Nashville to host Super Bowl LXIV in 2030

Tennessee Titans fan
Tennessee Titans fanJustin Ford/Getty Images

Nashville, home of the Tennessee Titans, will host Super Bowl LXIV in 2030 after all 32 NFL owners unanimously voted for it on Tuesday.

The league now has its Super Bowl site schedule finalized for the next three years, with SoFi Stadium (Los Angeles) set to be the host this season, Mercedes-Benz Stadium (Atlanta) in 2028, then Allegiant Stadium (Las Vegas) in 2029. 

'New' Nissan Stadium is expected to finish construction in Nashville ahead of the 2027 season after reaching the 75% mark back in March of this year. The new $2.1 billion dome stadium will seat 60,000 fans, with seats said to be 38% closer to the field than the current stadium. 

The city of Nashville also hosted the NFL Draft back in 2019, which brought in a record of $133 million in spending and an overall $224 million economic impact. 

The Titans are coming off back-to-back seasons with a 3-14 record, but will head into 2026 with a new look after the team revealed uniforms paying homage to the old Houston Oilers, although fans were back and forth on the change after they changed the logo.

They'll open up the 2026 season against the New York Jets on September 13th at home, their final one in the current Nissan Stadium that has stood for 27 years after being built in 1999 (then called Adelphia Coliseum). 

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