
Live Dallas Cowboys Super Bowl odds, NFC East race, and roster and player-availability markets tracked across the platforms covered by Prediction Genius.
| Team | W-L | GB |
|---|---|---|
Eagles | 11-6 | — |
Cowboys | 7-9 | 3.5 |
Commanders | 5-12 | 6 |
Giants | 4-13 | 7 |
The Dallas Cowboys are one of the most heavily traded teams in NFL prediction markets, a function of America's Team carrying the largest national following and the highest valuation in the league. Across roughly a dozen active contracts, the 2026-27 Super Bowl futures hold by far the most volume, and the board consistently treats the Cowboys as a longshot rather than a title-tier contender. The franchise closed the prior campaign 7-9-1 as of June 4, 2026, missing the playoffs, and the durable swing factor on the price is roster construction at quarterback and along both lines 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.
The Super Bowl futures market is where Cowboys volume concentrates, and the board slots Dallas well outside the championship tier. That gap is structural. Despite the brand and the spending, the market reads the roster as a wild-card-or-bubble team rather than a Lombardi favorite, and the Super Bowl price sits a long way behind the contenders the board treats as the real field. The pricing relationship between the conference contract and the title contract tells the story: the NFC Championship number runs meaningfully higher than the Super Bowl number, the standard discount that says traders see a path through the conference as more plausible than a path all the way through it. The Los Angeles Rams sit atop both the NFC and overall Super Bowl boards as the favorite, the franchise the market currently treats as the bar. For where Dallas prices today, read the live board above.
The NFC East is the most competitive structural setting on the Cowboys board. The Philadelphia Eagles are the division favorite, with Dallas, the Washington Commanders, and the New York Giants filling out a four-way field that historically swings on head-to-head series. The division contract prices Dallas as a live underdog rather than a frontrunner, which reflects the read that this is a team graded more on roster questions than on settled results in an offseason window. The Cowboys finished last season behind the pace in the NFC East as of June 4, 2026, and the division race over the coming season will hinge on the twice-yearly meetings with Philadelphia and on whether the offense holds up against divisional defenses. The live NFC East number sits on the board above.
The Cowboys trade heavily for reasons that do not move with the cents: a national fan base, the league's most valuable franchise tag, and a narrative gravity no other NFL team matches. That attention shows up as deep books and frequent action even in June, deep in the offseason. The durable swing factors on the price are roster construction, quarterback reliability, and the health of the offensive line that protects the franchise's most important investment. Forward catalysts run through the offseason calendar: free-agency and trade movement, training camp in late July, and the regular-season opener in September that turns futures into priced-in results. The board reflects where that stands today; check the live odds above for the current number.
Beyond the team futures, the Cowboys anchor a cluster of player-availability contracts that ask whether specific names will suit up for Dallas, including markets on George Pickens, Maxx Crosby, David Njoku, and Brandon Aiyuk. These trade because roster moves around a marquee franchise draw outsized speculation, and the volume tends to spike around free agency and the trade deadline. The contracts resolve on whether the player appears for the Cowboys over the covered window rather than on any single stat line. For the current read on each name, the live board above carries the prices.
The Cowboys have won five Super Bowls, tied for the third-most in NFL history, with the most recent coming in the 1995 season. That title drought, now three decades long for one of the sport's flagship franchises, is the single most heavily traded piece of Cowboys narrative and a constant frame for how the market weighs each new roster. A franchise built on top-of-league valuation and championship expectation has not reached a Super Bowl since, and that history is why the board demands more than spending and attention before it will price Dallas into the title tier.
As of June 4, 2026, the Dallas Cowboys trade around 3.5c to win the 2026-27 Super Bowl, roughly 4c on Kalshi and 3c on Polymarket. That prices them as a clear longshot, well behind the Los Angeles Rams near 16.5c. See the live board above for the latest.
Cowboys futures trade on multiple prediction-market platforms, with the deepest Super Bowl book and the closest cross-platform pricing on the highest-volume contracts. Prices sit within a cent or two of each other most days, with brief gaps that create short-lived value when one platform lags the move.
Prediction Genius tracks Cowboys Super Bowl and NFC Championship futures, the NFC East division contract, NFL playoff participation, weekly game markets, and a set of player-availability markets on names like George Pickens, Maxx Crosby, and David Njoku, all aggregated across platforms.
The Dallas Cowboys last won the Super Bowl in the 1995 season, their fifth title overall, tied for third-most in NFL history. They have not returned to a Super Bowl since, a drought of three decades that shapes how the market prices each roster.
Roster construction is the biggest durable driver, especially quarterback reliability and offensive-line health. The Cowboys carry the NFL's largest fan base and highest franchise valuation, but the market grades them on the roster, which is why a 7-9-1 prior season kept them out of the title tier.