Stop what you’re doing. I can confirm the answer NFL fans want right now. The Seattle Seahawks have one Super Bowl win. And with Super Bowl LX closing in, that single ring carries real weight, real story, real star power.
The answer, right now
This is simple. The Seahawks own one Lombardi Trophy. It came in February 2014, a dominant 43 to 8 win over the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XLVIII. The Legion of Boom turned defense into theater. Percy Harvin’s kickoff return felt like a music video. It was swagger, speed, and pure Seattle style.
Quick answer: Seahawks, 1 Super Bowl win. XLVIII over the Broncos, 43 to 8.
That is the baseline. One title, three total appearances, a legacy built on noise, grit, and an identity the city wears like a jacket.
The three games that built the myth
Let’s rewind and set the stage. Here are the Seahawks’ Super Bowl appearances, clean and clear.
- Super Bowl XL, lost to Steelers. A close one that still stings in Seattle.
- Super Bowl XLVIII, beat Broncos 43 to 8. A blowout, a coronation, a statement.
- Super Bowl XLIX, lost to Patriots on a late goal line interception. One of the most dramatic finishes ever.
That is the arc. Heartbreak, domination, heartbreak. The franchise grew up in front of the world. The fan base, the 12s, grew louder. The culture locked in.

Why it matters with Super Bowl LX on deck
This year’s stage is set for something electric. The Patriots are in. The NFC spot will belong to the Seahawks or the Rams. If Seattle breaks through, we get a sequel that already feels cinematic. Seahawks, Patriots, and the ghost of that one yard moment. The plot writes itself.
Locked in: Patriots to Super Bowl LX. NFC will be Seahawks or Rams. If it is Seattle, expect a heavyweight narrative.
Super Bowl LX lands at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara. That means West Coast lights and a fan travel sprint up and down I-5 and I-80. I am tracking the exact kickoff window as broadcast partners lock schedules, promos, and pregame blocks.
Kickoff timing is being finalized. Plan for an extended pregame window, then a tight announcement on the exact kick time.
The football story is big. The entertainment story may be bigger. Halftime lights, celebrity suites, and every camera cut is more vivid when a franchise with a defined style shows up. The Seahawks bring a look. Navy, action green, and a chorus that can shake glass.
Stars, 12s, and a city that plays loud
Seattle knows how to turn a game into a scene. The Space Needle glowing in team colors. Waterfront watch parties that feel like festivals. The 12s create atmosphere like a touring act. It is crowd work, only louder.
On the celebrity side, expect familiar faces. Seattle music royalty loves this team. Macklemore turned gameday into a runway before. Sir Mix-a-Lot has never missed a beat with the city’s teams. Joel McHale reps his roots with pride. When the Seahawks hit the Super Bowl, these names lean in, and the camera finds them.
The players became culture setters too. Richard Sherman’s mic skills made postgame interviews appointment viewing. Marshawn Lynch transformed silence into a brand. Russell Wilson, in that 2013 season to 2014 title run, became a crossover figure. Even the team’s lexicon, from Legion of Boom to Beast Quake, jumped from sports pages to late night punchlines and album lyrics. That is the mark of a true entertainment property.
If the Seahawks claim the NFC, the Rams add a Hollywood counterweight in the same time zone. That is star versus star, neon versus red carpet, and it is great for everyone watching at home. Football meets prime time, and the culture gets a new chapter.

What to remember as the clock ticks
Here is the headline you can carry into Super Bowl week. The Seahawks have one Super Bowl win, earned with style in Super Bowl XLVIII. They have been to three, and two of those games are etched in league history. With the Patriots already waiting in Santa Clara, a Seattle return would give us a rematch with gravity. Sports love a full circle. So do movies.
The count is one. The meaning is bigger. If the 12s get their night again, expect the sound to travel. And expect the cameras to stay right there, as a city with a soundtrack tries to turn one into two. 🏈
