SUPER BOWL 2024
How much money does the team that wins the Super Bowl get?
For the second time in five years, the San Francisco 49ers and the Kansas City Chiefs meet in NFL’s championship game.
The San Francisco 49ers and the Kansas City Chiefs will once again meet in the end-of-season finale at Super Bowl LVIII, with the two spurred on by different sporting factors. The Chiefs are hoping to consolidate their dynasty by becoming just the eighth team to win back-to-back championships, while the 49ers are simultaneously out for revenge after losing Super Bowl LIV to the same opponent and desperate to end a 29-year-drought.
As always tends to be the case, the NFL showpiece game promises to be quite the spectacle, with the on-field action set to be supplemented by musical performances before kickoff and at halftime, with Usher the main attraction during Super Bowl LVIII’s Halftime Show.
How much does the winning team at Super Bowl LVIII take home?
In addition to fighting it out to pick up the Vince Lombardi Trophy, the two sets of players on either side will also be playing for cash...although the sum on offer will pale in comparison to what they are used to picking up as part of their eye-watering salaries.
Last year, members of the Chiefs roster earned $157,000 for winning the Super Bowl as stipulated in the NFL collective bargaining agreement with the Players Association. According to that agreement, the amount received by the victors will increase by $7,000 each season up until 2030, which means this year’s champions will pick up $164,000 per player.
How much does the losing team at Super Bowl LVIII receive?
Last year, the Philadelphia Eagles, beaten by the Chiefs, picked up $82,000 per player, which was also a $7,000 increase on the previous season. Once again, the same rise will apply, so players on the losing team at Super Bowl LVIII will take home $89,000.
Super Bowl LVIII will be played on Sunday February 11, 2024 at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada.
The game will be shown on CBS and Paramount+ in the United States, with the game starting at 6:30 p.m. ET / 3:30 p.m. ET.