McDonald's has signed its first U.S. professional sports stadium naming rights agreement, putting its name on Chicago Fire FC's $750 million soccer-specific venue scheduled to open in 2028. The deal marks a strategic reversal for a company that has operated 42,000 restaurants worldwide without branding a single American arena.
The stadium will anchor The 78, a 62-acre mixed-use development on the Chicago River's South Loop edge. McDonald's Park will seat approximately 25,000 and include a flagship restaurant concept inside the venue. Financial terms were not disclosed, but comparable MLS naming rights deals in similar markets—Allianz Field in Minnesota, Lower.com Field in Columbus—have averaged $2.5M to $4M annually over 15 to 20-year commitments. McDonald's is headquartered in Oak Brook, 15 miles west of the stadium site.
The move makes sense for three constituencies. For McDonald's, the deal repatriates marketing spend to a city where the company maintains global headquarters but has watched competitor brands—PepsiCo at the United Center refresh, Wintrust on the South Side—claim venue marquees. The company is betting that soccer demographics skew younger and more diverse than the NFL or MLB inventory it has historically avoided. Fire ownership, led by Joe Mansueto since 2019, secures an anchor tenant for a project that requires zoning cooperation from a city government sensitive to corporate relocation threats. For The 78 developer Related Midwest, the McDonald's signature accelerates residential pre-sales in a neighborhood that currently offers river views and little else.
What the deal does not solve is attendance. The Fire averaged 17,383 per match in 2024, ranking 18th of 29 MLS clubs, despite playing at Soldier Field with 61,500 seats. A right-sized venue improves optics but does not manufacture demand. The naming rights check subsidizes construction; it does not fill sections. MLS continues to generate scarcity value through expansion fees—the 30th franchise, San Diego, paid $500M in 2023—while half the league plays in stadiums that sit one-third empty on Wednesday nights.
McDonald's also gains a platform for menu testing. The flagship restaurant inside the stadium will serve as a laboratory for limited-time offers and digital ordering interfaces in a controlled, high-traffic environment. The company has used similar strategies internationally—branding the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, operating pop-up locations at Olympic Villages—but never committed to a permanent U.S. sports real estate play. Expect the restaurant to carry experimental formats: kiosk-only ordering, no cash registers, dynamic pricing visible on menu boards.
The timeline matters. Construction begins in Q4 2026, with a 20-month build targeting an April 2028 opener. That schedule leaves Fire management two full seasons to sell premium inventory while the team still plays at Soldier Field. Club seat and suite deposits are already being collected, with early buyers receiving founder pricing and McDonald's co-branding opportunities. The club has hired Legends Global Sales to handle the process, the same firm that moved $450M in premium inventory for SoFi Stadium before the Rams played a game.
Watch for McDonald's to test bundled ticket promotions through its mobile app, offering Fire match access to loyalty program members who hit spending thresholds. The company's U.S. app has 30 million active users; converting 1% into casual attendees would solve the Fire's crowd problem overnight. Also watch for friction with the players' union. MLS removed jersey front sponsor restrictions in 2022, but McDonald's has not appeared on Fire kits yet. That negotiation, and whether it includes player compensation beyond standard CBA terms, will set precedent for future venue-to-apparel sponsor crossovers.
Related Midwest is expected to break ground on two residential towers adjacent to the stadium in Q1 2027, with delivery 18 months after the venue opens. Those units are being priced assuming the stadium exists and operates successfully. If the Fire continue drawing bottom-tercile crowds, the residential pro forma bends. The developer has not yet announced an anchor grocery or hotel partner for The 78, and neither deal closes without proof the stadium activated the district. McDonald's bought its naming rights; it also bought a construction timeline other tenants will use as a signal.
The takeaway
McDonald's breaks its no-U.S.-venue policy for Fire's **2028** opener, betting soccer demographics justify a play it refused the NFL and NBA.
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