
Live Denver Broncos AFC Championship odds, AFC West race, and Super Bowl futures tracked across the prediction markets aggregated by Prediction Genius.
The Denver Broncos are one of the more actively traded AFC teams in NFL prediction markets, a function of a franchise that closed the 2025 season as a top seed and now carries genuine contender pricing into the offseason. Across roughly nine active contracts, the bulk of the action sits in season-long futures: Super Bowl champion, AFC Championship, and the AFC West division title. As of June 4, 2026, in the dead period between the draft and training camp, the board consistently slots Denver inside the AFC's upper tier rather than among the favorites, with the durable swing factor on their price being roster continuity and the AFC West's depth rather than any single result. There are no weekly game lines this far ahead of kickoff. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above; the analysis below covers what those numbers mean.
The Super Bowl champion futures market is the deepest Broncos-related contract on the board, drawing tens of millions in lifetime volume across a ten-plus team field. The market does not treat Denver as the title favorite. That distinction belongs to teams like the Los Angeles Rams and Buffalo Bills, who anchor the top of the AFC and NFC pricing. Instead, the board files the Broncos into the second tier of contenders, a structural read that reflects a strong 2025 finish weighed against the uncertainty of a long offseason. Championship futures this early are priced as much on roster construction and continuity as on prior results, and the gap between Denver and the favorites narrows or widens with each free-agency and trade signal. For the exact cents, consult the live board above.
The AFC West is one of the most competitive divisions in football, and the Broncos sit in a near coin-flip with the Kansas City Chiefs for the division title. As of June 4, 2026, the two franchises are separated by roughly a point on the division board, with the Los Angeles Chargers and Las Vegas Raiders trailing. That tight pricing tells traders the market sees Denver as a legitimate threat to a Chiefs dynasty that has owned the division for most of the past decade. The AFC Championship contract, where Denver prices in the AFC's middle pack behind Buffalo, reinforces the read: this is a roster the market respects but does not yet crown. Head-to-head meetings with Kansas City will move the division price more than any other variable across the season.
Denver's market volume is concentrated in two places: the season-long futures that carry real liquidity and a cluster of binary player-acquisition markets. The Broncos closed 2025 as the AFC's top seed at 14-3, and that pedigree is what keeps the futures liquid through a quiet offseason. The durable drivers on the price are roster continuity, the health of the quarterback room, and how the AFC West arms race plays out. Forward catalysts are seasonal: free-agent signings through the summer, the start of training camp in late July, and the Week 1 kickoff in September. The live board above carries the current price; the structural picture below carries the why.
Beyond the futures, the Broncos anchor a set of binary markets asking whether specific veterans will play in Denver in 2026-27. Names in that book include David Njoku, Joey Bosa, Maxx Crosby, George Pickens, and Brandon Aiyuk. Most of these contracts price the No side as the favorite, meaning the market does not expect those players in Denver, but the speculation itself reflects the Broncos' profile as a buyer linked to high-profile names every cycle. These player markets are thin relative to the futures and move sharply on a single report. Check the board above for which acquisition rumors the market is currently taking seriously.
The Denver Broncos have won three Super Bowls, claiming back-to-back titles in Super Bowl XXXII (1997 season) and XXXIII (1998 season) behind John Elway, then a third in Super Bowl 50 (2015 season) on the strength of a historic defense. That history shapes how the market weights the current roster: this is a franchise whose business model assumes contention, and the strong 2025 campaign that produced a top seed slots cleanly into that tradition. The gap between Denver's three championships and its recent drought is exactly the tension the futures board is pricing.
As of June 4, 2026, the Broncos are not the Super Bowl favorite; the board leads with the Los Angeles Rams near 16.5c. On the AFC Championship contract, Denver trades around 9.5c blended (11c on Kalshi, 8c on Polymarket), behind Buffalo near 14c.
Denver's futures trade on both Kalshi and Polymarket, and the prices diverge slightly. On the AFC West division market as of June 4, 2026, Denver sits near 32c on Kalshi and 36c on Polymarket. Prediction Genius blends both into a single displayed price and flags the spread.
Coverage includes Super Bowl champion futures, AFC Championship, the AFC West division title, NFL playoff participation, and a set of binary player-acquisition markets. During the offseason there are no weekly game lines; those appear once the regular season begins.
The Broncos last won the Super Bowl in Super Bowl 50, following the 2015 season, behind a record-setting defense. It was the franchise's third championship, after back-to-back titles in Super Bowl XXXII and XXXIII in the late 1990s.
Roster construction and the depth of the AFC West are the durable drivers. Denver closed 2025 as the AFC's top seed at 14-3, but the market prices the division as a near coin-flip with Kansas City, so continuity and head-to-head matchups move the price most.