The cost of a 30-second Super Bowl ad has skyrocketed over the years. In 1967, it was $37,500, but now it has reached $7 million, marking a 185x increase. Bank of America highlighted that if everyday items kept up with this inflation, chicken wings would cost $43/lb, a 6-pack of beer would be $340, a gallon of gasoline $61, the average US house price $4.2 million, and the S&P would be 16374. Additionally, 12 new brands are debuting in this year's Super Bowl ad lineup, including Lindt, Nerds, Drumstick, Popeyes, Starry, and Poppi.
Big price tags for the big game. Thirty seconds of ad time costs $7 million, up 185x since the first time the game was played, according to Bank of America. @jimcramer, @davidfaber and @carlquintanilla talk about some of the costs surrounding game day. https://t.co/xxzx3SgE51
A six pack of beer for $340? How much things would cost if they increased as much as the price of a Super Bowl commercial. https://t.co/vfEd778SnZ
The #SuperBowl ad spot cost has reached $7M, yet 12 brands are making their debut this year 📺 First-timers include Lindt, Nerds, Drumstick, Popeyes, Starry, and Poppi, along with others. Read more from @Boylan ⬇️
If everyday things kept up with the pace of Super Bowl ad inflation… “chicken wings would now cost $43/lb, a 6-pack of beer would be $340, a gallon of gasoline $61, the average US house price $4.2 million, and the S&P would be 16374.” -BofA’s Hartnett https://t.co/XK3BYlYikv
B of A: “.. 30-second ad during Super Bowl I (1967) was $37,500, price for #SuperBowlLVIII $7,000,000 = 185x jump “.. nothing keeps pace with Super Bowl inflation but if they could chicken wings would now cost $43/lb .. 6-pack of beer .. $340 .. .. gallon of gasoline $61, ..…
"30-second ad during Super Bowl I (1967) was $37,500, price for Super Bowl LVII $7,000,000 = 185x jump; nothing keeps pace with Super Bowl inflation but if they could... 6-pack of beer would be $340, gallon of gasoline $61, avg US house price $4.2mn & S&P500 would be 16374" BofA
In 1967, a Super Bowl commercial cost $42,500. In 1995, it cost $1.2 million. Now it costs $7 million. Wow! - via @FOS
In 1967, a Super Bowl commercial cost $42,500. In 1995, it cost $1.2 million. Now it costs $7 million. Wow! - via @FOSports