Seahawks Celebrate Super Bowl Win With Parade Fans Wont Want To Miss

Seattle gears up for a historic celebration as fans prepare to honor the Seahawks Super Bowl triumph with a downtown parade and city-wide festivities.

Seattle’s back on top-and this time, they’re throwing a party like it’s brand new.

Ten years after the Seahawks first hoisted the Lombardi Trophy, the city is once again basking in football glory. On Sunday, Seattle claimed Super Bowl LX with a commanding 29-13 win over the New England Patriots at Levi’s Stadium. It was a performance that checked every box-dominant ground game, clutch special teams, and a defense that looked like it time-traveled from the Legion of Boom era.

Kenneth Walker III ran wild for 135 yards and earned Super Bowl MVP honors, powering a Seahawks offense that controlled the tempo from the jump. Jason Myers was automatic, drilling a Super Bowl-record five field goals, the kind of steady foot that championship teams lean on when drives stall.

But the real tone-setter? Seattle’s defense.

Six sacks, relentless pressure, and a pick-six from linebacker Uchenna Nwosu that broke the game open and sent a message: this defense isn’t just good-it’s championship-caliber.

And now, it’s time to celebrate.

How to Watch the Seahawks’ Super Bowl Parade

If you can’t make it to downtown Seattle in person, don’t worry-the city’s rolling out the blue carpet for everyone. The celebration kicks off Wednesday, Feb. 11, and it’s shaping up to be one for the books.

  • Trophy Celebration: 10 a.m. PT / 1 p.m.

ET at Lumen Field (gates open at 8 a.m.)

  • Parade Start Time: 11 a.m.

PT / 2 p.m. ET

  • TV Broadcast: KING 5 (local NBC affiliate)
  • Streaming: Seahawks.com/live and KING5.com

The day begins at Lumen Field, where fans lucky enough to snag tickets-sold out in just 20 minutes-will witness the trophy presentation inside the stadium. From there, the party spills into the streets.

The parade route starts at Fourth Avenue and Washington Street, rolls north up Fourth Avenue, and wraps up at Cedar Street near Seattle Center. It’s a two-mile stretch expected to take about two hours, with local officials bracing for a crowd north of one million. That’s right-a million fans flooding the streets between SODO and Belltown, ready to relive every big play and every clutch moment.

And yes, this is still Seattle, so of course the weather’s part of the story. Forecasts call for mild, dry, partly sunny conditions with temps in the 50s-pretty ideal by Pacific Northwest standards. Fans will also be able to grab limited-edition “World Champions” rally cards at select Starbucks locations along the parade route, because what’s more Seattle than celebrating a Super Bowl win with a latte in one hand and a rally card in the other?

A Decade Later, the 12s Are Louder Than Ever

The last time the Seahawks brought home the Lombardi Trophy was back in 2014, when a young, hungry team stunned the Broncos and sent the city into a frenzy. An estimated 700,000 fans braved sub-freezing temperatures that day.

Marshawn Lynch stole the show, tossing Skittles into the crowd as the 12s soaked in the franchise’s first Super Bowl title. That parade became the stuff of legend-still the largest public gathering in Seattle history.

Until now, maybe.

This time, the weather’s warmer, the roster’s different, but the energy? Just as electric.

Seattle may have done this before, but after a decade of waiting, it feels brand new again. The city’s ready to celebrate like it just discovered joy-and who could blame them?

This is what it looks like when a fan base that never stopped believing finally gets to scream, sing, and dance in the streets again. The Seahawks are champions. And Seattle’s about to throw a victory parade worthy of the moment.