The city of Seattle is wasting no time turning Super Bowl 60 celebrations into a full-blown downtown takeover. After the Seahawks beat the Patriots 29–13 at Levi’s Stadium to claim the franchise’s second Lombardi Trophy and first since the 2013 season, attention shifted quickly from Santa Clara back to the Pacific Northwest.
City officials, local TV partners, and national outlets have now laid out the basic framework for the championship parade, giving “12s” in and around Seattle a clear target to plan for as they get set to pack Fourth Avenue again.
Seahawks’ Super Bowl Parade Schedule
The Seahawks’ Super Bowl victory parade is scheduled for Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2026. A city spokesperson confirmed the midweek celebration late Sunday, locking in the date just hours after Seattle closed out its win over New England. That timing mirrors the team’s last title run, when the 2014 parade took place three days after the Seahawks dismantled the Broncos in Super Bowl 48.
KING 5, the local NBC affiliate and official broadcast partner for the celebration, reported that a Lombardi Trophy ceremony at Lumen Field will begin at 10 a.m. Wednesday, and the parade will then start at 11 a.m.
That event is being staged inside the stadium and is not expected to be open to the general public, functioning instead as a televised kickoff to the citywide festivities. The parade itself will follow after the trophy presentation, with city and team officials expected to finalize and release the precise step-off time and staging details as logistics are completed.
Other outlets have reinforced the Wednesday plan, highlighting an additional ceremony window with a public event at Lumen Field slated for 1 p.m. ET (10 a.m. PT).
Seahawks Super Bowl Parade Route
The 2026 parade will run straight through the spine of downtown, flipping the direction of the team’s 2014 title route. The Seattle Times reported that the tentative plan is for the procession to follow Fourth Avenue from south to north.
The route will start at South Washington Street near Lumen Field, then head north along Fourth Avenue through the central business district before finishing near the Space Needle at Cedar Street.
That alignment provides fans with multiple natural gathering points, from Pioneer Square and Westlake Park to the Seattle Center area. In 2014, the parade began near the Space Needle and moved south toward the stadium, drawing an estimated hundreds of thousands of people along the way.
Officials are bracing for a similarly massive turnout this time, with “12s” again expected to fill sidewalks several deep as the team, coaches, and Lombardi Trophy move through the city.

