Green Day and Counting Crows to play invite-only Super Bowl concert
Green Day and Counting Crows will headline an invite-only Super Bowl week concert at Pier 29, bringing Bay Area acts back to town and concentrating major events during Super Bowl LX.

Green Day and Counting Crows will perform at an invite-only concert at Pier 29 on Feb. 6, 2026, as part of a slate of celebrity and music events surrounding Super Bowl LX. The show, hosted by FanDuel and Spotify, brings two Bay Area rock acts into the city during a week already packed with high-profile festivities tied to the game at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara.
The concert is one of several private and promotional events scheduled across Super Bowl week, reflecting how corporate partners and streaming platforms are staging marquee moments in San Francisco while the game itself takes place south of the city. The organizers have limited access to the Pier 29 performance to invited guests, signaling a focus on branded hospitality and partner engagement rather than broad public attendance.
For San Francisco the local angle matters: both bands are established Bay Area names returning to perform near their home turf during an international sports weekend. That hometown connection drives publicity and local spending around a concentrated set of events, even when shows are not open to the general public. Restaurants, hotels, and nightlife venues near the Embarcadero and downtown can expect higher demand from corporate guests, touring crews, and media traveling for the week, while areas around Levi's Stadium will absorb large-scale visitor flows tied to game-day crowds.
Even with limited public access to this particular concert, residents should anticipate visible effects during Super Bowl week. Increased security, temporary road closures, and elevated police presence around key sites such as Pier 29 and the downtown waterfront are likely. Transit routes to the Embarcadero and connectors to BART and Muni may experience crowding, and private shuttles servicing corporate events could add to curbside congestion.
Economically, Super Bowl-related activations often produce a concentrated but uneven boost. Branded, invite-only affairs channel spending to event partners and premium hospitality vendors, while the broader consumer benefits depend on how many public events and fan experiences are available. With multiple high-profile festivities linked to the game at Levi's Stadium, the region will see a mix of private and public economic activity that will ripple through San Francisco's hospitality and services sectors.
As Super Bowl week approaches, residents should monitor local traffic advisories and transit updates. For those not on guest lists, the week will still reshape downtown rhythms and business activity, even if the headline performances remain behind closed doors.
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