Major pro and college sports teams ranked by market size

Ranking the 115 U.S.-based “Big Four” professional sports teams (NBA, NFL, NHL, MLB) and 80 “Power” conference college programs (ACC, Big Ten, SEC, Big 12, Pac-12, Big East) by Nielsen TV market size. As of the 2023-24 television season, the top five markets remain New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia and Dallas-Ft. Worth.

Sports Team TV Market Size

As determined by Nielsen and effective for the 2023-24 television season. American teams only (Nielsen does not track viewership in Canada.)

Disclaimer: Many of the college teams listed could be listed under several different markets. Texas, for example, could reasonably be listed in every Texas-based market. In general, teams are either in geographic proximity to the listed market or are the primary flagship athletic institution in the state.

On mobile devices, scroll left-to-right to see all of the leagues listed.

# Market Homes (000)
NBA NFL NCAA “Power” Conferences MLB NHL
1 New York City 7,595 Knicks, Nets Giants, Jets Rutgers, St. John’s, Syracuse, Seton Hall, UConn Yankees, Mets Rangers, Devils, Islanders
2 Los Angeles 5,905 Lakers, Clippers Rams, Chargers USC, UCLA Dodgers, Angels Kings, Ducks
3 Chicago 3,649 Bulls Bears Illinois, DePaul, Northwestern, Notre Dame Cubs, White Sox Blackhawks
4 Philadelphia 3,177 76ers Eagles Penn State, Villanova Phillies Flyers
5 Dallas-Ft. Worth 3,130 Mavericks Cowboys SMU, TCU, Texas Rangers Stars
6 Houston 2,773 Rockets Texans Houston Astros no team
7 Atlanta 2,737 Hawks Falcons Georgia, Georgia Tech Braves no team since 2011 (Thrashers)
8 Boston 2,606 Celtics Patriots Boston College, UConn Red Sox Bruins
9 Washington D.C. 2,578 Wizards Commanders Maryland, Georgetown Nationals Capitals
10 SF-Oakland-San Jose 2,520 Warriors 49ers Stanford, Cal Giants, A’s Sharks
11 Phoenix 2,174 Suns Cardinals Arizona, Arizona State D’Backs Coyotes
12 Tampa-
St. Pete
2,143 no team Buccaneers Florida Rays Lightning
13 Seattle-Tacoma 2,071 no team since 2008 (Sonics) Seahawks Washington, Washington State Mariners Kraken
14 Detroit 1,930 Pistons Lions Michigan, Michigan State Tigers Red Wings
15 Minneapolis-
St. Paul
1,862 T’Wolves Vikings Minnesota Twins Wild
16 Orlando-Daytona 1,840 Magic no team UCF, Florida no team no team
17 Denver 1,787 Nuggets Broncos Colorado Rockies Avalanche
18 Miami-
Ft. Lauderdale
1,737 Heat Dolphins Miami Marlins Panthers
19 Cleveland-
Akron
1,553 Cavaliers Browns Ohio State Guardians no team since 1978 (Barons)
20 Sacramento-
Stockton-
Modesto
1,526 Kings no team no team no team no team
21 Charlotte 1,362 Hornets Panthers see below no team no team
22 Raleigh-
Durham
1,333 no team no team NC State, Wake Forest, Duke, North Carolina no team Hurricanes
23 Portland 1,315 Trail Blazers no team Oregon, Oregon State no team no team
24 St. Louis 1,285 no team since 1968 (Hawks) no team since 2016 (Rams) Missouri Cardinals Blues
25 Indianapolis 1,206 Pacers Colts Indiana, Butler no team no team
26 Nashville 1,192 no team Titans Vanderbilt no team Predators
27 Salt Lake City 1,174 Jazz no team Utah, BYU no team no team
28 Pittsburgh 1,165 no team Steelers Pittsburgh, West Virginia Pirates Penguins
29 Baltimore 1,162 no team since 1973 (Bullets) Ravens Maryland Orioles no team
30 San Diego 1,123 no team since 2017 (Chargers) no team since 1984 (Clippers) no team Padres no team
31 San Antonio 1,081 Spurs no team Texas no team no team
32 Hartford-New Haven 1,034 no team no team UConn no team no team since 1997 (Whalers)
33 Columbus 1,020 no team no team Ohio State no team Blue Jackets
34 Kansas City 1,019 no team since 1985 (Kings) Chiefs Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri Royals no team since 1976 (Scouts)
35 Austin 1,001 no team no team Texas no team no team
36 Greenville-Spartanburg 951 no team no team Clemson, South Carolina no team no team
37 Cincinnati 940 no team since 1972 (Royals) Bengals Cincinnati, Xavier Reds no team
38 Milwaukee 932 Bucks Packers Wisconsin, Marquette Brewers no team
40 Las Vegas 889 no team Raiders no team no team Golden
Knights
41 Jacksonville 799 no team Jaguars Florida, FSU no team no team
46 Greensboro, High Point, Winston-Salem 756 no team no team NC State, Wake Forest, Duke, North Carolina no team no team
46 Birmingham-Anniston-Tuscaloosa 756 no team no team Alabama, Auburn no team no team
47 Oklahoma
City
737 Thunder no team Oklahoma, Oklahoma State no team no team
48 Louisville 708 no team no team Louisville no team no team
50 Memphis 673 Grizzlies no team Mississippi no team no team
51 New Orleans 672 Pelicans Saints LSU no team no team
53 Providence 648 no team no team Providence no team no team
54 Buffalo 641 no team since 1978 (Braves) Bills no team no team Sabres
56 Richmond-Petersburg 611 no team no team Virginia no team no team
59 Little Rock-Pine Bluff 588 no team no team Arkansas no team no team
61 Knoxville 579 no team no team Tennessee no team no team
62 Tulsa 557 no team no team Oklahoma State no team no team
63 Lexington 515 no team no team Kentucky no team no team
64 Spokane 500 no team no team Washington State no team no team
65 Tuscon 498 no team no team Arizona no team no team
67 Des Moines-Ames 482 no team no team Iowa, Iowa State no team no team
69 Green Bay-Appleton 476 no team Packers no team no team no team
70 Roanoke-Lynchburg 458 no team no team Virginia Tech no team no team
71 Omaha 456 no team no team Nebraska, Creighton no team no team
74 Columbia, SC 443 no team no team South Carolina no team no team
77 Madison 434 no team no team Wisconsin no team no team
79 Charleston-Huntington 427 no team no team West Virginia no team no team
83 Waco 412 no team no team Baylor no team no team
87 Syracuse 389 no team since 1963 (Nationals) no team Syracuse no team no team
91 Champaign-Springfield-Decatur 373 no team no team Illinois no team no team
95 Baton Rouge 357 no team no team LSU no team no team
100 South Bend 329 no team no team Notre Dame no team no team
105 Tallahassee 301 no team no team FSU no team no team
106 Lincoln 295 no team no team Nebraska no team no team
112 Johnstown-Altoona-State College 286 no team no team Penn State no team no team
113 Lansing 271 no team no team Michigan State no team no team
119 Eugene 256 no team no team Oregon no team no team
135 Columbus-Tupelo-West Point 191 no team no team Mississippi State no team no team
136 Columbia-Jefferson City 187 no team no team Missouri no team no team
141 Lubbock 174 no team no team Texas Tech no team no team
158 Gainesville 143 no team no team Florida no team no team
173 Charlottesville 101 no team no team Virginia no team no team
188 Lafayette 75 no team no team Purdue no team no team

Comments 64

  1. Jeff says:

    Absurd you do not include MLS.

  2. ER Smuth says:

    West Virginia Univ [U WVa] is headquartered in Morgantown, NOT in Charleston or Huntington. So, it’s actually 0 for 5!

  3. daveyb says:

    Where would Quebec City be? This would be of interest in the nhl expands or relocates some existing franchises. The nhl is unique in having several teams in Canadian cities and considerable political pressure to maintain a strong presence in canada

  4. omar says:

    i neeed more info

  5. Michael M says:

    I know the Sacramento Kings suck, why aren’t they listed in the Sacramento Market?

    • Paulsen says:

      The Kings are easy to overlook, I admit — but they are listed next to Sacramento.

      • Zak says:

        Devils don’t play in new york they play in Newark New Jersey

        • Odie says:

          What’s your point?

        • Gens Lewis says:

          Jersey has no identity of its own. The north is a NYC market, and the south is a Philly market.

        • Darrell J says:

          Angels/Ducks don’t play in LA. Markets typically extend beyond city limits.

        • David Vaillencourt says:

          The Devils play 3 miles as the crow flies from Staten Island(NYC), 7 miles from Manhattan(NYC) c’mon now.. 😉

  6. Will says:

    This list is SO misleading. Look up “metro population”. That is the true teller. For example, Miami’s true size is over TWICE as big as Denver. And this stupid list would lead you to think Denver is bigger than Miami. Which isn’t even close to true in reality.

    • Paulsen says:

      Not sure how you found time on Christmas to complain about this, but this is a list of Nielsen market sizes. That’s it. Nowhere on this page does it say that this is a list of which cities are bigger.

  7. Ron G says:

    Here’s a list of the 10 largest DMA markets (U.S. and Canada) by population instead of households; Toronto is #4:

    https://www.statista.com/statistics/791916/leading-tv-markets-north-america/

  8. Kyle says:

    I am not sure why it is so hard for people to comprehend that these are Nielson TV markets and not sports / fan base markets. It is a pretty simple list of those “TV” markets and what sports teams are in them. I am sure if you spend 2 minutes on a reputable internet search page you can find a more comprehensive list of sports / fan base markets.

  9. T Hui says:

    Why does a market like Tampa have a bigger TV market than Miami when the Miami metro area is much bigger? Or how is San Diego could be that low in the rankings when the metro area is higher up the rankings? I don’t get it.

    • ScottinDallas says:

      Tampa/St Pete vs Miami alone?

    • SoCal Joe says:

      Miami-Ft. Lauderdale and West Palm Beach are separate TV markets, which is why it appears the Miami numbers are so much lower than Tampa-St. Pete. San Diego’s market is just the county of San Diego, nothing more (Tijuana does not count). Imperial County is part of Yuma, AZ. All the counties just to the north of SD are part of the L.A. market.

      • Clinton says:

        I thought West Palm Beach gets the Dolphins/Heat/Panthers/Marlins games?

  10. Jerome says:

    Wheres Toronto???

  11. Creighton Rabs says:

    Will this page be updated to reflect the Raiders now based in Las Vegas instead of Oakland when updated market numbers are released?

  12. Frank Martin says:

    Orlando #18 with 1.4M and experiencing explosive growth. Amazing that the only major sport we have here is a 3ed rate NBA team.

  13. Daniel says:

    Can you add MLS, please?

    • Tony says:

      Two years later, I echo your request. MLS has grown to 28 teams and has been around for 25+ years and I think has at least equal interest in some parts of the country as the NHL. One of these years I hope the media will say “of the 5 major sports…” instead of saying “of the 4 major sports…”

      • Billy says:

        The 4 major sports are the best leagues for that sport in the world. MLS isn’t even a top 10 league in its own sport

        • Eber says:

          MLS has surpassed the NHL in popularity and is closing in on MLB

  14. Eric says:

    Milwaukee and Green Bay are definitely the same market 100% the stadium itself is like 1.5 hours from milwaukee, not to mention the state of Wisconsin is pretty steadily populated between those places.

    • Paulsen says:

      Milwaukee is a separate market from Green Bay for Nielsen purposes.

    • KCJ says:

      Chicago is 20 minutes closer to Milwaukee than Green Bay is…are the Cubs and White Sox in the Milwaukee market then too?

  15. Jim says:

    They combine San Jose & SF but not DC and Baltimore?

    • SoCal Joe says:

      San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose are a single market. Washington DC and Baltimore are separate, even though they are only about 40 miles apart.

  16. Steve says:

    Gonna have to disagree with you not including MLS despite the obvious retorts coming. It’s a billion dollar revenue league no US league under it is close. TV ratings sans Stanley Cup Finals are favorable to NHL. Is it because not enough teams currently 24?

  17. DC says:

    Also to everyone complaining above, this wasn’t explained well by the author, but, those numbers are HOUSEHOLDS (see the header, “homes”), not PEOPLE, which is also probably throwing you off, since the average home has 2.5-3 people in it.

  18. A.J. says:

    Here’s a map of the markets for everyone’s reference: https://www.thevab.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/2017-2018-TV-DMA-Map.pdf

  19. Todd O Dillon says:

    Tampa ahead of Miami
    Interesting indeed.

  20. Todd Morse says:

    This is just a weird way to do it. It’s analytics at it’s worst.

    • Paulsen says:

      It’s a list of sports TV market sizes, as defined by Nielsen. Not really sure what you’re looking for here, and the reference to analytics is frankly bizarre.

  21. Lee Stevlingson says:

    These numbers seem slight … the Seattle Seahawks for example have a TV (and radio) market that includes at least six states (WA, OR, ID, MT, AK, HI) and one Canadian province, B.C. … total population 21,348,791. But according this, the market is only 1.855 million households.

    • DC says:

      Those markets are not “Seattle” though. Yes, the “Seattle” TV/radio network might go into Spokane and Boise, etc., but, they have their own Nielsen TV markets.

      A separate table including “secondary markets” could be done, but, that would get tricky. I live in one that would be tricky… Fort Wayne, IN is probably “majority” Colts, but, probably only barely, there are a lot of Bears fans here, and you’d probably get ~5% legacy Lions fans (from before the Colts came to Indianapolis in 83) I’d guess as well. So, the chart is just the primary TV market.

  22. mike says:

    Charlotte Bobcats are missing

    • Nyck Henderson says:

      They have them as the Hornets which is the current name.

  23. Don Erb says:

    This is pretty deceiving. The Buffalo Teams are religiously followed by metro Rochester and half of Erie, PA. The stats are light by at least 150,000 households pushing it up closer to 39th. And when you live in a border city leading to the most populated region in a neighboring country that also follows your football team I think that deserves asterisk treatment in the list.

    • Jason Vyzer says:

      Sure, but to some degree, all of the market numbers listed are off because they’re excluding neighboring area’s.

    • ScottinDallas says:

      Buffalo is a backwater. That’s reflected here, only Green Bay is a smaller media market. This isn’t about loyalty, it’s about media market. Dallas is 8-9th largest city, but with Ft Worth and other suburbs, we’re number 4-5 market.

  24. DaveH says:

    Huh? Milwaukee is over a two-hour drive from Green Bay. Seems kind of moronic to state the Packers are in Milwaukee’s market and make Milwaukee a three-sport town.

    • Paulsen says:

      Consider it moronic if you want, but that’s the way it is. Milwaukee is the Packers’ home market.

      • Bill says:

        Actually, it’s incorrect to say, “Milwaukee is the Packers’ home market.” That implies that they only have one home market. Officially, the Packers have two home markets—Green Bay and Milwaukee. This goes back to when the Packers used to play several home games each season in Milwaukee. Although that practice has ended, there is now a separate season ticket package for the former Milwaukee season ticket holders. So they are truly a home market in that sense.

    • ClevelandNEO says:

      Wrong, Cleveland draws exceptionally well compare to the product. Even their AHL and ARENA Football Team draw well. Cleveland/Akron market really includes Canton (approx 55 miles south) as well which places Cleveland at number 15 or 16 in market size with a population in excess of 3.5 million; for some reason this omitted just like most boards will separate or drop Akron. .

      • ScottinDallas says:

        Cleveland media market, Akron has it’s own news channels, radio stations no doubt; that is what this is talking about. Cowboys are big in San Antonio, 250 miles away, but they aren’t in our media market, there are 4 others between us, San Antonio, Austin, Temple/Belton, Waco, Dallas.

        • Ohio Guy says:

          The DMA in Cleveland includes Akron as well as Canton and a large portions of the counties in NE Ohio. Akron does not have it’s own television stations. The Youngstown, Toledo, Columbus, Erie, and Zanesville markets boarder the Cleveland market.

      • JRS says:

        If you’re counting Canton with Cleveland, then you’d have to count Dayton with Cincinnati.

  25. DaveH says:

    Cleveland wasn’t able to support four teams when they had the NHL, and Cleveland really can’t support three. But that’s never stopped Cleveland’s politicians from donating hundreds of millions in public money to them. Actually, at this point, it’s literally over a billion.

  26. Andre Alexander says:

    What does the homes category represent

  27. Derrick E Vaughan says:

    The City of Baltimore is #26 on the list. They are the #5 city of 5 major cities on the Washington D.C. to New York corridor line (Philadelphia, Boston). They have a new honorary street name, The Charm’tastic Mile of Baltimore. It’s a 1.3 mile corridor that was created to give “Charm City” a branded street that could be considered one of the Top 15-20 Most Iconic Streets in America. The Charm’tastic Mile was inspired by The Magnificent Mile the famous 13 blocks of Michigan Avenue. Look for Baltimore to be more of a big player as a major city with the new addition of “The Mile”.

  28. Ben F. says:

    Where is Toronto?

    • Paulsen says:

      Nielsen’s estimates only cover U.S. markets.

      • Bill says:

        Understood—but for the purpose of comparing North American sports markets (which appears to be the primary intended purpose), it would be beneficial to include Canadian markets with teams in the Major Four Leagues.

  29. Joe says:

    Green Bay?

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