
Live Miami Dolphins 2026-27 Super Bowl odds, AFC East race, AFC Championship futures, and offseason roster markets tracked across prediction markets.
The Miami Dolphins are an actively traded team in NFL prediction markets, where their contracts sit in the longshot tier of a wide-open 2026-27 futures board. Across nine active markets, the Super Bowl Champion future carries the most volume, but the Dolphins price as an outsider rather than a contender, a read shaped by a 7-10 finish to the prior season and a points differential of minus-77. In the AFC East they trade well behind the Buffalo Bills, the durable favorite in that division. With no regular-season games on the board in the June offseason, the market is driven by roster construction, free-agency churn, and the binary player contracts that ask whether names like David Njoku, Maxx Crosby, and George Pickens end up in Miami. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above; the analysis below covers what those numbers mean.
The Super Bowl Champion 2026-27 future is the highest-volume Dolphins-adjacent market on the board, but Miami is not among the names the market treats as the title tier. That group is led by clubs like the Los Angeles Rams and Buffalo Bills, the franchises traders price near the top of the field. The Dolphins instead sit in the longshot band, a structural read rooted in a losing prior season and a roster the market does not yet view as built to contend. The gap between the AFC Championship future and the Super Bowl future tells traders the same story from two angles: even reaching the conference title game is priced as an uphill climb. For the exact cents on where Miami slots today, the live board above carries the current number.
The AFC East is the most direct Miami market, and it is a division the market reads as Buffalo's to lose. The Bills are the durable favorite, priced as the class of the grouping, while the Dolphins, New England Patriots, and New York Jets compete for the contracts behind them. The Dolphins trade as a clear underdog in that race, a position the market holds because of on-field results rather than name value. The durable swing factor here is whether Miami's roster moves close the talent gap with Buffalo over the offseason. As of June 4, 2026, the Dolphins are coming off a 7-10 season and a 10th-place conference standing, the kind of slow-moving record that anchors the underdog pricing until new results arrive.
In the June offseason there are no weekly game lines, so Dolphins volume concentrates in two places: the season-long futures (Super Bowl, AFC Championship, AFC East) and a cluster of binary roster markets. Those roster contracts ask whether specific players, David Njoku, Maxx Crosby, George Pickens, Joey Bosa, and Brandon Aiyuk, land in Miami for 2026-27, and they trade on free-agency and trade speculation rather than results. The durable driver of the futures price is roster construction: the market will re-rate the Dolphins as the depth chart firms up through training camp. The forward catalysts are the offseason calendar itself, with the price most sensitive to signings, the schedule release, and camp reports. The live board above shows where each contract sits today.
Miami anchors a set of binary roster markets that are unusual for the offseason: rather than in-game player props, they ask which players will be on the team. The board carries contracts on David Njoku, Maxx Crosby, George Pickens, Joey Bosa, and Brandon Aiyuk, each resolving Yes or No on whether the player suits up for the Dolphins in 2026-27. These trade on transaction speculation, and most currently lean No, reflecting a market that does not yet expect Miami to land the bigger names. The structural reason these markets exist is the offseason vacuum: with no games to price, attention shifts to roster building. Current prices for each player sit on the board above.
The Miami Dolphins have won two Super Bowls, both in the early 1970s (Super Bowl VII following the 1972 season and Super Bowl VIII following 1973). The 1972 team remains the only club in NFL history to finish a season perfect, going 17-0, a distinction that defines the franchise's place in the sport even five decades later. That championship history is now distant, and the market weights the current roster on recent results, not legacy. Coming off a 7-10 campaign, the Dolphins enter 2026-27 priced as a team rebuilding toward relevance rather than defending a contention window, which is why their futures sit in the longshot tier despite a storied past.
As of June 4, 2026, the Dolphins trade around 3c to win the AFC East 2026 (roughly 4c on Kalshi, 2c on Polymarket), well behind the Buffalo Bills near 58c. On the 2026-27 Super Bowl Champion future they sit in the longshot tier, with the Los Angeles Rams the board favorite near 16c.
Dolphins futures trade on multiple prediction market platforms, with the AFC East division contract showing a small spread between exchanges (near 4c on Kalshi and 2c on Polymarket as of June 4, 2026). The highest-volume Super Bowl future carries the deepest book, while roster and division markets trade thinner.
Coverage includes the 2026-27 Super Bowl Champion future, the AFC Championship future, the AFC East division winner, NFL playoff participation, and a set of binary roster markets on players such as David Njoku, Maxx Crosby, George Pickens, Joey Bosa, and Brandon Aiyuk.
The Dolphins last won the Super Bowl following the 1973 season (Super Bowl VIII), their second straight title after Super Bowl VII. Their 1972 team went 17-0, still the only perfect season in NFL history. Miami has not won a championship since.
Roster construction is the biggest durable driver. The market prices Miami as a longshot largely because of recent results, including a 7-10 prior season and a minus-77 point differential, and will re-rate the futures as offseason signings and the depth chart firm up through training camp.