
Live Carolina Panthers Super Bowl odds, NFC South race, and player movement markets tracked across the prediction markets covered by Prediction Genius.
| Team | W-L | GB |
|---|---|---|
Panthers | 8-9 | — |
Buccaneers | 8-9 | — |
Falcons | 8-9 | — |
Saints | 6-11 | 2 |
The Carolina Panthers are one of the more closely watched rebuilding teams in NFL prediction markets, a function of a young roster reorganized around quarterback Bryce Young. Across roughly ten active contracts, the 2026-27 Super Bowl and NFC Championship futures carry the most volume, and the board consistently slots Carolina as a deep longshot well outside the title tier. The franchise has never won a Super Bowl across two appearances, and the durable swing factor on its price is whether Young and head coach Dave Canales convert roster youth into wins rather than any single offseason headline. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above; the analysis below covers what those numbers mean in an NFL offseason where futures dominate the board.
The market structurally treats the Carolina Panthers as a deep longshot in the 2026-27 Super Bowl futures, the tier it reserves for teams whose roster has not yet earned contender pricing. In the offseason, that read is built almost entirely on roster construction and projection rather than results, because no games have been played. The board anchors its title tier around clubs like the Los Angeles Rams, who sit atop the same Super Bowl market, with Carolina priced far behind. The pennant-style gap between the Panthers' NFC Championship number and their Super Bowl number is wide, which tells traders the market sees a long path even to the conference title. The durable driver here is whether the Young-led offense takes a step forward, not any single news cycle. Check the live board above for the current Super Bowl line.
The NFC South is the more tradeable Carolina market in June, and it prices as a genuinely open division. The Panthers share the group with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Atlanta Falcons, and New Orleans Saints, and the board currently slots Tampa Bay as the favorite with Carolina a step behind in the contender mix. The division has no dominant franchise, which is why the gap between first and last stays compressed relative to deeper divisions. The market here prices Carolina more on roster strength and projected improvement than on settled results, a gap that exists because the offseason has no on-field data to weigh. Carolina finished 8-9 in the prior season as of June 4, 2026, fourth in the division, and the race over the year will turn on the two head-to-head series against Tampa Bay.
Most of the Panthers' market gravity in the offseason comes from player-movement contracts rather than the team's own title odds. The board carries several yes-or-no markets on whether veterans such as Joey Bosa, George Pickens, David Njoku, and Brandon Aiyuk land in Carolina, and those questions draw steady interest because the franchise is an active buyer in a rebuild. The durable swing factor on the team's season-long price is the development of Bryce Young and the coaching structure under Dave Canales. Forward catalysts include the NFL Draft aftermath, training camp in late July, and the Week 1 kickoff in September, each of which can reprice the NFC South and Super Bowl markets. Reference the live board above for where each contract sits today.
The Carolina Panthers have never won a Super Bowl. The franchise, founded in 1995, reached the title game twice and lost both, falling to New England in Super Bowl XXXVIII to close the 2003 season and to Denver in Super Bowl 50 to close the 2015 season. That zero-championship history is why the market does not extend the franchise the structural benefit it grants established winners, and the current rebuild around Bryce Young is the team's attempt to push back into the contender conversation. For a franchise with no titles in three decades, the market weights present roster construction far more heavily than any legacy premium.
As of June 4, 2026, the Carolina Panthers trade as a deep longshot in the 2026-27 Super Bowl futures, well outside the title tier the board anchors around the Los Angeles Rams near 16c. In the more active NFC South division market, Carolina prices around 22c. Check the live board above for the latest line.
The Panthers' markets trade across multiple platforms tracked by Prediction Genius, and the division contract shows real spread between books. As of June 4, 2026, the NFC South Carolina line sits near 26c on Kalshi and 19c on Polymarket, a gap that reflects thinner offseason liquidity.
Prediction Genius covers Carolina's Super Bowl and NFC Championship futures, the NFC South division market, NFL playoff participation, individual game lines, and several player-movement contracts on veterans like Joey Bosa and George Pickens.
The Carolina Panthers have never won a Super Bowl. The franchise reached the game twice, losing Super Bowl XXXVIII after the 2003 season and Super Bowl 50 after the 2015 season, and holds zero championships since its 1995 founding.
The single biggest durable driver is the development of quarterback Bryce Young under head coach Dave Canales. With zero Super Bowl titles and an 8-9 prior season, the market weights the current rebuild's roster construction over any historical premium.