List of college bowl games
This is a list of college football bowl games, including those proposed and defunct. Six bowl games are part of the College Football Playoff, a selection system that creates bowl matchups involving twelve of the top-ranked teams in the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision. There are also a number of other college football postseason invitationals, as well as several all-star games.
For nearly a century, bowl games were the purview of only the very best teams, but a steady proliferation of new bowl games required more teams, with 70 participating teams by the 2010–11 bowl season, then 80 participating teams by the 2015–16 bowl season. As a result, the NCAA has steadily relaxed the criteria for bowl eligibility. Teams with a non-winning record were allowed starting in 2010. Requirements were further reduced to allow teams with outright losing records to be invited since 2012, with the team with the best Academic Progress Rate score to be chosen first. While inviting teams without winning records to bowl games has become more commonplace, there were several losing teams who played in bowl games before the last decade's changes in bowl eligibility: 1946 Gator Bowl, South Carolina ; 1963 Sun Bowl, SMU ; 1970 Tangerine Bowl, William & Mary ; and the 2001 New Orleans Bowl, North Texas. For the 2016–17 bowl season, 25% of the bowl participants did not have a winning record.
The tables reflect changes for the 2022–23 bowl season.
Bowl games are not limited to the Bowl Subdivision; teams in the three lower divisions of the NCAA—the Football Championship Subdivision, Division II, and Division III—are also allowed to participate in bowl games. The playoff structure in those three divisions discourages most high-caliber teams from participating in bowl games, as teams would rather contest for their division's national championship than play in a bowl game. The same basic guidelines for bowl eligibility apply for those contests. As of 2017, one bowl game exists for FCS, four bowls serve Division II, and ten exist for teams in Division III.
Community college bowl games, not sanctioned by the NCAA, are also listed.
College Football Playoff games
Six major bowl games, known as the New Year's Six, rotate the hosting of the two semifinal games which determine the teams that play in the final College Football Playoff National Championship game. The New Year's Six includes six of the ten oldest bowl games, continuing their original history of pitting the very best teams in the country against each other. These six games focus on the top 12 teams in the rankings, with only five teams ranked lower than 12th having ever played in the New Year's Six since the College Football Playoff system was inaugurated.^ The Rose Bowl did not add a sponsor to its name until the 1998 season. Unlike other bowls, which give the sponsor's name precedence ahead of the bowl's name, the Rose Bowl adds the sponsor as "presented by", after the words Rose Bowl.
Two-time move, due to World War II travel restrictions after the attack on Pearl Harbor moving the 1942 game to Duke Stadium in Durham, NC, as well as the COVID-19 pandemic moving the 2021 game to AT&T Stadium in Arlington, TX.
† One-time move, due to damage to the Superdome from Hurricane Katrina, moving the 2006 game to the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, GA.
Other current Division I FBS bowl games
Besides the six bowl games that are part of the College Football Playoff, there are a number of other postseason invitationals. Generally, two conferences will agree to send teams of a particular standing to a game beforehand. For instance, the Rose Bowl traditionally features the Big Ten and Pac-12 conference champions. Generally, the payout to the participating teams in a bowl game is closely correlated to its prestige. By comparison, each of the former BCS bowls had a payout of $18 million.Non-FBS bowl games
Division II bowls
NOTE: These games are the Division II equivalent of the FBS bowls that are not integrated into the College Football Playoff. They provide a postseason venue for teams that do not qualify for the NCAA Division II Football Championship playoffs.| Name | First game | Venue | City | Title sponsor | Conference tie-ins | Previous name |
| Heritage Bowl | 2017 | Tiger Stadium | Corsicana, Texas | Riot Platforms | GAC LSC MIAA | Corsicana Bowl |
| Albanese Candy Bowl | 2019 | Brickyard Stadium | Hobart, Indiana | Albanese Confectionery Group | GLVC G-MAC | America's Crossroads Bowl |
| First Americans Bowl | 2025 | Doc Wadley Stadium | Tahlequah, Oklahoma | 7 Clans Talent Agency | - |
Division III bowls
NOTE: These games are the Division III equivalent of the FBS bowls that are not integrated into the College Football Playoff. They provide a postseason venue for teams that do not qualify for the NCAA Division III Football Championship playoffs.Additionally, the Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl has served as the championship game for Division III since 1973. It has been played at Phenix City, Alabama, Kings Island, Ohio, Bradenton, Florida, Salem, Virginia. Canton, Ohio, Annapolis, Maryland, and Humble, Texas.
NAIA bowl games
The NAIA's national championship game is currently not named as a bowl, but has held a bowl name in the past. Additionally, from 1970 to 1996, NAIA football was split into two divisions and held a separate tournaments and championships for both divisions; the Division II championship was never named a bowl and as such the past names listed below do not apply to the Division II championship game.| Name | First game | Venue | City | Title sponsor | Previous name |
| NAIA national football championship | 1956 | Municipal Stadium | Daytona Beach, Florida | NAIA Waste Pro | Aluminum Bowl Holiday Bowl Camellia Bowl Championship Bowl Apple Bowl Palm Bowl |
Proposed games
The number of bowl games have risen steadily, reaching 41 by the 2015 bowl season. To fill the 80 available bowl slots, a record 15 teams with non-winning seasons participated in bowl games—including three with a record of 5–7. This situation led directly to the NCAA Division I Council imposing a three-year moratorium on new bowl games in April 2016.Since 2010, organizers and boosters have continued to propose other bowl games—some of these proposals have since been dropped, while others are active proposals that have been placed on hold during the NCAA moratorium.
| Name | Year to start | Venue | City | Payout | Sponsor | Previous name |
| Chili Bowl | TBD | TQL Stadium | Cincinnati, Ohio | TBD | TBD | None previous |
| Chicago Bowl | TBD | Wrigley Field | Chicago, Illinois | TBD | TBD | None previous |
| Chocolate Bowl | TBD | Hersheypark Stadium | Hershey, Pennsylvania | TBD | TBD | None previous |
| Austin Bowl | TBD | Darrell K Royal–Texas Memorial Stadium | Austin, Texas | TBD | TBD | None previous |
| Medal of Honor Bowl | TBD | Johnson Hagood Stadium | Charleston, South Carolina | TBD | TBD | None previous |
| Little Rock Bowl | TBD | War Memorial Stadium | Little Rock, Arkansas | TBD | TBD | None previous |
| Melbourne Bowl | TBD | Marvel Stadium AAMI Park | Melbourne, Victoria, Australia | TBD | TBD | None previous |
| Dubai bowl game | TBD | TBD | Dubai, United Arab Emirates | TBD | TBD | None previous |
| Ireland bowl game | TBD | TBD | Ireland | TBD | TBD | None previous |
| Toronto bowl game | TBD | Rogers Centre BMO Field | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | TBD | TBD | International Bowl |
| St. Louis bowl game | TBD | The Dome at America's Center Busch Stadium | St. Louis, Missouri | TBD | TBD | None previous |
Two proposed games, the Cure Bowl and Christmas Bowl, were turned down by the NCAA for 2010. The Cure Bowl was eventually added in 2014, for the 2015 bowl season.
In August 2013, the Detroit Lions announced that it would hold a new bowl game at Ford Field beginning in 2014, holding Big Ten and Atlantic Coast Conference tie-ins, despite the existence of the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl. While Pizza Bowl organizers attempted to move the game to Comerica Park, these plans never came to fruition. In August 2014, the Lions announced that the new game would be known as the Quick Lane Bowl, and play its inaugural game on December 26, 2014. In a statement to Crain's Detroit Business, Motor City Bowl co-founder Ken Hoffman confirmed that there would be no Little Caesars Pizza Bowl for 2014.
In June 2013, ESPN.com reported that the so-called "Group of Five" conferences—the American Athletic Conference, Conference USA, MAC, Mountain West Conference, and Sun Belt Conference—were considering adding one or more new bowl games once the NCAA's current moratorium on new bowls expires after the 2013 season. This move was driven by a trend for the then-"Power Five" conferences to play one another in bowl games. The 2013 season, the last of the then-current four-year bowl cycle, had 16 bowls that involved two teams from "Power Five" leagues. The 2014 season, the first of a new six-year bowl cycle, would have at least 19, and possibly more, matchups of "Power Five" teams. The "Group of Five" was apparently concerned that this trend would mean that its teams might not have available bowl slots.
According to reports, the 2010 Christmas Bowl proposal would have involved a Mountain West team against an opponent from either the Pac-12 or The American. As for The American, it has suggested a new bowl game, most likely at Marlins Park in Miami. Two other venues of then-"Group of Five" schools in Florida—Spectrum Stadium and FAU Stadium —were being considered for other potential bowls. A possible bowl in Little Rock would pit C-USA and the Sun Belt. Finally, the director of the current Little Caesars Bowl indicated that he had been in contact with officials from all of the "Group of Five" about starting new bowl games in Ireland, Dubai, and either Toronto or Nassau. Recently, though, reports have indicated the proposed games in Ireland and Dubai would be unworkable.
The first new bowl to be confirmed for 2014 was the Camellia Bowl, a game created by ESPN and played in Montgomery, Alabama. It secured tie-ins with the MAC and Sun Belt, and an initial contract to run through the 2019 season. ESPN was also reported to be in negotiations to take over ownership of the existing Heart of Dallas Bowl and establish a new bowl game in Boca Raton.
Another ownership group interested in starting a Montgomery-based bowl at New ASU Stadium reportedly switched focus to Charleston, South Carolina. In the face of obstacles related to an NCAA ban on playing postseason games at predetermined locations in South Carolina due to the Confederate battle flag being flown at a civil war monument on the State House grounds, the ownership group instead chose to stage the Medal of Honor Bowl all-star game at Johnson Hagood Stadium beginning in 2014. However, with the Confederate flag's removal from the State House grounds on July 10, 2015, the NCAA lifted its ban that day. As such, on August 27 of that year, the Medal of Honor Bowl announced their plans to become a traditional postseason bowl game beginning on December 18, 2016, pending NCAA approval. The all-star game format was not played that year as a result. However, in April 2016, the NCAA announced a moratorium on new bowl games; organizers had subsequently announced plans to hold the bowl in January 2018; however, no further editions of the Medal of Honor Bowl have been played.
Number of current FBS bowl games by state
''* Bowl is a College Football Playoff semifinal, once every three seasons, in rotation under current CFP format''All-star games
FBS all-star games
All-star games predominantly featuring players from the FBS-level.Regular season games called bowls
- Black and Blue Bowl – Memphis and Southern Miss
- Empire State Bowl – Columbia and Cornell
- Confusion Bowl – Miami (OH) and Miami (FL)
- Crab Bowl Classic – Maryland and Navy
- Egg Bowl – Ole Miss and Mississippi State
- Georgia Grown Bowl – Georgia Southern and Georgia State
- Iron Bowl – Alabama and Auburn
- Magnolia Bowl – LSU and Ole Miss
- Oyster Bowl - currently Old Dominion and rotating teams
- Palmetto Bowl – Clemson and South Carolina
- Safeway Bowl – North Texas and SMU
- Shula Bowl – FIU and Florida Atlantic
- Soul Bowl – Alcorn State and Jackson State
- Textile Bowl – Clemson and North Carolina State
Bowl games played outside of the US
- Aztec Bowl – Mexico
- Bacardi Bowl – seven exhibition games played in Havana, Cuba, from 1907 to 1946
- International Bowl – bowl game played in Toronto, Canada, from 2007 to 2010
- Bahamas Bowl – bowl game played in Nassau, Bahamas, from 2014 to 2024.
Junior college bowl games
- C.H.A.M.P.S. Heart of Texas Bowl – Copperas Cove, Texas
- Game One Bowl – Cedar Falls, Iowa. This bowl is a doubleheader with the Iowa runner-up playing in the first game and the Iowa champion in the second. The opponents for each game are chosen at-large.
- Mississippi Bowl – Biloxi, Mississippi
- Midwest Classic Bowl – Miami, Oklahoma
- Red Grange Bowl – Glen Ellyn, Illinois
- Salt City Bowl – Hutchinson, Kansas
Defunct
- Beef Empire Classic – Garden City, Kansas
- Brazos Valley Bowl – Bryan, Texas
- Carrier Dome Bowl – Syracuse, New York
- Citizens Bank Bowl – Pittsburg, Kansas. Known in its last season as the Football Capital of Kansas Bowl. Hosted 2009 National Junior College Athletic Association National Championship game between Blinn and Fort Scott, which featured future NFL stars Cam Newton and Lavonte David.
- Dalton Defenders Bowl – Coffeyville, Kansas
- Dixie Rotary Bowl – St. George, Utah
- East Bowl – rotating site among Coastal Conference schools
- El Toro Bowl – Yuma, Arizona
- Empire State Bowl – Uniondale, New York
- Garland Texas Bowl – Garland, Texas
- Gold Bowl – Richmond, Virginia
- Golden Isles Bowl – Brunswick, Georgia
- Grenn Country Bowl – Tahlequah, Oklahoma
- Junior Rose Bowl – Pasadena, California
- Kansas Jayhawk Bowl Classic – Coffeyville, Kansas
- Mid-America Bowl – Tulsa, Oklahoma
- Midwest Bowl – rotating site among North Central Community College Conference schools
- Mineral Water Bowl – Excelsior Springs, Missouri
- Mississippi Magnolia Bowl – MACJC Championship game, rotating site
- North Star Bowl – Rochester, Minnesota
- Palm Bowl – McAllen, Texas
- Pilgrim's Pride Bowl – Mt. Pleasant, Texas
- Real Dairy Bowl – Pocatello, Idaho
- Red River Bowl – Bedford, Texas
- Refrigerator Bowl – Evansville, Indiana
- Roaring Ranger Bowl – Ranger, Texas
- Robert A. Bothman Bulldog Bowl – San Mateo, California
- Rodeo Bowl – Arkansas City, Kansas
- Sterling Silver Bowl – Sterling, Kansas
- Texas Shrine Bowl – Tyler, Texas
- Top of the Mountain Bowl – Sandy, Utah
- Valley of the Sun Bowl – rotating site in Maricopa County, Arizona
- Wool Bowl – Roswell, New Mexico
- Zia Bowl – Albuquerque, New Mexico
Defunct bowl games
Defunct Division I-AA bowl games
- Camellia Bowl – Sacramento, California
- Heritage Bowl – Atlanta, Georgia
- Pioneer Bowl – Wichita Falls, Texas
- Gridiron Classic – rotating locations
- ECAC Bowl – rotating locations
Defunct Division II bowl games
- Bicentennial Bowl – Richmond, Virginia
- Boardwalk Bowl – Atlantic City, New Jersey
- Camellia Bowl – Sacramento, California
- Dixie Rotary Bowl – Saint George, Utah
- Florida Beach Bowl – Fort Lauderdale, Florida
- Gold Bowl – Richmond, Virginia
- Grantland Rice Bowl – Murfreesboro, Tennessee & Baton Rouge, Louisiana
- Heart of Texas Bowl – Copperas Cove, Texas & Waco, Texas
- Kanza Bowl – Topeka, Kansas
- Knute Rockne Bowl – Akron, Ohio & Davis, California
- Live United Texarkana Bowl – Texarkana, Arkansas
- Mineral Water Bowl – Excelsior Springs, Missouri
- Pioneer Bowl – Wichita Falls, Texas
- Pioneer Bowl – various locations as a bowl between HBCU teams
Defunct Division III bowl games
- Oyster Bowl – Norfolk, Virginia
- ECAC Presidents Bowl - New Britain, Connecticut and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- ECAC Legacy Bowl - New Britain, Connecticut and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- New York State Bowl - Campus Sites
Defunct NAIA bowl games
- All-Sports Bowl - Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
- Bicentennial Bowl - Little Rock, Arkansas
- Boot Hill Bowl - Dodge City, Kansas
- Cowboy Bowl - Lawton, Oklahoma
- Great Southwest Bowl - Grand Prairie, Texas
- Poultry Bowl – Gainesville, Georgia, Greensboro, North Carolina
- Share Bowl - Knoxville, Tennessee
- Shrine Bowl - Ardmore, Oklahoma
- Sunflower Bowl - Winfield, Kansas
- Wheat Bowl - Ellinwood, Kansas, Great Bend, Kansas, Pre-season NAIA bowl
Other defunct college bowl games
Defunct regular-season games known as bowl games
| Name | Seasons Active | City | Notes |
| Harvest Bowl | 1958–1969 | Roanoke, Virginia | |
| Mirage Bowl | 1976–1993 | Tokyo, Japan | A regular season matchup, originally at Korakuen Stadium, later at Olympic Stadium, and finally at the Tokyo Dome |
| Oyster Bowl | 1948–1995 | Norfolk, Virginia | A regular season game called a "bowl", now a home game for Old Dominion University to raise money for the Kedive Shriner's charities |
| Patriot Bowl | 2007–2009 | Cleveland, Ohio | A regular season game called a "bowl" that featured a team from the Mid-American Conference and one of the United States service academies |
| Tobacco Bowl | 1949–1982 | Richmond, Virginia |