4 Best Super Bowl Commercials that Cost Nearly $0 to Make
Check out these low-budget Super Bowl commercials that proved to be effective ads for these companies!
February 10, 2023
Topic tags
Chiara Hoogervorst
Creative
While we’re excited to see the biggest and best Super Bowl commercials for 2023, it’s a good reminder that video ad production doesn’t have to break the budget. Just take a look at some low-budget Super Bowl commercials from the past. Yep, you read that right!
How much does a Super Bowl commercial cost?
To be clear, Super Bowl ad placement is notoriously expensive — a thirty-second slot for a Super Bowl ad cost $6.5 million in 2022 and costs $7 million in 2023 (a record-high).
What about production cost? In addition to the ad placement cost, many brands still fork over tons of cash to produce glitzy commercials in hopes of capturing attention from the millions of viewers who tune in each year.
However, a few brands took a different path and produced Super Bowl ads with a low-budget approach. These companies leaned into the creative constraints of a small production budget and made commercials that subverted the idea of what a Super Bowl ad should look like. And guess what? Viewers loved ‘em!
Here's some of the best low-budget Super Bowl commercials:
These brands prove that you can create impactful videos on any budget. They took a Hail Mary pass with their unconventional Super Bowl ads that looked like they were produced on a shoestring budget — and still scored a touchdown. Check ‘em out, and learn why each ad worked so well.
Oatly: Their Singing CEO
Out of the commercials that aired during the 2021 Super Bowl, one particularly stood out to the viewers: Oatly’s quirky low-production ad. It featured the brand’s CEO sitting smack dab in the middle of an oat field, playing his keyboard and singing about oat milk:
Why this ad works:
This 30-second commercial was a huge conversation starter. Viewers around the world quickly went to social media to express everything from confusion to curiosity to laughter. Oatly cashed in on the hype by creating a limited edition t-shirt that read “I totally hated that Oatly commercial,” which quickly sold out.
The ad’s modesty and (let’s be honest) strangeness made it memorable to Super Bowl viewers. The ad perfectly matches Oatly’s eccentric brand voice. Oatly didn’t need to spend money on talent scouting or a huge camera crew. Instead, the brand used its own talent and shot the video on one camera in just a few takes.
Old Milwaukee: Will Ferrell in Slo-Mo
In 2012, Old Milwaukee hit the jackpot of Super Bowl commercials. The beer brand paid only $3,000 to air their 30-second Super Bowl ad on two small town TV stations in Nebraska, but the ad went viral on social media.
Why? For one, famous actor Will Ferrell starred in it. He agreed to do it for free because he was such a big fan of the brand. Also, the ad wasn’t what anybody expected. If you haven’t seen it yet, we bet you can’t guess what happens.
Spoiler: Will Ferrell walks through a field in slow motion. Near the end, he stops, catches a can of Old Milwaukee, and begins to say the brand’s name — but then the commercial cuts out. After such a dramatic build-up, the cut-off moment got plenty of laughs and perhaps some confused looks.
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Why this ad works:
It’s likely that only a few thousand viewers saw the commercial live, but Old Milwaukee understood the power of going viral. Sure enough, the video received more than 1 million views on YouTube within a week of airing.
Another thing that made this ad so effective is that it remained authentic to the brand and its customers. Folks who buy Old Milwaukee are looking for an inexpensive and no-frills beer, so a flashy Super Bowl ad probably wouldn’t appeal to them as much.
LifeMinders: The “worst” commercial
Gather around, folks. We’ve got an interesting story about one of the first low-production ads to have ever graced the screen during the big game.
In 2000, an email management startup called LifeMinders bought a small amount of Super Bowl ad time. There was a problem, though. The company spent almost all its budget on the ad slot itself, and only had $5,000 left to produce the commercial.
LifeMinders also waited to engage its ad agency until the game was just 3 weeks away. The agency was understandably taken aback by the budget and turnaround time and promptly quit, leaving the company on its own to produce the commercial.
With their backs against the wall, the folks at LifeMinders hired three freelancers to produce what many called the worst commercial in Super Bowl history:
But guess what? This commercial was a massive success. Sandwiched between ritzy ads by big brands, the commercial was so strange that it made viewers stop what they were doing and try to figure out what on Earth they were watching.
Why this ad works:
Tons of the viewers who watched the commercial took action. More than 700,000 new customers signed up for LifeMinders’s email service in the following week.
Coinbase: The QR code
The 2022 Coinbase Super Bowl commercial was so rudimentary that you could recreate it at little to no cost. It was just a black background with a QR code floating across the screen — reminiscent of the old Windows screensaver — for a full minute:
Why this ad works:
The QR code ad led viewers to a Coinbase landing page, where they could sign up for an account and redeem $15 in Bitcoin. The landing page got 20 million hits within only one minute of the ad airing, and it garnered so many sign-ups that the company’s stock price went up 4%.
Key takeaways for your low-budget videos
Although the commercials we highlighted are quite different from each other, there are some consistent themes and key takeaways to consider when creating marketing videos on a budget.
The masterminds behind these commercials used minimal production as a way to stand out from the crowd. They surprised the audience by delivering something unexpected — Super Bowl ads that weren’t glossy or over the top. You might not be be creating Super Bowl ads, but you can look for similar trends in videos made by competitors in your field. If you find any, figure out a way to break out of what’s expected and present something fresh.
Need more inspiration? Check out our One, Ten, One Hundred experiment and learn how you can make a huge impact with the right creative approach, regardless of your budget. Once you get your creative juices flowing, you have what it takes to come up with something amazing!