Travis Kelce finally revealed how much he spent on a suite for his girlfriend, Taylor Swift, to watch the Chiefs win Super Bowl LVIII.
The Kansas City star, who is now the highest-paid tight end in the league, shelled out millions for the Love Story singer and her friends in February.
During a scene from Netflix’s new sports docuseries Receiver, Kelce told San Francisco 49ers TE George Kittle that Super Bowl suites were selling for “fucking three million dollars.”
Kittle, who signed a five-year, $75 million contract in 2020, ultimately decided against spending that kind of money on a private box when his team faced Kelce and the Chiefs at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas.
“It’s like, ‘You guys are going to be fine,'” he joked, revealing that his family was sitting in the stands.
Travis Kelce Finally Revealed How Much He Spent on Taylor Swift’s Super Bowl Suite
The pop star returned to the US in the middle of his Eras tour to cheer on the Chiefs tight end.
As fans may recall, Swift was in the middle of her international Eras Tour in February and rushed back to the U.S. from Japan to cheer on her boyfriend from the comfort of their private suite.
She was joined by the likes of Blake Lively, Ice Spice and Keleigh Teller as they watched Kelce claim his third championship.
Just a week before the game, Travis’ mother, Donna Kelce, revealed she planned to watch from the stands due to the high price of VIP boxes.
However, the Catching Kelce alum hinted to listeners of his New Heights podcast that he was purchasing one of the last remaining suites.
“I’m not really doing anything different other than counting how much money I’m spending on this damn Super Bowl to get family and friends to come,” he joked at the time.
Swift attended 13 of her boyfriend’s NFL games last season, and the tight end is returning the favor by showing his support on her Eras Tour.
Travis is spending the summer traveling across the pond, playing shows in London, Dublin, Paris and Amsterdam.
Swift attended 13 of her boyfriend’s NFL games last season, including the big one in February.
Kansas City eventually defeated the San Francisco 49ers 25-22 in overtime.