
Live Indianapolis Colts Super Bowl futures, AFC South division odds, and roster markets tracked across the platforms aggregated by Prediction Genius.
The Indianapolis Colts are one of the steadily traded AFC South teams in NFL prediction markets, a function of a franchise with two Lombardi Trophies and a long history of contention. In June, the offseason board is futures-heavy: the 2026 Super Bowl and AFC Championship contracts carry the most volume, alongside an AFC South division market and a cluster of roster props. The board consistently slots the Colts well outside the championship tier and as a middle-of-the-pack name in their own division, where the Houston Texans sit as the structural favorite. The durable swing factor on the Colts price is quarterback stability and the offseason roster build under head coach Shane Steichen, not any single result. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above; the analysis below covers what those numbers mean.
The 2026 Super Bowl futures market carries the deepest book of any Colts contract, with tens of millions in aggregate volume across all 32 teams. The board slots Indianapolis firmly in the longshot tier, well behind the names traders treat as the championship class. The Los Angeles Rams anchor the top of the market as the structural favorite, with the Buffalo Bills leading the parallel AFC Championship contract, the more relevant tier for a Colts path that runs through the conference. What durably moves this price is roster construction at quarterback and the strength of the offseason build, not a single game. For the exact cents on the Colts Super Bowl line, see the live board above.
The AFC South is the cleanest read on the Colts board. The Houston Texans price as the division favorite, with Indianapolis, the Jacksonville Jaguars, and the Tennessee Titans trading behind them in a grouping the market treats as winnable but not owned by any one team. Indianapolis finished 8-9 in the 2025 season, missing the playoffs, and that recent on-field result colors how the division contract prices the roster heading into the new year. The race will be driven by the offseason quarterback decision and the head-to-head series inside a division that has changed hands repeatedly over the past decade, not by today's exact division price.
Colts volume is concentrated in two places: the Super Bowl and AFC Championship futures, which trade as part of league-wide markets, and a set of binary roster props asking whether specific veterans will play for Indianapolis in 2026-27. Those player contracts spike on free-agency and trade news, which is the dominant catalyst in a June offseason with no games on the board. The durable driver underneath all of it is quarterback stability, the single factor most tied to whether the franchise climbs back into the playoff conversation. Forward catalysts include the start of training camp and the regular-season opener; reference the live board for where each contract sits today.
The Colts have won two NFL championships in the Super Bowl era, Super Bowl V in January 1971 as the Baltimore Colts and Super Bowl XLI in February 2007 behind quarterback Peyton Manning. The Manning era from 1998 to 2011 defined the modern franchise, producing a decade-plus of contention and the 2006 championship run. That history is why the market still treats Indianapolis as a name with a contention ceiling rather than a permanent rebuild, even when the current roster prices as a longshot. The franchise traces back to the original Baltimore Colts before relocating to Indianapolis in 1984.
As of June 4, 2026, the Colts trade as a deep longshot in the 2026 Super Bowl futures market, well outside the contender tier led by the Los Angeles Rams near 16c. Their clearest priced market is the AFC South division contract, where Indianapolis sits around 18c behind favorite Houston. See the live board for exact cents.
Colts markets trade on both Kalshi and Polymarket, with the AFC South division contract showing close prices across the two (roughly 19c on Kalshi and 17c on Polymarket as of June 4, 2026). The Super Bowl and player-prop books are deeper on the platform with more NFL futures liquidity. Prediction Genius aggregates every platform so you compare the best line.
Coverage includes Super Bowl and AFC Championship futures, the AFC South division winner market, NFL playoff participation, and a set of binary roster props on whether specific players will suit up for Indianapolis in 2026-27. Game lines are added once the regular season begins.
The Colts last won the Super Bowl in February 2007, beating the Chicago Bears in Super Bowl XLI behind quarterback Peyton Manning. It was the second championship in franchise history, after Super Bowl V in January 1971 as the Baltimore Colts.
Quarterback stability is the single biggest durable driver. The franchise has cycled through passers since Peyton Manning's 2011 departure, and the market prices the Colts on whether the offseason build settles the position. A team that finished 8-9 in 2025 moves on roster construction, not one result.