
Live Detroit Lions Super Bowl and NFC Championship odds, the NFC North race, and roster-move markets tracked across the prediction markets Prediction Genius covers.
The Detroit Lions are one of the most actively traded NFC contenders in NFL prediction markets, a status earned the hard way after years as a perennial longshot. Across roughly nine active contracts the Super Bowl and NFC Championship futures carry the most volume, and the board consistently slots Detroit in the conference's second tier behind the front-runners rather than among the field. As of June 4, 2026, in the heart of the NFL offseason, the durable swing factor on the price is roster construction under head coach Dan Campbell and general manager Brad Holmes, not any single result. The team also anchors a cluster of player-destination markets tied to free agency and trade rumors. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above; the analysis below covers what those numbers mean.
The Lions trade in the championship-contender band of the Super Bowl futures market, a tier the board reserves for teams traders treat as legitimate title threats without making them the chalk. That placement reflects roster quality more than recent rings, because Detroit has not reached a Super Bowl in the franchise's history. The structural tell is the gap between the Lions' Super Bowl price and their NFC Championship price: the conference number always sits higher, because winning the NFC is a necessary step toward the title and a softer ask. The Los Angeles Rams headline the NFC board as the favorite, with Detroit grouped just behind in the chasing pack. For the exact cents on each contract, the live board above carries the current snapshot.
The NFC North is one of the most competitive divisions in football, and the market reflects it: the division contract is a four-way race where Detroit prices as the favorite, narrowly ahead of the Packers, Vikings, and Bears. That is a meaningful read, because the division title is the cleanest path to a home playoff game and a January seed. The market prices Detroit on roster strength as much as on the prior season's results, which is why the division number can move on free-agency news in June even with no games on the schedule. Through a 9-8 finish as of the most recent completed season, the Lions carried a positive point differential of plus-68, the kind of underlying number that keeps the market treating them as the team to beat in the North.
Detroit's trading volume is driven by narrative gravity as much as by market size. The Lions spent decades as the league's punchline, and their rise into genuine contention is one of the most-followed stories in the sport, which pulls retail and sharp money alike into their futures. The durable swing factors on the price are roster continuity on both lines and the health of the team's offensive core under Dan Campbell. The offseason calendar supplies the catalysts: the league's free-agency window, the draft aftermath, and the cluster of player-destination contracts asking whether veterans land in Detroit. Reference the live board above for where each price sits today.
In the offseason, Detroit's player-level action runs through destination markets rather than in-game props. Active contracts ask whether free agents and trade targets such as Maxx Crosby, Joey Bosa, George Pickens, Brandon Aiyuk, and David Njoku sign with the Lions, and the board prices most of those outcomes as unlikely. These markets trade because Detroit is a destination contenders chase, and because every roster addition reprices the team's Super Bowl and division contracts. Weekly game lines and statistical props return once the season schedule arrives; the board above tracks the current destination prices.
The Lions have never won a Super Bowl, and their last NFL championship of any kind came in 1957, before the Super Bowl era began. The franchise owns four pre-merger NFL titles (1935, 1952, 1953, and 1957), a championship drought now spanning more than six decades. That history is exactly why the market's recent re-rating of Detroit into the contender tier is notable: the board is pricing the current roster on its merits, not on franchise pedigree. For a team that built its rebuild around the trenches and a culture overhaul, the structural question every futures contract is really asking is whether this version of the Lions finally clears the bar the franchise has missed since 1957.
As of June 4, 2026, the Lions sit in the NFC contender tier behind front-runner Los Angeles, whose NFC Championship contract trades near 25c. Detroit's NFC Championship price sits around 9c (10c on Kalshi, 8c on Polymarket). Check the live board above for the exact Super Bowl cents.
Detroit's futures trade on multiple platforms tracked by Prediction Genius, with the deepest books on the Super Bowl and NFC Championship contracts. As of June 4, 2026, the NFC Championship price showed a small split, near 10c on Kalshi and 8c on Polymarket. Prices and spreads vary by platform and date.
Coverage includes Super Bowl champion futures, NFC Championship and NFC North division markets, NFL playoff participation, and offseason player-destination contracts for free agents and trade targets. Weekly game lines and player props are added once the regular-season schedule is set.
The Lions have never won a Super Bowl. Their last title came in 1957, before the Super Bowl era. The franchise owns four pre-merger NFL championships, won in 1935, 1952, 1953, and 1957, a drought now stretching more than six decades.
Roster construction under head coach Dan Campbell and general manager Brad Holmes is the biggest durable driver. The Lions are priced as the NFC North favorite on roster strength, and offseason moves in free agency and the trade market reprice their futures even before any games are played.