The Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots have revealed which uniforms they’ll wear for next weekend’s Super Bowl LX in Santa Clara, California. As the designated home team, the Patriots opted for their all-white look — white jerseys and white pants — rather than their usual navy blue jerseys and silver or blue pants worn at home. That choice means Seattle will stick with its typical home kit: navy blue jerseys and navy pants.
Both squads will sport the Super Bowl LX patch on their jerseys, as is customary, but this year there’s an additional emblem: an “America 250” patch on the right shoulder to mark the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. The phrase “America 250” will also appear on each sideline at Levi’s Stadium during the game.
A few uniform trends and trivia: teams wearing home colors in recent Super Bowls have not fared especially well over the past 21 years — home-uniform teams are 5-16 in that span — and historically 37 of the 58 Super Bowl winners have worn white jerseys. Still, the last two Super Bowl champions wore their home colors (the Chiefs in red and the Eagles in green), suggesting the pattern might be shifting. The Patriots have also favored white in their recent title games, including their win over the Seahawks in Super Bowl XLIX, when Seattle wore navy; Seattle wore white in their Super Bowl XLVIII victory.
This season’s head-to-head uniform records: the Seahawks are 7-1 when wearing navy blue, while the Patriots are 6-0 in white.
Fan Take: Uniform choices are a fun piece of Super Bowl lore that give fans something else to argue about and can even feel like a superstition-fueled edge. Beyond the vibes, the increased use of special patches and stadium branding shows how the NFL blends tradition with national milestones and marketing, which matters for fan experience and the league’s cultural footprint.

