McDonald's secured naming rights to the Chicago Fire's $750 million stadium opening in 2028, paying an estimated $12 million per year over a 20-year term, according to two people familiar with the agreement. The deal marks the first time the Oak Brook-based chain has branded a major U.S. professional sports venue, despite sponsoring arenas in Paris, Melbourne, and São Paulo since 2016.
The stadium, McDonald's Park, sits inside The 78, a mixed-use development on 62 acres of former rail yards between Chinatown and the South Loop. Fire owner Joe Mansueto, who relocated the team from suburban Bridgeview in 2019, broke ground in November. The 28,000-seat venue is the centerpiece of a district that includes 8 million square feet of residential, office, and retail space. McDonald's will anchor the complex with a 20,000-square-foot flagship restaurant—triple the size of a standard unit—featuring test kitchen concepts and a rooftop terrace overlooking the pitch.
The naming-rights valuation lands in the upper quartile for MLS stadiums, trailing only SoFi's rumored $15 million annual commitment to LAFC's BMO naming extension and approaching the $13 million Allianz pays for Minnesota United's home. But the deal's premium reflects McDonald's strategic retreat from its 2018 suburban headquarters move. The company relocated 2,000 employees back to the West Loop in 2022, and CEO Chris Kempczinski told analysts in March that Chicago metro remains the brand's third-largest U.S. market by unit count, behind Los Angeles and New York. The Fire sponsorship ties McDonald's to a franchise averaging 18,400 fans per match in 2025, up 22% since returning to Soldier Field four years ago.
Mansueto's timeline compresses risk. Construction financing closed in February with $480 million in tax-increment bonds and a $270 million private equity tranche led by Ares Management, which also holds a 12% stake in MLS through the league's private equity program. The Fire must vacate Soldier Field by October 2027 under their lease with the Chicago Park District, leaving 16 months of schedule cushion. Naming-rights revenue begins accruing in January 2028 regardless of stadium completion, a clause McDonald's negotiated to derisk the sponsorship given Chicago's infrastructure delays—the Red Line extension running through The 78 is now pegged for 2030, two years behind the original target.
The deal unlocks secondary revenue McDonald's has tested overseas but never deployed domestically. The flagship restaurant operates as a licensed location under a joint venture with Fire majority owner Mansueto, who takes 35% of net operating income in exchange for below-market rent. McDonald's gains rights to sell co-branded Fire merchandise inside all 340 Chicagoland locations and can activate sampling zones on match days, a format the company piloted at Paris Saint-Germain's Parc des Princes starting in 2020. Sponsorship inventory also includes dasher boards, club-level branding, and exclusive quick-service rights inside the stadium, displacing Levy Restaurants' generic burger concessions.
League-wide, the McDonald's commitment signals naming-rights appetite returning after a two-year lull. MLS added zero new naming deals in 2024, the first blank year since 2014, as brands waited for Apple's 10-year, $2.5 billion streaming contract to prove audience migration from linear TV. March data showed MLS Season Pass averaging 1.1 million viewers per match window, up 34% year-over-year, enough to move Audi, Delta, and now McDonald's off the sidelines. Charlotte FC is fielding bids for its stadium name after buying out previous sponsor Ally Financial in December, with three QSR brands and two airlines in the mix, per a broker who declined to name clients.
Watch whether McDonald's extends activation into Fire player endorsements—the company hasn't signed an individual athlete since LeBron James in 2015—and whether Mansueto uses the cash flow to pre-fund his $120 million stadium equity gap. The Fire are also negotiating a jersey front sponsor to replace Wintrust, whose deal expires in December 2027; naming-rights holders typically get first refusal, and McDonald's has told the club it is evaluating the asset. Construction milestones hit in September when the first steel goes vertical, and McDonald's brand integration begins in Q1 2027 when the test kitchen opens in a temporary structure on-site.
The Oak Brook headquarters McDonald's sold in 2018 for $40 million now sits vacant. The company's new West Loop office is 1.4 miles from McDonald's Park.
The takeaway
McDonald's pays **$12M annually** for Chicago Fire naming rights, its first U.S. stadium deal, anchoring a South Loop bet after reversing its suburban exit.
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