INDIANAPOLIS — The Lombardi Trophy might still be up for grabs this weekend, but the Indianapolis Colts have already secured a league title of their own. The NFL released its 2025 “Voice of the Fan” survey results today, and Indianapolis stands alone at the top of the mountain for family-oriented entertainment.
While on-field performance often dominates the headlines, the battle for the fan wallet is fought in the concourses and parking lots. The Colts didn’t just edge out the competition; they executed a strategic masterclass in fan engagement that landed them in the top five across six different operational categories.
The “Voice of the Fan” survey is the league’s internal barometer for franchise health, measuring everything from the crispness of the fries to the speed of the security lines. Indianapolis put on a clinic in logistical efficiency and atmosphere.
The Colts secured the No. 1 spot for family-oriented entertainment, a direct result of aggressive programming at the American Family Insurance Touchdown Town and in-stadium activations. But the wins didn’t stop at the kids’ zone. The data shows a holistic approach to the gameday grind:
Getting 65,000 people into a building is hard. Getting them out happily is harder. Cracking the top five in both arrival and departure satisfaction suggests the Colts have solved the traffic puzzle that plagues so many other NFL venues.
“We are honored to be recognized by our fans as a top-tier gameday experience. We believe in the power of football to entertain, inspire and unite, and we strive to ensure Colts gamedays provide an opportunity for fans of all ages to make memories that will last a lifetime.” — Stephanie Pemberton, Vice President of Marketing
This ranking wasn’t an accident. Walking through Lucas Oil Stadium this past season, the shift in strategy was palpable. The franchise poured resources into “value-add” experiences that don’t appear on the scoreboard but matter to parents paying for four tickets.
The team introduced complimentary coloring books, first-game certificates, and birthday buttons—small inventory items with massive emotional ROI. The “value-price” kids meal addressed the biggest complaint across the league: the cost of feeding a family at a pro sporting event. By attacking the friction points of the fan experience (cost, boredom, traffic), Indianapolis built a fortress of goodwill.
For the rest of the AFC South, this is a warning shot. You can draft the best players, but if your stadium experience is a headache, the home-field advantage erodes. The Colts have turned Lucas Oil Stadium into a destination where the experience delivers regardless of the final score.
Expect other franchises to copy the Colts’ playbook on youth engagement heading into the 2026 season. Copycat leagues don’t just exist on the gridiron; they exist in the marketing offices, too.