Los Angeles will host Super Bowl LV in 2021, the NFL announced on Tuesday.
The league also announced that Super Bowl LIII will take place at Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium in 2019, with South Florida playing host the following year.
Tampa Bay and New Orleans were also under consideration at the spring meeting of NFL owners, where the locations were decided.
The 2021 game will mark the first time that Los Angeles has hosted the Super Bowl since the 1993 contest between the Dallas Cowboys and the Buffalo Bills at the Rose Bowl Stadium in Pasadena.
The league recently allowed the Rams to move to L.A. from St. Louis, ending a two-decade period in which the nation’s second-biggest city did not have a pro football team.
Super Bowl LV will be held at the recently announced $1.86 billion stadium in Inglewood, which is scheduled to open in 2019.
Super Bowl LI and LII had previously been set for Houston and Minneapolis, respectively.
The Next 5 @SuperBowl Locations:#SB51: Houston#SB52: Minnesota#SB53: Atlanta#SB54: South Florida#SB55: Los Angeles #SBSelection
— NFL (@NFL) May 24, 2016