
Live Chicago Bulls 2027 NBA Finals odds, offseason roster markets, and 2026 NBA Draft positioning tracked across the prediction markets covered by Prediction Genius.
| Team | W-L |
|---|
| GB |
|---|
Pistons | 60-22 | — |
Cavaliers | 52-30 | 8 |
Bucks | 32-50 | 28 |
Bulls | 31-51 | 29 |
Pacers | 19-63 | 41 |
The Chicago Bulls are one of the most recognizable franchises in NBA prediction markets, a legacy of the six-title Jordan dynasty that still anchors how traders read the name. The 2025-26 season is over, and it was a hard one: Chicago finished 31-51 as of June 4, 2026, twelfth in the Eastern Conference and outside the play-in entirely. With the Bulls eliminated, the live forward market is the 2027 NBA Finals Champion contract, where the franchise prices among the longest longshots on the board, the market's honest read of a roster in a rebuild rather than contention. The durable swing factor now is the offseason itself: the 2026 NBA Draft, cap decisions, and whether the front office commits to a teardown. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above.
With the 2025-26 season finished, the Bulls' only live championship contract is the 2027 NBA Finals Champion market, and it slots them firmly in longshot territory near the bottom of the board. That placement is the market's structural verdict, not a fluke: a 31-51 team that missed the play-in does not get priced as a contender, and the gap between Chicago and the franchises traders treat as the title tier is wide. The favorites on the 2027 board are the teams that reached the current Finals and the deep-roster contenders, not a club entering a rebuild. For exact cents, the live board above carries the number; the durable read is that the Bulls trade as a rebuild story whose price will only move on roster transformation, not on hope.
The Eastern Conference is where the Bulls have to climb back, and the 2025-26 finish established how far that climb is. Chicago landed twelfth in the East as of June 4, 2026, well behind the play-in cutoff, with a point differential underwater on the season. The conference's durable structure works against a quick fix: the East's top tier is stocked with established cores, and the middle is crowded with younger teams ahead of Chicago on the curve. The market prices the Bulls on roster trajectory now, not recent results, which is why the offseason carries more weight than any single game did. The race back to relevance runs through the draft and the trade market, not through the standings the team just posted.
The Bulls draw trading interest for reasons that outlast any given season. Chicago is a top-five media market, the franchise's brand is global, and the Jordan-era history gives every Bulls contract narrative gravity that smaller-market rebuilds never get. That structural pull is why even a longshot title contract sees a book. The real swing factors this summer are concrete and dated: the 2026 NBA Draft is the first catalyst, where positioning matters for a team picking high, followed by free agency and the question of whether the front office trades veterans for picks. Roster construction, not last season's record, is what moves the price from here. The live board above shows where each contract sits today.
The most actively watched Bulls-adjacent market this offseason is the 2026 NBA Draft, where AJ Dybantsa leads the field as the favorite to go number one. Draft position is the clearest lever a rebuilding team has, and the Bulls' lottery standing makes their pick a real input into the 2027 outlook. Beyond the draft, the offseason carries roster-movement contracts, including speculative markets like whether a marquee veteran lands in Chicago next season, which trade as low-probability narrative bets rather than serious projections. These are the markets to watch while the championship board stays quiet for the Bulls.
The Bulls own six NBA championships, all won during the Michael Jordan dynasty across two three-peats in 1991-1993 and 1996-1998. That history is why the franchise commands the brand weight it does, and why a rebuild season draws more attention than a comparable record elsewhere would. The drought now stretches nearly three decades, and the market reflects it plainly: a storied name does not buy a contender's price. The 2025-26 finish at 31-51 confirmed the rebuild, and the current board treats the Bulls as a franchise rebuilding its way back toward the standard those six banners set.
As of June 4, 2026, the Chicago Bulls trade at roughly 0c (priced near zero) on the 2027 NBA Finals Champion market on Polymarket, among the longest longshots on the board after a 31-51 season. The San Antonio Spurs lead that market. Check the live board above for the latest price.
The Bulls' live 2027 NBA Finals contract currently trades on Polymarket, with no Kalshi market on that specific futures line as of June 4, 2026. As more platforms add NBA futures, the comparison view above aggregates them. Deeper books tend to form around the league-wide championship and draft markets.
Coverage includes the 2027 NBA Finals Champion futures, the 2026 NBA Draft market (where AJ Dybantsa is favored to go first), Eastern Conference futures, and offseason roster-movement contracts. Player and award markets appear when the Bulls' roster supports them.
The Bulls last won the NBA title in 1998, the final championship of the Michael Jordan dynasty. Chicago has six championships total, won across the 1991-1993 and 1996-1998 three-peats. The franchise has not returned to the Finals since.
Roster construction is the durable driver. After a 31-51 season and a missed play-in, the Bulls trade as a rebuild, and their price will move on the 2026 NBA Draft and offseason roster decisions rather than on the standings, which is why the title contract sits near zero.