Live NFL Super Bowl odds, division race markets, MVP and award futures, and weekly player props tracked across prediction markets.
The National Football League trades across hundreds of active prediction markets, anchored by Super Bowl futures that consistently carry the most volume on the board as of June 5, 2026. Coverage spans all 32 franchises, from the Chiefs, Eagles, and 49ers at the contender tier to rebuilding clubs like the Panthers, Titans, and Browns, with markets on every division title, conference championship, and the season MVP, Coach of the Year, and Rookie of the Year races. The football board is structured around a small contender group the market revisits each week, while division and wild-card races reprice on results and injuries. The live board above ranks the current top markets and movers, and the trade deadline and draft windows are the league's largest forward catalysts for futures repricing.
The Super Bowl futures are the deepest market the NFL anchors, resolving on a single champion crowned in February and structured around a contender tier the market revisits all season. Roster strength, quarterback play, conference path, and franchise stature durably weight the board far more than any single Sunday result. The perennial contender set the market prices near the top includes the Kansas City Chiefs, Philadelphia Eagles, San Francisco 49ers, Buffalo Bills, Baltimore Ravens, and Detroit Lions, with that group shifting as injuries and form turn over through the season. Conference-winner futures for the AFC and NFC sit one rung below the Super Bowl line and trade as their own contracts, giving traders a path to fade or back a team's route to the title game without taking the full championship price. Reference the live board above for the current favorites and exact cents on each platform.
The NFL splits into eight divisions across the AFC and NFC, and each division-winner market trades as a self-contained race that reprices weekly on results, tiebreakers, and head-to-head outcomes. The structural rivalries that shape these markets are durable: the AFC West runs through the Chiefs, Chargers, Broncos, and Raiders, the AFC North pits the Ravens, Steelers, Bengals, and Browns in one of the league's most physical groupings, and the NFC East keeps the Eagles, Cowboys, Commanders, and Giants in a chase that swings on a handful of divisional games. Where a roster looks stronger than its record, the division market often prices the gap before the standings catch up, the kind of value sharp money hunts early. Point to the board above for the current division prices.
The NFL anchors a full slate of individual award markets that draw steady volume alongside the team futures. The MVP race is the headline, historically a quarterback market that the field revisits as passing production and team record move, with names like Patrick Mahomes, Josh Allen, Lamar Jackson, and Jalen Hurts recurring near the top of these boards. Beyond MVP, the league carries Offensive and Defensive Player of the Year, Coach of the Year, and the Offensive and Defensive Rookie of the Year races, each resolving on end-of-season voting. These award markets structurally draw volume because they run the full season and reprice on weekly narrative shifts. Reference the live board above for current award prices.
Per-game and season-long player props are among the highest-volume NFL categories, turning over fastest because a new full slate opens every week. The board covers passing yards and touchdowns, rushing and receiving yard lines, total touchdowns, and milestone season totals across quarterbacks, running backs, and wide receivers league-wide. Season-long award-adjacent props, like passing-yard and sack leaders, trade alongside the per-game lines and stay live for months. Props draw heavy volume because they let traders price a single player's output independent of the game result, and they refresh on injury reports and depth-chart moves through the week. The live board carries the current lines.
Prediction Genius covers NFL Super Bowl and conference-championship futures, all eight division-winner races across the AFC and NFC, the MVP, Coach of the Year, and Rookie of the Year award markets, and weekly per-game and season-long player props spanning all 32 franchises.
Super Bowl championship futures structurally carry the most NFL volume, followed by conference-winner futures and the most-traded weekly quarterback and skill-position player props. The live board above ranks the current leaders rather than this answer naming today's top contract.
Each NFL market is a binary contract that settles at 100 cents if the outcome happens and zero if it does not, so a price reads directly as an implied probability. A Super Bowl contract trading at 20 cents implies a 20 percent chance that team wins the title.
As of June 5, 2026, the 2026 Super Bowl championship futures are the biggest NFL market by volume on the board, with the contender tier led by clubs such as the Chiefs, Eagles, and 49ers. Check the live board above for the current favorite and exact cents.
Prices for the same NFL outcome can differ across platforms, with one venue often carrying a deeper order book on Super Bowl futures and another posting tighter spreads on weekly props. Prediction Genius aggregates the prices so traders can compare the implied probabilities side by side.