These Are the Best Super Bowl Car Ads of All Time

Some you might remember, others, not so much. But they’re all gold.

a boy in a darth vader costume attempting to use the force to start a volkswagen passatVW

Every year in early February, Americans rally around their televisions by the tens of millions for an unofficial holiday, one that livens up that long, dark stretch between New Year’s and spring: Super Bowl Sunday. Whether or not you’re rooting for either of the teams playing that day, or even care about the National Football League, is practically irrelevant; the Super Bowl is an agnostic Mardi Gras that happens to take place on the weekend, a chance for people to come together and feast, imbibe and be merry.

Of course, with all those people gathered in front of their screens, companies looking to draw attention to themselves and their products have come to go big on Super Bowl Sunday, spending absurd amounts of money on commercials. As a result, the ads have become as big a draw as the football game itself, with companies working like mad to outdo each other and craft miniature films that compress an entire movie’s worth of levity or drama into as little as 30 seconds.

Car companies have been on the leading edge of this for years, sparing no expense to whip up ads that poke people right in their lizard-brain ids. Car buying, after all, is an emotionally-driven decision at the end of the day, so a company that can whip up a visceral response to its products stands a better chance of convincing buyers to fork over tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars on that ride they park in their driveway.

Which means, of course, that many of those ads are still a delight to watch today. So in honor of this year’s big game being upon us once again, we pulled together a list of the best automotive Super Bowl ads of all time.

VW, “The Force” — 2011

Not just one of the greatest automotive Super Bowl ads — one of the best ads, period. (And it does it all without a word of dialogue, to boot.)

Ford, “The One” — 2004

Many automotive Super Bowl commercials depend on fancy special effects, celebrity cameos or broad humor in order to hook the viewer’s attention. Or, if you’re Ford and you’re launching the new GT supercar, you just let the damn thing rip around a race track. (That little powerslide at 0:15 still sends shivers up the spine.)

Chrysler, “Born of Fire (Imported From Detroit)” — 2011

You know it’s a memorable Super Bowl ad when it has its own Wikipedia page. To launch the new Chrysler 200 sedan into an economy stricken by the Great Recession, the brand tapped into a hefty vein of hometown pride, with none other than local hero Marshall Mathers to bring it home at the end and punch you square in the feels. The 200 wound up being forgettable; the commercial, immortal.

Audi, “The Godfather” — 2008

If you’re going to go for a spoof, it’s hard to beat this ad that Audi used to introduce the R8 to America. In fact, if the car hadn’t had a starring role in Iron Man several months later, this might well be its best-known appearance on the screen.

Chevrolet, “Soap” — 2004

Just wait for the payoff. It’s worth it.

VW, “Tree” — 2001

Generation Z almost certainly has no clue how good Volkswagen’s advertising used to be. If you’re reading this and were born after 1995, consider this Super Bowl ad as your first step into that discovery.

Jeep, “Groundhog Day” — 2020

To promote the new Gladiator, Jeep tapped Bill Murray to spoof his 1993 film about living the same day over and over again. (Ironically, it hit the air just a month or so before COVID-19 wound up forcing many of us to work from home and live our own personal Groundhog Day scenarios.)

Nissan, “Danger Zone” — 1997

Arguably the best use of Kenny Loggins’s iconic ’80 jam between its Top Gun origins and its use on the TV show Archer, this ad features a squadron of animatronic fighter-bomber pigeons attempting to befowl a car wash-shiny Maxima.

Chevrolet, “New Generations” — 2022

Unlike Audi’s Godfather parody, Chevy’s ad for the Silverado EV was a loving tribute to its Cosa Nostra-media inspiration — all the way down to tapping Sopranos creator David Chase to helm the commercial.

Audi, “The Chase” — 2009

Jason Statham rose to super-stardom, in part, in the Transporter series of movies, the second of which featured him up to his antics from behind an A8 — so it’s not too surprising to see him playing a typical Statham-esque character from behind the wheel. Audi’s send-up of its competitors for laughs, however, is done exceptionally well.