Super Bowl LVIII by the numbers

A look at viewership, costs and how much food Americans will consume this Sunday

Millions of fans will tune in on Sunday to watch the Kansas City Chiefs take on the San Francisco 49ers at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas for Super Bowl LVIII.  Football fans will drop billions of dollars on game day festivities and eat enough food to feed a small country. Here are how the numbers stack up for this year's championship event.

$60 million dollars

The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority expects the bill for hosting the event to cost $60 million. In return, Las Vegas will see an economic benefit of around $1 billion, according to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

$7 million dollars

A 30-second spot at this year's game costs $7 million, according to Ad Age. And despite the eye-popping cost, CBS said they sold out of slots weeks ahead of the game.

200 million viewers

The NFL is expecting approximately 200 million viewers to tune in to the Super Bowl. That's based on ratings from last year's audience, which included global viewers from 190 countries and territories — and didn’t account for the Taylor Swift effect.

Record for attendance

Super Bowl XIV still holds the record for attendance with 103,985 people at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California. Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas has a capacity of 65,000, but is expandable to 71,835.

$89,100 tickets

While the most expensive Super Bowl ticket on Stub Hub, as of Jan. 29, was listed at $89,100, the average cost of a ticket on another resale site, Vivid Seats, is going for $8,554 as of Feb. 7. That's down from an average of $9,780 just a week earlier.

250,000,000 pounds of avocados

The Super Bowl is the No. 1 consumption occasion for avocados, according to the fruit's trade group Avocados From Mexico. An estimated 250 million pounds of avocados will be eaten leading to the big game. That's enough avocados to cover an entire football field with more than 75 feet of guacamole.

1.45 billion chicken wings

Americans will devour 1.45 billion wings while watching Kansas City and San Francisco battle for the championship trophy, according to the National Chicken Council. That's enough wings for every man, woman and child in the U.S. to eat four wings each.

Americans will consume millions of pounds of snacks during the Super Bowl, with corn tortilla chips — the preferred vehicle for guacamole — accounting for 8 million pounds of that, according to the American Farm Bureau.

Taylor Swift will wrap up her show at the Tokyo Dome on Feb. 10 and fly 8,900 miles to Vegas to see boyfriend Travis Kelce play in the Super Bowl. Her carbon footprint is 91,752 pounds.

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