billion hit to national productivity. There have been over two dozen petitions to make "Super Sick Monday" a national holiday. None have passed. We keep trying.
Where to Watch in Miami
Super Bowl Sunday in Miami is never just about the game. It's about where you're watching, what you're drinking, how many TVs are in your line of sight, and whether the wings are actually worth the heartburn. This city treats the Big Game like a sport of its own.
Here are some spots across Miami to catch the action:

