Ranking the Top 10 Super Bowl Wins by Team

Published on February 10, 2026 by Millie Titus

If you follow football, you already know how seriously people take Super Bowl rankings. Fans argue about them like settled truth, not an opinion. And as of February 2026, that list nearly got a shake-up. Super Bowl LX just wrapped in Santa Clara, and the New England Patriots were one win away from sitting alone at the very top. Didn’t happen. The Seattle Seahawks shut that down in a hurry. With that result, and with Seattle picking up its second title, the top tier stays packed instead of clean and clear.

Moments like this are why long-term league watching sticks with you. Over the years, plenty of “can’t miss” runs have ended abruptly. Dominant teams cool off. Sure bets fail on the night. Older eras people thought would last forever end up as highlight reels and documentaries. 

From the old Steel Curtain days to Tom Brady turning a late draft slot into a stack of rings, the pattern repeats. Two days ago, watching Drake Maye leave the field after taking six sacks from that Seattle defence said plenty on its own. No speech needed. This league is tough, fast, and unforgiving. Numbers matter, but the wear and tear tells the real story. What follows is where things stand right now for the top 10 Super Bowl wins by team.

Super Bowl Wins by Team: The All-Time Rankings (Updated 2026)

RankTeamSuper Bowl WinsWinning Years

1 New England Patriots 6 2002, 2004, 2005, 2015, 2017, 2019
2 Pittsburgh Steelers 6 1975, 1976, 1979, 1980, 2006, 2009
3 San Francisco 49ers 5 1982, 1985, 1989, 1990, 1995
4 Dallas Cowboys 5 1971, 1972, 1978, 1993, 1994, 1996
5 Kansas City Chiefs 4 1970, 2020, 2023, 2024
6 Green Bay Packers 4 1967, 1968, 1997, 2011
7 New York Giants 4 1987, 1991, 2008, 2012
8 Denver Broncos 3 1998, 1999, 2016
9 Las Vegas Raiders 3 1977, 1981, 1984
10 Washington Commanders 3 1983, 1988, 1992

1. New England Patriots: The Dynasty That Refuses to Fade

Total Wins: 6 Winning Years: 2002, 2004, 2005, 2015, 2017, 2019

For a long stretch, the Patriots felt like the measuring stick for everyone else, though that picture shifted a bit after February 8, 2026. They’ve reached the Super Bowl 12 times, which still stands as its own kind of record, but the flip side is tougher to look at. They’ve now also piled up six losses on that same stage. 

Super Bowl LX was a rough watch if you were on their side. The opening was there to grab. A win would have pushed them clear of Pittsburgh and settled the debate for good. Instead, Seattle’s defence, the unit people call “The Dark Side”, tore through the protection and kept Drake Maye under constant pressure.

It’s strange how easy it is to forget how unexpected their first title run looked at the time. Go back to 2002, and most previews leaned the other way. A young Brady wasn’t supposed to outplay the high-powered Rams attack, which people called the Greatest Show on Turf. Yet that upset changed the path of the league for years after. That’s been the Patriots’ pattern at their peak. They didn’t just beat teams; they drained them. According to the 2026 Championship recap from CBS News, the count still sits at six championships, level at the top with the franchise out of Pennsylvania.

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2. Pittsburgh Steelers: Still the King of the North

Total Wins: 6 Winning Years: 1975, 1976, 1979, 1980, 2006, 2009

Steelers fans probably had a pretty good night when that final whistle blew. With the Patriots falling short in Super Bowl LX, Pittsburgh stays level at the top instead of getting pushed down a spot. No surprise if a few thank-you notes are headed Seattle’s way. Records like that matter to fan bases that track every banner and every ring.

The 1970s really was Pittsburgh’s golden stretch. Four championships in six seasons, built around a defence that earned the “Steel Curtain” label the hard way. It wasn’t branding. It was survival. Years ago, I heard a retired lineman describe facing Mean Joe Greene as trying to slow down a moving brick wall with your bare hands. This was not a fancy metaphor but rather an honest account from someone who had experienced it firsthand.

They collected two more championships in the 2000s, first with Bill Cowher stalking the sideline in that windbreaker, then later with Mike Tomlin bringing the same hard-edge tone. Different years, different players, but the feel of the team hardly shifted. Still physical. Still stubborn. Still built on the idea that you settle games with effort more than talk. No drama about style points; just do your job and keep leaning on the opponent until something gives.

Yeah, it’s been a while since the last confetti drop in Pittsburgh, and fans know that better than anyone. But the older wins haven’t faded in importance. Those banners still count the same. Put their total next to New England’s in the record books and there’s no awkward gap, no asterisk feeling. Just two heavyweights sharing the same line.

3. San Francisco 49ers: The Architects of Elegance

Total Wins: 5 Winning Years: 1982, 1985, 1989, 1990, 1995

If the Steelers built their reputation on force, the 49ers built theirs on touch and timing. Different tools, different feel. Joe Montana to Jerry Rice never looked rushed. It looked measured, almost surgical. The West Coast Offence didn’t just tweak the game; it changed how people thought about moving the ball. Short passes, rhythm throws, and yards piling up before defences could reset.

Go back and watch the tape from Super Bowl XXIV sometime. That 55–10 win over Denver barely feels real when you see it unfold. The gap on the scoreboard kept stretching and nothing slowed it down. By the second half it stopped feeling like a contest and started feeling like a demonstration.

They’ve had their chances again in the 2020s and came within touching distance, only to be turned away twice by Kansas City. Those losses still sting for their fans. Even so, five championships is no small pile of hardware. That stretch of San Francisco football still stands as a model of control and precision that other teams keep trying to copy, usually without the same smooth finish.

4. Dallas Cowboys: America’s Team (For Better or Worse)

Total Wins: 5 Winning Years: 1971, 1972, 1978, 1993, 1994, 1996

Say the word ‘Cowboys’, and people don’t remain ambivalent for long. The response is generally immediate and vocal, either pride or eye-rolling, sometimes both in the same room. That is just the way it has always been with them. Rewind to the 1990s and that roster seemed stacked at each of the most crucial positions. 

Troy Aikman running the offence, Emmitt Smith chewing up yards, and Michael Irvin talking and catching in equal measure. They didn’t just win; they controlled games. Three Super Bowl wins in four years still sounds exaggerated until you look it up again.

The tricky part for fans is how long it’s been since the last one. Close to three decades now without a new ring. For a franchise that leans hard into the “America’s Team” label, that gap gets brought up a lot. Every season starts with noise and hope, and every season ends short of the final step. Still, those five Lombardis at Jerry World aren’t decorative props. They’re proof of what that team once was. Quiet years don’t erase heavy history.

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5. Kansas City Chiefs: The New Era Giant

Total Wins: 4 Winning Years: 1970, 2020, 2023, 2024

Right now, the Chiefs are the side nobody feels comfortable lining up against. Every time Patrick Mahomes lets the ball go, there’s a split second where you wonder how that throw even worked. Different arm angles, off-balance launches, plays that look broken until they suddenly aren’t. Defences prepare all week and still get caught guessing.

Their climb into the top five came fast, powered by back-to-back championships in 2023 and 2024. They nearly stretched it to three straight the following season, but Super Bowl LIX didn’t go their way. Philadelphia shut the door with a 40–22 result that took the air out of the three-peat talk pretty quickly.

Recent sports records from Britannica now place Kansas City firmly in dynasty territory. This isn’t viewed as a short hot streak anymore. The label has shifted from surprise contender to regular title threat. When a season starts, they’re automatically in the serious-favourite column, and nobody argues much about it.

6. Green Bay Packers: The Frozen Tundra Legends

Total Wins: 4 Winning Years: 1967, 1968, 1997, 2011

You really can’t get far into any Super Bowl talk without someone bringing up Green Bay. It always comes up sooner or later. They took the first two titles when the whole thing was still finding its feet, and the trophy itself carries Vince Lombardi’s name. That’s not trivia; that’s foundation-level history. In league terms, that’s about as original as it gets.

What’s funny is how every generation seems to have its Packers quarterback story. Older fans talk about Bart Starr like clockwork. Then came the Favre years, all risk and fireworks. Then Rodgers, cool and precise, closed the deal in 2011. Different personalities, same pattern: Green Bay keeps showing up in important seasons when a lot of bigger-market teams drift in and out.

And that market point matters. This isn’t New York or Dallas money and scale. It’s a small city with a massive football footprint, which makes those four rings feel earned the hard way. The ownership model is different, too. No single owner in a luxury box calling the shots. Shares sit with the public, many of them everyday supporters. Fans there don’t just cheer the team; they literally own a piece of it, and they’re rightly proud of that.

7. New York Giants: The Giant Killers

Total Wins: 4 Winning Years: 1987, 1991, 2008, 2012

The Giants have built a reputation on ruining someone else’s perfect plan. Say “2008” to most fans and they know exactly where this is going. New England was sitting at 18–0, steamrolling everyone, and talk of a perfect season was getting louder by the week. Then Eli Manning slips free, throws that desperate ball, and the Helmet Catch turns into one of those plays that never leaves the highlight reels. Just like that, the script flipped.

What makes them tricky is that they don’t always look dominant across a full season. Some years the record is decent, not scary. But if they squeeze into the playoffs, the mood changes. Games get tight, clocks run low, and somehow they’re still there on the last drive. They hang around, absorb pressure, and then steal it late. If you’re backing the other side, it’s infuriating to watch. If you like tough, stubborn football, it’s hard not to give them credit.

8. Denver Broncos: The Mile High Magic

Total Wins: 3 Winning Years: 1998, 1999, 2016

The Broncos have this odd way of turning Super Bowl victories into farewell tours. John Elway had gotten his two titles when he retired immediately afterward. Years later, Peyton Manning did pretty much the same thing: one more ring, then straight to retirement. Not many teams get to have their biggest wins double as farewell addresses.

Recent seasons haven’t exactly been smooth, and fans know it. Still, those three championships are locked in the record books. What people sometimes forget is how often Denver has actually reached the big game. Eight appearances in total, which is no small number. The flip side is rougher: five of those ended in losses, and a few weren’t even close by the final whistle.

Even with that mixed history, there’s a pattern there. When the moment finally swings their way, they close it out. Not pretty every time, not dominant every era, but when they’ve had the right window, they’ve taken it. That part counts.

9. Las Vegas Raiders: The Silver and Black Legacy

Total Wins: 3 Winning Years: 1977, 1981, 1984

The Raiders haven’t won a Super Bowl since the stretch when they called Los Angeles home, but ask older fans and they’ll tell you the reputation still carries weight. That team had a personality you could spot from across the field. The phrase “Just win, baby” wasn’t some tidy motto printed on posters. It was how they operated. Simple, blunt, no apologies.

They leaned hard into being the team people loved to complain about. Penalties, intimidation, mind games, big hits. None of it bothered them much if the result went their way. In fact, the villain label almost seemed to fuel the whole thing. You either backed them fully or couldn’t stand them. There wasn’t much middle ground.

Since the move to Vegas, results have been uneven, and patience has worn thin more than once. Even so, those three Super Bowl wins from the Madden and Flores periods still get brought up with pride. For long-time supporters, that era isn’t dusty history. It’s the standard they still measure everything against.

10. Washington Commanders: The Hogs Era

Total Wins: 3 Winning Years: 1983, 1988, 1992

Rounding out the top ten are the Commanders, and their best years came in that late-80s to early-90s window when the team was built around pure muscle up front. People still bring up that offensive line, “The Hogs”, like it was a separate unit with its own identity. They weren’t pretty, they weren’t flashy, but they controlled games snap after snap and wore defences down.

The unusual part is how they won those three Super Bowls with three different quarterbacks—Joe Theismann first, then Doug Williams, then Mark Rypien. That’s not the normal pattern in this league. Most champions ride one franchise passer through the whole run. Washington didn’t need that. The strength sat across the roster, not in just one locker.

Those teams worked more like a crew than a star vehicle. Different leader under centre, same outcome at the end of the season. That kind of depth is rare, and it’s the main reason that era still gets respect when people talk about the league’s strongest title teams.

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Frequently Asked Questions

1. Who has the most Super Bowl wins as of 2026?

For now it remains a shared spot at the top. The New England Patriots and the Pittsburgh Steelers are each on six. New England had a chance to go ahead in Super Bowl LX, but Seattle put a stop to that. So the tie remains, at least for now.

2. How many Super Bowls have the Kansas City Chiefs won?

The Chiefs have four championships in the house, so to speak. It was the back-to-back victories in 2023 and 2024 that really altered people’s language when describing them. That run took them from “strong contender” talk into full dynasty conversations.

3. Which team has the most Super Bowl appearances?

That mark belongs to the Patriots with 12 trips to the big game. There’s a flip side to that record too. After the 2026 loss, they’ve also piled up six Super Bowl defeats, which is the highest total on that end as well.

4. Has any team ever pulled off three straight Super Bowl wins?

No one has managed it yet. Some teams have been almost there, most recently the Chiefs in 2025, before Philadelphia foiled them. Nobody has climbed the mountain three times in a row.

5. How many rings do the Dallas Cowboys have?

The city of Dallas has won five Super Bowls. The last one was in the mid-90s, so I’ve been waiting a long time since then. Even with that gap, their total trophy haul also keeps them in the conversation at or near the top when you compare franchise histories.

The landscape of the NFL is always shifting. A few years ago, the Chiefs weren’t even in the top ten. Now? They’re knocking on the door of the 5-ring club. And with the way the Seahawks just dominated the Patriots, who’s to say they won’t be climbing this list soon too?

Anyway, it’s a weird time to be a Steelers fan—you’re still technically tied for the lead, but only because a rival team did you a massive favour by beating New England. Do you think Drake Maye will ever get the Patriots that seventh ring, or is the era of New England dominance finally dead and buried?

Millie Titus

Millie Titus is an award-winning writer and Managing Editor with a background in English Literature. She holds a Master’s degree from McGill University and has extensive experience covering culture, lifestyle, and current affairs. Millie has interviewed a range of high-profile figures and is known for clear, well-researched storytelling that combines first-hand reporting with careful editorial standards. Her work focuses on accuracy, context, and engaging readers with informed, responsible journalism.

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