
Live Green Bay Packers Super Bowl odds, NFC Championship futures, NFC North race, and roster-movement markets tracked across the platforms covered by Prediction Genius.
The Green Bay Packers are one of the most consistently traded teams in NFL prediction markets, a function of a tradition-rich, community-owned franchise that the board treats as a perennial NFC contender. With nine active contracts in the June 2026 offseason, the futures dominate: Super Bowl, NFC Championship, and NFC North division markets carry the volume, since there are no weekly game lines until kickoff. Green Bay closed the prior season 9-7-1 and earned a wild-card berth, and the durable swing factor on its price is roster construction around a young quarterback and a defense the market is still pricing on projection rather than results. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above; the analysis below covers what those numbers mean.
The market slots the Green Bay Packers in the NFC's second tier of contenders, behind the conference's clear favorites rather than among them. That read is structural. Green Bay is built around a young, cost-controlled quarterback and a defense the board still prices on projection, which caps the Super Bowl number below the established powers while keeping the team firmly in the playoff conversation. The relationship between the NFC Championship contract and the Super Bowl contract is the tell traders watch: the conference price sits meaningfully above the title price, the market's way of saying it gives Green Bay a real path out of the NFC but rates the championship itself a longer shot. The durable drivers here are quarterback development and pass-rush health, not any single result. For the exact cents on each contract, the live board above is authoritative.
The NFC North is one of the league's most competitive divisions, and the board prices it that way. Green Bay, Detroit, Minnesota, and Chicago all carry live division odds, with the Lions sitting as the market's favorite and the Packers priced as a close second contender. This is a division decided by head-to-head series and schedule structure as much as by talent, which is why the market keeps the top contracts bunched rather than running away with a single chalk pick. Green Bay's 9-7-1 finish in the prior season placed it inside the playoff field but behind the division winner, and the offseason question the price is absorbing is whether the roster closes that gap. The race will move on those divisional matchups once the season opens, not on offseason noise.
Green Bay's trading volume is a product of national brand gravity. The Packers are one of the NFL's signature franchises, publicly owned and carrying a fan base that trades far beyond its market size, which keeps the futures liquid even in the dead of June. The durable swing factors on the price are quarterback play and the health of the pass rush, the two inputs the market treats as decisive for a team built on youth and projection. The forward catalysts are the offseason calendar: training camp in late July, roster cutdowns in late August, and Week 1 in September, when the futures finally get tested against real results. As of June 4, 2026, with no game lines on the board, the market is pricing expectation alone, and the live odds above reflect where that expectation sits.
Beyond the team futures, Green Bay anchors a cluster of roster-movement contracts that ask whether specific veterans land in the building. The board carries markets on whether players such as David Njoku, Maxx Crosby, George Pickens, Joey Bosa, and Brandon Aiyuk suit up for the Packers in 2026-27, each resolving on actual roster status rather than performance. These trade because Green Bay is a perennial name in trade and free-agency speculation, and the market consensus on each leans heavily toward no, a structural reflection of how rarely any single rumored move actually closes. The board above carries the current price on each name.
The Green Bay Packers have won four Super Bowls, capturing the first two ever played (Super Bowl I and II) plus titles in Super Bowl XXXI and XLV, the most recent following the 2010 season. Counting the pre-Super Bowl era, the franchise owns 13 league championships overall, the most in NFL history. That heritage shapes how the market weights the current roster: Green Bay is treated as a franchise that expects contention, so the board rarely prices it as a longshot even in rebuilding stretches. The 9-7-1 wild-card season establishes the present-day baseline, a playoff team still short of the conference's elite, which is exactly where the futures slot it.
As of June 4, 2026, the Green Bay Packers are not among the top-ten favorites on the 2026-27 Super Bowl Champion market (the Los Angeles Rams lead near 16.5c). The Packers' NFC Championship contract trades around 8c, roughly 9c on Kalshi and 7c on Polymarket.
The Packers' futures trade on both Kalshi and Polymarket, and prices can diverge. On the NFC North market the contract recently sat near 26c on Kalshi versus 33c on Polymarket, a gap that creates cross-platform value when one book lags the other. Always check the live board for the current spread.
Coverage includes the 2026-27 Super Bowl Champion futures, the NFC Championship market, the NFC North division race, NFL playoff participation, and a set of player roster-movement binaries asking whether specific veterans join Green Bay. During the season, weekly game lines and player props are added.
The Green Bay Packers last won the Super Bowl following the 2010 season, defeating the Pittsburgh Steelers in Super Bowl XLV. It was their fourth Super Bowl title and their record 13th NFL championship overall counting the pre-Super Bowl era.
The single biggest durable driver is roster construction around a young, cost-controlled quarterback and the health of the pass rush. Because the market prices the Packers on projection more than proven results, quarterback development is the input that most moves the futures across a 9-7-1 baseline season.