Live MLB World Series futures, AL and NL division race markets, MVP and Cy Young odds, and player props tracked across prediction markets.
Major League Baseball trades across hundreds of active prediction markets spanning all 30 clubs, with the 2026 World Series futures consistently carrying the most volume on the board. Coverage runs from championship futures down to every team's division-winner odds, the AL and NL MVP races, Cy Young futures, pennant markets, and per-game player props. The contender tier the market revisits all season is anchored by the Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Yankees, Atlanta Braves, Houston Astros, and Philadelphia Phillies, the franchises traders most often price near the top. The live board above ranks the current top markets, movers, and exact cents on each platform. The summer trade deadline is the season's largest forward catalyst, reshaping contender odds across the league as of June 5, 2026.
The World Series futures are the league's flagship market, resolving on which of the 30 clubs wins the championship at the end of the postseason. The market durably weights roster depth, payroll, and franchise stature, which is why large-market contenders like the Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Yankees, and Philadelphia Phillies tend to anchor the top of the board while a deep-roster club like the Houston Astros or Atlanta Braves rounds out the contender tier. Pennant futures sit one rung below, splitting the field into AL and NL champions before the World Series resolves. The contender set shifts with injuries and the trade deadline far more than with any single result, so the board stays fluid through the summer. Reference the live board above for the current favorites and the exact cents on each platform.
The division markets price six separate races, three in each league, and they reward roster strength over hot streaks because a 162-game schedule smooths out variance. The perennial rivalries shape each one: the AL East pits the Yankees, Red Sox, and Rays against a contending Orioles core, while the NL West runs through the Dodgers, Padres, and Giants. Roster-strength gaps show up most clearly in the NL Central and AL Central, where the Brewers, Cubs, Cardinals, Guardians, and Tigers cluster tightly and small free-agent moves swing the implied probabilities. Division-winner odds move slower than the World Series board because they ignore postseason variance, making them a favorite of sharp money looking for value as of June 2026. Point to the board for the current division prices.
The league anchors several season-long award markets that draw steady volume independent of the standings. The AL and NL MVP races are the headliners, typically pricing a tight field of position players and the occasional two-way star, while the AL and NL Cy Young futures track the top of each league's starting rotations. Rookie of the Year markets round out the slate, rewarding traders who scout call-up timing and playing time. These award markets structurally draw volume because they resolve on individual performance that bettors can model from rate stats, and the field tightens as the season wears on. Names like Aaron Judge, Shohei Ohtani, and the league's top arms recur across these boards; point to the live board above for the current award prices.
Per-game player props are the league's highest-frequency market category, refreshing daily across the schedule. The stat categories span hits, total bases, home runs, runs batted in, and strikeouts for pitchers, with both over/under lines and milestone thresholds. Season-long prop markets layer on top, covering home run leaders, stolen base totals, and strikeout crowns. Props draw heavy volume because they price a single player's output rather than a full game, giving traders a cleaner read on implied probability and a faster settlement cycle. The depth of the prop board scales with the daily slate, so coverage peaks on full-schedule days. Reference the live board for the current lines.
Coverage spans 2026 World Series and pennant futures, AL and NL division-winner odds across all 30 teams, AL and NL MVP and Cy Young award markets, Rookie of the Year, and per-game and season-long player props tracked across prediction market platforms.
The 2026 World Series futures structurally carry the most volume, followed by pennant and division-winner markets and the premier per-game player props. Championship futures draw the deepest books because they resolve on a single season-defining outcome. Point to the live board above for the current leader.
Each market is a binary contract that settles at 100 cents if the outcome happens and zero if it does not. A World Series contract priced at 18 cents implies an 18 percent chance that team wins. Prices move with news, injuries, and trades until the market resolves.
As of June 5, 2026, the 2026 World Series futures carry the most volume on the board, with the Dodgers, Yankees, and Braves pricing near the top of the contender tier. See the live board above for the current favorite and exact cents on each platform.
World Series and division futures often show a deeper order book on one platform and tighter spreads on another, so the same contract can carry slightly different implied odds. The live board above surfaces both quotes side by side so traders can spot the better price.