The Holiday Bowl was founded in 1978 to give the
Western Athletic Conference an automatic bowl bid after the
Fiesta Bowl, which previously had a tie-in with the conference, ended its association with the WAC following the departure of
Arizona and
Arizona State (the latter of which served as the game's host) to join the
Pacific-8 Conference in the summer of 1978, leading to the conference renaming itself as the Pacific-10. The Holiday Bowl inherited the Fiesta Bowl's former WAC ties and gave the conference's champion its automatic bid. For the first several editions, the WAC champion played an at-large team; from
1991 through
1994, the
Big Ten Conference was given the second bid, provided it had enough bowl-eligible teams. Beginning in
1995, the
Big Eight Conference replaced the Big Ten and remained tied with the bowl as the conference expanded to become the
Big 12 the following year. The WAC's automatic bid was split, with first choice given to the
Cotton Bowl Classic in
Dallas, and a team from the Pacific-10 was added as the alternate pick (meaning that, if the WAC champion played in the Cotton Bowl, a Pacific-10 team would play in the Holiday Bowl). The WAC ended its association with the Holiday Bowl after
1997, and the game became a matchup between the Big 12 and Pacific-10. From 1998 to 2009, the matchup featured the No. 2 team in the Pacific-10/
Pac-12 and the No. 3 Big 12 team, but the
Alamo Bowl outbid the Holiday Bowl to feature that matchup beginning in 2010. Holiday Bowl Executive Director Bruce Binkowski stated that average ticket prices for the Holiday Bowl would have had to be increased from $60 to $100 to match the Alamo Bowl's offer of a $3 million payout (the Holiday Bowl was only offering $2.35 million). The Pac-12 and Big 12 retained their contracts with the Holiday Bowl, however, and the 2010–2013 matchups pitted the No. 3 Pac-12 team against the No. 5 Big 12 team. Starting with the 2014 game, the Big Ten signed a six-year contract to return after a 20-year absence to the Holiday Bowl, regaining the slot that it had held from 1991 to 1994. With this agreement, the Holiday Bowl featured the No. 3 Pac-12 team and the No. 4 Big Ten team. In 2019, the bowl announced plans to host a Pac-12 team and an
Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) team during the 2020-2025 games. Through 2019, the bowl was played at
San Diego Stadium. The stadium was demolished beginning in the autumn of 2020, at which point the game was played at
Petco Park. In 2024, the bowl returned to
Mission Valley playing in
Snapdragon Stadium, built on the site of San Diego Stadium. On October 22, 2020, organizers canceled the 2020 edition of the bowl, citing complications from the
COVID-19 pandemic. The 2021 edition was called off hours before kickoff on December 28, due to COVID-19 protocol issues within the
UCLA program, and officially canceled the next morning, after organizers could not secure a replacement team to face
NC State. In May 2023, organizers of the Holiday Bowl filed a lawsuit in
San Diego County, seeking $3 million in damages from the Pac-12 and UCLA due to their withdrawal from the 2021 game. In 2025, Holiday Bowl organizers considered moving the game from San Diego to
Jeddah,
Saudi Arabia. The bowl's organizing committee met with Saudi officials in the spring of that year regarding the move and discussions about the proposal were communicated to the ACC, but the conference's athletic directors rejected it. The game itself was scheduled for January 2, 2026, still held in San Diego. It will be the first time the Holiday Bowl is played in the month of January. If the Saudi Arabia proposal had been approved, the 2025 Holiday Bowl would have been the first NCAA sanctioned bowl game held outside of North America. Sponsors of the bowl game have included in order:
SeaWorld;
Thrifty Car Rental;
Chrysler Corporation (through its
Plymouth brand);
Culligan;
Pacific Life;
Bridgepoint Education;
National University; National Funding, a San Diego–based alternative lender; San Diego County Credit Union, which formerly sponsored San Diego's other bowl game, the now-defunct
Poinsettia Bowl; and
DirecTV. In December 2025,
Trust & Will was announced as the sponsor for the January 2026 game. ==Notable games==