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Supply Side

Comcast Says Its 4K Feed Delivered Super Bowl with Near-Zero Latency

By SOS. News Desk | Feb 23, 2026

Comcast announced its new RealTime4K technology delivered the Super Bowl LX stream with just a 17-second delay, a speed that rivals traditional broadcast. The low-latency feed was nearly 50 seconds faster than competing streaming services, effectively making the viewing experience spoiler-proof for Xfinity subscribers.

  • Beating the group chat: "Delivering the fastest path from stadium to screen is the ultimate benchmark for live sports,” said Michael Pilquist, Comcast's Vice President of Video Architecture, in the company's announcement. The goal is to give customers "the speed that keeps them ahead of spoilers, texts, and social media.” Subscribers with a compatible X1 set-top box could access the stream on a dedicated Peacock-branded channel.

  • Under the hood: The performance boost comes from network upgrades that remove compression steps from the delivery pipeline. The process pushes 4K programming at what Sports Video Group reported was double the bitrate of standard 4K and five times that of HD.

The Super Bowl feed isn't a one-off, either. Comcast is using the same technology for its 4K feeds of the Winter Olympics, establishing low-latency as the new standard for its live sports coverage. Meanwhile, a separate third-party report from Stats Perform offered its own latency measurements for the big game. The low-latency push appears to be paying off for Comcast's streaming service, which saw Peacock stream a record 6.3 billion minutes of Olympics content over the first 11 days of the games.

Credit: Comcast

Key Takeaways

  • Comcast's new RealTime4K technology delivered the Super Bowl stream with a 17-second delay, nearly 50 seconds faster than competing services.
  • The low-latency feed is designed to create a spoiler-proof viewing experience, keeping subscribers ahead of social media and text message alerts.
  • The technology, which removes compression steps to double the standard 4K bitrate, is also being used for the Winter Olympics to set a new standard for live sports.