Universal Orlando committed undisclosed seven-figure media spend to a Super Bowl LX advertising campaign launching ahead of the February 9 game in New Orleans. The buy positions the operator to capture booking intent during the single highest-reach television event in North America, typically delivering 110M–125M live viewers and another 30M–40M impressions across digital and social extensions in the 72 hours surrounding kickoff.
The campaign coincides with Universal's $5B+ Epic Universe park opening set for May 22, 2025, adding roughly 11,000 daily guest capacity to the Orlando resort complex. Universal Parks & Resorts reported 10.8% North America attendance growth in fiscal 2024, with Orlando properties accounting for roughly 60% of segment operating income. The Super Bowl media window gives the operator a 90-day lead time to drive summer bookings before the new park's debut, a period when family travel intent historically peaks and conversion rates for theme park vacations run 18–22% higher than off-peak months.
The timing matters because Universal faces a narrow operational window. Epic Universe represents the largest single-year capacity addition in the company's history, but the May opening leaves only 14 weeks before the core summer travel season ends in late August. Early velocity on reservations determines whether the company can sustain 85%+ occupancy across its 10,800 on-site hotel rooms during the critical June-through-August period, when daily ticket revenue averages $180–$220 per guest compared to $140–$165 in shoulder months. Super Bowl adjacency also offers defensive value: Disney World typically runs spring promotions starting in mid-February, and a strong Universal media presence during the game disrupts that cycle.
The campaign structure likely follows the model Universal used for its 2023 Super Bowl activation, which paired 30-second spots with extended digital creative and influencer partnerships. That effort generated an estimated $42M in earned media value and drove a 26% year-over-year increase in web traffic to Universal Orlando booking pages in the week following the game. Media buyers estimate a 30-second national Super Bowl spot now costs $7.5M–$8M, with production and integration adding another $1.5M–$2M per execution. For context, Universal's parent company Comcast reported $1.27B in theme park advertising and marketing expense across fiscal 2024, with Orlando accounting for roughly 40% of that total.
Operators and allocators should watch three follow-on signals. First, Universal's on-property hotel booking pace for May through August, typically disclosed in Comcast's earnings calls, will indicate whether the campaign converted impressions into reservations. Second, any incremental media buys during March Madness or the NBA playoffs would signal the company sees softness and needs additional reach. Third, pricing behavior for multi-day tickets and annual passes in the 60 days post-campaign will reveal whether Universal believes it has demand elasticity to push yields higher or needs to defend share.
Epic Universe's success depends on filling 1.8M–2.0M incremental annual visits in its first 12 months, requiring Universal to capture roughly 15–18% of new-to-market Orlando guests and convert another 8–10% of Disney-only households into dual-park visitors. A Super Bowl media buy is expensive, but the alternative—relying on shoulder-season discounting to fill capacity—costs more.
The takeaway
Universal's Super Bowl LX campaign targets **90-day** booking lead time before Epic Universe's May opening, critical to sustaining **85%+** occupancy during summer peak.
super bowltheme parksuniversal orlandoepic universemedia strategycapacity expansion
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