
Live Minnesota Vikings Super Bowl futures, NFC North race, playoff participation, and roster-move markets tracked across the prediction markets covered by Prediction Genius.
The Minnesota Vikings are one of the more actively traded NFC North franchises in NFL prediction markets, a function of a market that prices every contending roster long before kickoff. With the 2026 regular season still months away as of June 4, 2026, the board is futures-heavy: Super Bowl, NFC Championship, NFC North, and playoff participation contracts carry the action, alongside a cluster of offseason roster-move markets. Minnesota finished 9-8 last season and qualified as a low playoff seed, which is exactly why the market treats them as a fringe contender rather than chalk. The durable swing factor on their price is quarterback and roster construction heading into camp, not any single offseason headline. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above; the analysis below covers what those numbers mean.
The Super Bowl 2026-27 futures market is the deepest contract the Minnesota Vikings appear in, with tens of millions in lifetime volume across roughly ten candidate teams. The board structurally slots Minnesota as a longshot rather than a championship-tier name, well behind the favorites the market currently treats as the class of the field, the Los Angeles Rams chief among them. That placement reflects a roster the market reads as good-not-great, a profile typical of a team that made the playoffs as a lower seed. The gap between Minnesota's Super Bowl price and its NFC Championship price is the tell every futures trader watches: it isolates how much of the longshot number is conference strength versus a single title-game coin flip. For the exact cents on each leg, the live board above is the source of truth.
The NFC North is one of the most competitive divisions in football, and the market prices it that way. The Detroit Lions sit as the structural favorite, with the Vikings, Green Bay Packers, and Chicago Bears all priced as live threats rather than afterthoughts. That density is why Minnesota's division number trades richer than its Super Bowl number: winning four games against three quality rivals is a far shorter path than surviving the full NFC bracket. Minnesota went 9-8 and reached the postseason as the eight seed in the prior campaign, the kind of slow-moving result that frames them as a team built to compete for the division without being the favorite. Head-to-head series against Detroit and Green Bay will move this market more than any offseason transaction.
Volume on Minnesota contracts is driven less by championship hype than by a steady stream of roster questions. The Vikings anchor an unusually large set of "will player X play for Minnesota next?" binaries, the residue of an active offseason and a fan base that trades the rumor mill. The durable swing factor on the futures price is quarterback and skill-position construction heading into training camp, with the NFC North's competitive depth amplifying every depth-chart move. Forward catalysts are calendar-driven: the close of free agency, training camp battles through the summer, and the Week 1 kickoff in September that turns futures into in-season markets. Where the price sits today is on the live board above; what moves it is roster certainty.
Beyond the futures ladder, the Vikings carry a cluster of player-availability binaries tied to high-profile names floated in trade and free-agency speculation, including markets on whether players such as Maxx Crosby, Tyreek Hill, George Pickens, and Brandon Aiyuk land in Minnesota next. These contracts trade thin relative to the Super Bowl pool but draw consistent interest because roster moves reprice the futures the moment they resolve. The market currently leans heavily toward "No" on most of them, the default read for any single speculative landing spot. Point to the live board for the current price on each name.
The Minnesota Vikings have never won a Super Bowl. The franchise, founded in 1960, reached the championship game four times in the 1970s era (Super Bowls IV, VIII, IX, and XI) and lost all four, one of the longest title droughts in the league. That history shapes how the market weights the current roster: traders price Minnesota as a perennial competitor that has repeatedly fallen short of the final step, which keeps the Super Bowl number a longshot even in seasons the team is good. A 9-8 finish and a low playoff seed last year fits that long-running pattern of contention without a championship payoff.
As of June 4, 2026, the Minnesota Vikings trade around 1 to 2 cents on the 2026-27 Super Bowl futures market (roughly 2c on Kalshi, 1c on Polymarket), pricing them as a clear longshot well behind favorites like the Los Angeles Rams. See the live board above for the latest cents.
Minnesota's futures trade on multiple prediction market platforms, with the deepest book on the headline Super Bowl and NFC contracts. Pricing across platforms typically sits within a cent or two of each other; Prediction Genius aggregates them so you can compare the implied probability side by side.
Prediction Genius covers the Vikings' Super Bowl and NFC Championship futures, the NFC North division market, 2027 playoff participation, and a set of offseason player-availability binaries on names linked to Minnesota in trade and free-agency rumors.
The Minnesota Vikings have never won a Super Bowl. The franchise reached and lost four championship games in the 1970s era (Super Bowls IV, VIII, IX, and XI), one of the longest title droughts in the NFL since its founding in 1960.
Roster construction, especially at quarterback and skill positions, is the biggest durable driver. The NFC North's competitive depth, with the Lions, Packers, and Bears all live, amplifies every depth-chart move, which is why the Vikings sit as a division-contending longshot rather than a Super Bowl favorite.