Live basketball odds across the NBA and twelve international leagues, championship futures, MVP races, and player props tracked across prediction markets.
Basketball trades across hundreds of active prediction markets, with combined volume reaching into the eight figures as of June 5, 2026 and championship futures consistently carrying the most weight on the board. Coverage spans the NBA alongside twelve international and domestic pro leagues, from EuroLeague and Spain's ACB to China's CBA, Japan's B.League, and South Korea's KBL. The market structure breaks into four durable categories: title futures, conference and division races, MVP and major awards, and per-game player props. The live board above ranks the current top markets and movers; the NBA Finals futures anchor the season, with the league's perennial contenders such as the Celtics, Nuggets, and Thunder the franchises traders most often price near the top.
The NBA is the deepest basketball market by a wide margin, covering all 30 franchises across title, conference, division, MVP, and player-prop contracts. Around it sits a dozen international leagues that draw their own steady volume: EuroLeague, the continent's premier club competition; Spain's Liga ACB; Italy's Serie A; France's LNB Élite; Germany's BBL; Turkey's BSL; and the multinational ABA League and VTB United League. Asia adds China's CBA, Japan's B.League, and South Korea's KBL, with the ISL rounding out the coverage set. Each league anchors its own champion futures and, where liquidity supports it, MVP and player markets. The NBA carries the bulk of volume, but EuroLeague and the major domestic European leagues hold steady books through their playoff windows, giving the basketball board year-round depth as overlapping calendars hand the spotlight from one competition to the next.
The premier basketball futures resolve on title outcomes: the NBA Finals for the top American league, the EuroLeague Final Four for Europe, and each domestic league's championship series. These markets price a contender tier the board revisits all season, reshuffling as rosters, injuries, and seeding shift. In the NBA the durable competitive set runs through franchises like the Boston Celtics, Denver Nuggets, Oklahoma City Thunder, and New York Knicks, the names traders most often weight near the top of the board. EuroLeague concentrates its title odds among repeat finalists such as Real Madrid, Olympiacos, and Panathinaikos. Championship futures draw the most volume because they run the longest, absorb the most information, and offer the clearest binary payout. The live board above carries the current favorites and exact cents on each contract; the structure of the field, a small contender cluster trailed by a long tail of longshots, holds across seasons even as the specific prices move.
Basketball volume tracks the calendar. The NBA's October-to-June arc, the February trade deadline, and the playoff run each pull liquidity into title and series futures, while EuroLeague and the European domestic leagues peak through their spring playoff windows. Injury news is the sharpest catalyst: a star sidelined can reprice a title contender within hours, and sharp money tends to move ahead of confirmation. The draft and free-agency periods reshape future-season odds, and MVP and award markets swell as the race tightens into the final months. Off the championship board, player-prop volume concentrates on marquee national-TV games and playoff series, where pricing is densest and lines move fastest. Across all of these, the value tends to surface when a roster change or schedule quirk lags the consensus number, the spot the board's movers most often flag.
Coverage spans the NBA plus twelve international and domestic pro leagues, including EuroLeague, Spain's ACB, China's CBA, Japan's B.League, and South Korea's KBL. Market categories run from championship futures to conference and division races, MVP and major awards, and per-game player props across all 13 leagues.
Championship futures carry the most volume, led by NBA Finals and conference odds, followed by the EuroLeague Final Four and each domestic league's title series. MVP markets and marquee-game player props rank next. The live board above shows the current leader rather than a fixed top contract.
Each market is a binary contract that resolves yes or no on an outcome, such as a team winning the title or a player taking MVP. Prices trade between roughly 1c and 99c, and a contract's cents map directly to the market's implied probability of that outcome.
As of June 5, 2026, the NBA championship futures carry the most volume on the basketball board, with the league's title contenders priced near the top. The live board above shows the current favorite and exact cents, which move as rosters, injuries, and playoff seeding shift.
Liquidity and pricing vary by venue: one platform may carry a deeper book on NBA futures while another quotes tighter spreads on international leagues. Comparing the same contract across platforms surfaces small price gaps, and aggregated pricing shows where the sharpest line sits at any moment.