As we close out Super Bowl 59, it’s the perfect time to look back at all Super Bowl Winners on a per-year basis. The Packers won the first Super Bowl while the Eagles are the most recent champions after a 40-22 win over the Chiefs in Super Bowl LIX.
Super Bowl Champions by Season
Take a look at the history of the Super Bowl including the matchup, score, and winner of the NFL’s biggest game. The Patriots have the most Super Bowl victories in NFL history. Tom Brady and Bill Belichick helped the franchise win 6 titles from 2001-2019.
SB | Date | Result |
---|---|---|
I | Jan. 15, 1967 | Green Bay 35, Kansas City 10 |
II | Jan. 14, 1968 | Green Bay 33, Oakland 14 |
III | Jan. 12, 1969 | New York Jets 16, Baltimore 7 |
IV | Jan. 11, 1970 | Kansas City 23, Minnesota 7 |
V | Jan. 17, 1971 | Baltimore 16, Dallas 13 |
VI | Jan. 16, 1972 | Dallas 24, Miami 3 |
VII | Jan. 14, 1973 | Miami 14, Washington 7 |
VIII | Jan. 13, 1974 | Miami 24, Minnesota 7 |
IX | Jan. 12, 1975 | Pittsburgh 16, Minnesota 6 |
X | Jan. 18, 1976 | Pittsburgh 21, Dallas 17 |
XI | Jan. 9, 1977 | Oakland 32, Minnesota 14 |
XII | Jan. 15, 1978 | Dallas 27, Denver 10 |
XIII | Jan. 21, 1979 | Pittsburgh 35, Dallas 31 |
XIV | Jan. 20, 1980 | Pittsburgh 31, Los Angeles Rams 19 |
XV | Jan. 25, 1981 | Oakland 27, Philadelphia 10 |
XVI | Jan. 24, 1982 | San Francisco 26, Cincinnati 21 |
XVII | Jan. 30, 1983 | Washington 27, Miami 17 |
XVIII | Jan. 22, 1984 | Los Angeles Raiders 38, Washington 9 |
XIX | Jan. 20, 1985 | San Francisco 38, Miami 16 |
XX | Jan. 26, 1986 | Chicago 46, New England 10 |
XXI | Jan. 25, 1987 | New York Giants 39, Denver 20 |
XXII | Jan. 31, 1988 | Washington 42, Denver 10 |
XXIII | Jan. 22, 1989 | San Francisco 20, Cincinnati 16 |
XXIV | Jan. 28, 1990 | San Francisco 55, Denver 10 |
XXV | Jan. 27, 1991 | New York Giants 20, Buffalo 19 |
XXVI | Jan. 26, 1992 | Washington 37, Buffalo 24 |
XXVII | Jan. 31, 1993 | Dallas 52, Buffalo 17 |
XXVIII | Jan. 30, 1994 | Dallas 30, Buffalo 13 |
XXIX | Jan. 29, 1995 | San Francisco 49, San Diego 26 |
XXX | Jan. 28, 1996 | Dallas 27, Pittsburgh 17 |
XXXI | Jan. 26, 1997 | Green Bay 35, New England 21 |
XXXII | Jan. 25, 1998 | Denver 31, Green Bay 24 |
XXXIII | Jan. 31, 1999 | Denver 34, Atlanta 19 |
XXXIV | Jan. 30, 2000 | St. Louis 23, Tennessee 16 |
XXXV | Jan. 28, 2001 | Baltimore 34, New York Giants 7 |
XXXVI | Feb. 3, 2002 | New England 20, St. Louis 17 |
XXXVII | Jan. 26, 2003 | Tampa Bay 48, Oakland 21 |
XXXVIII | Feb. 1, 2004 | New England 32, Carolina 29 |
XXXIX | Feb. 6, 2005 | New England 24, Philadelphia 21 |
XL | Feb. 5, 2006 | Pittsburgh 21, Seattle 10 |
XLI | Feb. 4, 2007 | Indianapolis 29, Chicago 17 |
XLII | Feb. 3, 2008 | New York Giants 17, New England 14 |
XLIII | Feb. 1, 2009 | Pittsburgh 27, Arizona 23 |
XLIV | Feb. 7, 2010 | New Orleans 31, Indianapolis 17 |
XLV | Feb. 6, 2011 | Green Bay 31, Pittsburgh 25 |
XLVI | Feb. 5, 2012 | New York Giants 21, New England 17 |
XLVII | Feb. 3, 2013 | Baltimore 34, San Francisco 31 |
XLVIII | Feb. 2, 2014 | Seattle 43, Denver 8 |
XLIX | Feb. 1, 2015 | New England 28, Seattle 24 |
50 | Feb. 7, 2016 | Denver 24, Carolina 10 |
LI | Feb. 5, 2017 | New England 34, Atlanta 28 |
LII | Feb. 4, 2018 | Philadelphia 41, New England 33 |
LIII | Feb. 3, 2019 | New England 13, Los Angeles Rams 3 |
LIV | Feb. 2, 2020 | Kansas City 31, San Francisco 20 |
LV | Feb. 7, 2021 | Tampa Bay 31, Kansas City 9 |
LVI | Feb. 13, 2022 | Los Angeles Rams 23, Cincinnati 20 |
LVII | Feb. 12, 2023 | Kansas City 38, Philadelphia 35 |
LVIII | Feb. 11, 2024 | Kansas City 25, San Francisco 22 |
LIX | Feb. 9, 2025 | Philadelphia 40, Kansas City 22 |
Super Bowl History
The very first American Football League-National Football League Championship Game was played on Jan. 15, 1967. This contest was a stipulation and part of the merger between leagues that took place in June of 1966. According to Time, “It was the only “Super Bowl” game to be telecast by two television networks, to use two different footballs, to have two kickoffs for the second half, and to fail to sell out. Tickets at $15, $12, and $10 were thought to be overpriced.”
New NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle had several suggestions for naming the big game including “The Big One” and “Pro Bowl” but they settled on “The AFL-NFL World Championship Game” as the official moniker for that first matchup between the Kansas City Chiefs and Green Bay Packers. It was too wordy and not ideal for newspaper usage, so it didn’t stick. Lamar Hunt, then owner of the Chiefs and main founder of the American Football League, came up with the name Super Bowl, a name that derived from his son’s favorite toy, the Superball from Wham-O.
More: Check out 4for4 for expert betting picks along with great fantasy football content!
List of Super Bowl Winners By Decade
Check out the breakdown by decade for the Super Bowl winners. The Packers won the first back in 1967 and followed that with another win in 1968.
1960s
- 1967: Green Bay Packers
- 1968: Green Bay Packers
- 1969: New York Jets
1970s
- 1970: Kansas City Chiefs
- 1971: Baltimore Colts
- 1972: Dallas Cowboys
- 1973: Miami Dolphins
- 1974: Miami Dolphins
- 1975: Pittsburgh Steelers
- 1976: Pittsburgh Steelers
- 1977: Oakland Raiders
- 1978: Dallas Cowboys
- 1979: Pittsburgh Steelers
1980s
- 1980: Pittsburgh Steelers
- 1981: Oakland Raiders
- 1982: San Francisco 49ers
- 1983: Washington Redskins
- 1984: Los Angeles Raiders
- 1985: San Francisco 49ers
- 1986: Chicago Bears
- 1987: New York Giants
- 1988: Washington Redskins
- 1989: San Francisco 49ers
More Super Bowl Content: Super Bowl Winners by Player l Super Bowl Winners by Team
1990s
- 1990: San Francisco 49ers
- 1991: New York Giants
- 1992: Washington Redskins
- 1993: Dallas Cowboys
- 1994: Dallas Cowboys
- 1995: San Francisco 49ers
- 1996: Dallas Cowboys
- 1997: Green Bay Packers
- 1998: Denver Broncos
- 1999: Denver Broncos
2000s
- 2000: St. Louis Rams
- 2001: Baltimore Ravens
- 2002: New England Patriots
- 2003: Tampa Bay Buccaneers
- 2004: New England Patriots
- 2005: New England Patriots
- 2006: Pittsburgh Steelers
- 2007: Indianapolis Colts
- 2008: New York Giants
- 2009: Pittsburgh Steelers
2010s
- 2010: New Orleans Saints
- 2011: Green Bay Packers
- 2012: New York Giants
- 2013: Baltimore Ravens
- 2014: Seattle Seahawks
- 2015: New England Patriots
- 2016: Denver Broncos
- 2017: New England Patriots
- 2018: Philadelphia Eagles
- 2019: New England Patriots
2020s
- 2020: Kansas City Chiefs
- 2021: Tampa Bay Buccaneers
- 2022: Los Angeles Rams
- 2023: Kansas City Chiefs
- 2024: Philadelphia Eagles
Which Team has the Most Consecutive Super Bowl Wins?
As we can see, no team has won more than two consecutive titles in a row but several franchises have come close. The Miami Dolphins reached the Super Bowl from 1971 to 1973 but fell short in their first attempt. New England also went to three straight NFL title games from 2016-2018 but only came away with two wins.
There have been eight squads to win back-to-back Super Bowl titles, with the first being the Green Bay Packers who won the first two. Miami was next with wins in 1973 and 1974, with Pittsburgh right after them with victories in 1975 and 1976. The Steelers then did it again in both 1979 and 1980. San Francisco got in on the two-straight Super Bowl win action in 1989 and 1990, followed by the Cowboys in 1993 and 1994. Denver was next with two straight championship titles to end the 1990s, then the next team to do it was New England in 2004 and 2005.
Looking to wager on this year’s big game? See the latest DraftKings or FanDuel promo codes.