McDonald's closed a multi-year naming rights agreement with the Chicago Fire, securing the title to the club's $750 million stadium under construction at The 78 development on Chicago's Near South Side. The venue, now McDonald's Park, is scheduled to open in 2028 and will include a flagship McDonald's restaurant integrated into the stadium footprint. Financial terms were not disclosed.
The Fire moved from Soldier Field to suburban Bridgeview in 2006, played there for thirteen seasons, and returned to Soldier Field in 2020 after buying out the SeatGeek Stadium lease for $65.5 million. The new facility at The 78—a 62-acre mixed-use site bordered by Roosevelt Road, Clark Street, and the Chicago River—represents the club's third home in two decades and its first soccer-specific venue in the city proper. Related Midwest is developing the site. The stadium capacity has not been finalized but is expected to fall between 20,000 and 25,000 seats.
McDonald's global headquarters sits 2.3 miles north of the stadium site in the West Loop. The company relocated from Oak Brook to Chicago in 2018, occupying nine floors at 110 North Carpenter Street. This is McDonald's first naming rights deal in professional sports in the United States, a notable departure for a brand that typically deploys stadium spend on suite inventory, concession partnerships, and activation rather than marquee signage. The embedded flagship restaurant—details on square footage and menu differentiation were not provided—positions the deal closer to a retail anchor tenant agreement than a pure media play. The Fire declined to comment on whether McDonald's will also hold pouring rights or broader concession partnerships inside the venue.
The naming rights market for MLS stadiums has tightened since 2022. Recent comparable deals include $300 million over 25 years for BMO Field's renewal in Toronto (2023) and $200 million over 20 years for Chase Center's naming rights with the Golden State Warriors, though that is an NBA venue. MLS-specific deals tend to fall in the $2 million to $6 million annual range for mid-market clubs. The Fire's previous naming rights holder at Bridgeview, SeatGeek, paid approximately $20 million over ten years starting in 2018, a deal that expired when the club left the venue. McDonald's Park will compete with Guaranteed Rate Field (1.6 miles southeast) and United Center (2.8 miles northwest) for corporate hospitality and entertainment dollars.
The Fire averaged 17,383 paid attendance in 2025, ranking 16th in MLS's 30-team league. The club has not reached the MLS Cup final since 2003 and missed the playoffs in seven of the past ten seasons. New ownership led by billionaire Joe Mansueto, who took majority control in 2019, has invested in player acquisitions and front-office infrastructure but has not yet delivered consistent on-field results. The stadium project was announced in 2022, with groundbreaking delayed twice due to financing negotiations and zoning approvals. Construction began in late 2024.
McDonald's domestic same-store sales grew 3.2% in Q1 2026, driven by value platform extensions and digital ordering gains. The company operates 13,400 U.S. locations and has leaned into experiential retail as a customer acquisition strategy, including test kitchens in Times Square and London. The Chicago flagship will be the largest McDonald's in North America by square footage, according to a person familiar with the project, though the company has not confirmed dimensions. The venue will serve as a brand showcase and event space on non-match days, a format the company has tested in smaller formats in Orlando and Las Vegas.
The Fire will begin play at McDonald's Park in the 2028 MLS season, assuming construction remains on schedule. The club's current lease at Soldier Field runs through 2027. Related Midwest has secured $450 million in private financing for the stadium build, with the remaining $300 million expected to come from naming rights, premium seat deposits, and public infrastructure credits tied to The 78's broader development. The site will include residential towers, office space, and retail anchors opening in phases through 2031.
Watch for secondary sponsorship announcements in the next six months, particularly pouring rights and jersey front-of-shirt deals. The Fire's current kit sponsor, Motorola, is in the final year of its contract. Coordinator hires for stadium operations and the McDonald's flagship buildout are expected by summer 2026.
The takeaway
McDonald's first U.S. naming rights play embeds flagship retail into $750M Fire stadium, opening 2028 at The 78 with undisclosed annual fees.
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