
Live Baltimore Ravens 2026 Super Bowl odds, AFC North race, and player-movement markets tracked across the prediction markets followed by Prediction Genius.
The Baltimore Ravens are one of the most actively traded teams in NFL prediction markets, a function of a franchise the board treats as a perennial AFC contender built around a dual-threat quarterback and a defense-first identity. Across roughly a dozen active contracts, the 2026-27 Super Bowl and AFC Championship futures carry the most weight, and traders consistently price Baltimore inside the conference's contender tier rather than the long-shot pack. As of June 4, 2026, with the NFL in its offseason and no live games on the board, prices reflect roster construction and projected ceiling more than recent results. The durable swing factor on Baltimore's number is the health and form of Lamar Jackson behind a defense that anchors the team's market value. Exact cents for every contract sit on the live board above; the analysis below covers what those numbers mean.
The board slots the Baltimore Ravens firmly in the AFC contender tier on the 2026-27 Super Bowl futures, the deepest market on the page by volume. That placement is structural, not sentimental. A roster headlined by Lamar Jackson and a top-tier defense is the kind of profile prediction markets reward with a championship-tier price, and Baltimore's AFC Championship contract trades close to the conference favorites rather than the field. The gap between the Ravens' Super Bowl number and their AFC Championship number is the read traders care about most: it isolates how much of the price is winning the conference versus winning it all. The durable competitive set the market treats as Baltimore's tier includes the Buffalo Bills and Kansas City Chiefs, the two franchises that have repeatedly stood between the Ravens and a title. For the live championship price, the board above carries the current cents.
The AFC North is one of the most physical divisions in football, and the market prices it as a genuine four-way fight rather than a coronation. The Ravens, Cincinnati Bengals, Pittsburgh Steelers, and Cleveland Browns all carry credible division equity, which keeps the AFC North division contract competitive even when one team holds the favorite line. The board currently treats Baltimore as the division favorite, a reflection of roster strength and quarterback play rather than a clean projection off a finished season. That gap between roster-based pricing and on-field results is exactly what makes the division market move once games resume. Head-to-head series against Pittsburgh and Cincinnati, plus the schedule structure of a divisional grind, will drive the AFC North race far more than any single offseason headline.
Baltimore draws heavy trading volume because the franchise combines a marquee quarterback with championship-tier expectations, the exact narrative gravity that keeps a futures market liquid. The biggest durable swing factor on the price is Lamar Jackson: his availability and form move the Ravens' Super Bowl and AFC Championship numbers more than any other input, because the offense's ceiling is built around him. The defense provides the floor, which is why the market keeps Baltimore in the contender band even in a quiet offseason. Forward catalysts that will reprice the board include the opening of the 2026 NFL season in September 2026, in-season injury news, and the trade-deadline window. Several player-movement contracts also trade on the page, asking whether specific free agents land in Baltimore. For where the price sits today, defer to the live board above.
Beyond the team futures, the Baltimore Ravens anchor a cluster of binary player-movement contracts that ask whether named players will suit up for the franchise next season. These markets cover prospective additions such as George Pickens, Brandon Aiyuk, Joey Bosa, and David Njoku, and they trade because roster speculation around a contender draws attention even in the offseason. The volume on these contracts is thinner than the championship and division futures, but they capture how the market handicaps Baltimore's roster moves in real time. As free agency and trade activity unfold, these resolution-driven markets reprice quickly. Current prices for each player contract are shown on the live board above.
The Baltimore Ravens have won two Super Bowls, Super Bowl XXXV following the 2000 season and Super Bowl XLVII following the 2012 season, both built on dominant defenses. Founded in 1996, the franchise has spent most of its history as a model of defensive identity and quarterback-driven contention, a profile that explains why the market consistently prices Baltimore in the championship tier. Two titles in roughly three decades, paired with a Lamar Jackson era that has produced multiple MVP-caliber campaigns, establish the Ravens as a franchise the board expects to contend rather than rebuild. That history is why a quiet offseason still leaves Baltimore priced as a Super Bowl threat rather than a long shot.
As of June 4, 2026, the Baltimore Ravens trade in the AFC contender tier on the 2026-27 Super Bowl futures, with their AFC Championship contract priced at 13c on Kalshi, just behind the Buffalo Bills at 14c. The live board above carries the exact Super Bowl cents.
Ravens futures trade across the major prediction markets tracked by Prediction Genius, with the deepest championship books and tightest spreads on the highest-volume venues. The AFC North division contract is quoted on both Kalshi and Polymarket, letting traders compare implied probability and hunt for value between platforms.
Prediction Genius covers Ravens 2026-27 Super Bowl and AFC Championship futures, the AFC North division market, NFL playoff participation, and a set of binary player-movement contracts asking whether free agents land in Baltimore. Game-level markets are added once the regular season begins.
The Baltimore Ravens last won the Super Bowl after the 2012 season, beating the San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl XLVII. It was the franchise's second title, following Super Bowl XXXV after the 2000 season. Both championships were anchored by elite defenses.
The single biggest durable driver is Lamar Jackson's health and form. The offense's ceiling is built around him, so his availability moves the Ravens' Super Bowl and AFC Championship numbers more than any other input, with the defense providing the floor that keeps Baltimore in the contender tier.