
Live New Orleans Saints Super Bowl and NFC Championship odds, the NFC South race, and roster markets tracked across prediction markets.
| Team | W-L | GB |
|---|---|---|
Panthers | 8-9 | — |
Buccaneers | 8-9 | — |
Falcons | 8-9 | — |
Saints | 6-11 | 2 |
The New Orleans Saints are one of the more actively traded longshot franchises in NFL prediction markets, a function of a passionate market and a roster in transition rather than championship expectation. Across roughly nine active contracts, the bulk of the action sits in 2026-27 Super Bowl, NFC Championship, and NFC South division futures, where the board consistently slots the Saints well behind the conference's contender tier. As of June 4, 2026, the board reflects their 6-11 finish in the 2025-26 season with a minus-77 point differential, last in the division, and that record is the durable anchor on their futures price far more than offseason noise. The swing factor going forward is roster reconstruction, where the live board prices every contract above; the analysis below covers what those numbers mean.
The market treats the New Orleans Saints as a deep longshot in the 2026-27 Super Bowl field, not a contender. On a board led by the Los Angeles Rams near the top of the championship tier, the Saints sit far down the ladder, a placement driven by their 6-11 finish in the 2025-26 season and a roster mid-rebuild rather than any single offseason move. The structural read is straightforward: prediction markets price Super Bowl futures off projected roster strength and recent results, and the Saints offer neither a top quarterback room nor a defense that graded out as elite last season. The gap between the Saints and the named favorites is the durable signal here. For the exact championship price, see the live board above; it moves with depth-chart news but the tier placement is slow to change.
The NFC South is the most winnable path on the Saints board, which is why the division future trades far closer than the conference or Super Bowl markets. The race is structurally open: the Tampa Bay Buccaneers sit atop the division market, but no team carries a dominant favorite's price, leaving New Orleans within striking range of the top tier. After a last-place 6-11 finish in 2025-26, the market prices the Saints on projected roster strength and division parity rather than on last season's standings, which is why the division contract trades meaningfully higher than their Super Bowl number. Head-to-head divisional results and the offseason depth-chart will drive this market through training camp; the live board above carries the current division price.
Volume on the Saints is driven less by championship belief and more by roster speculation. The single largest pull right now is a cluster of player-destination markets asking whether free agents and trade candidates land in New Orleans, a reflection of a front office actively reshaping the roster this offseason. Those binary contracts, plus the division future, anchor most of the trading interest. The durable swing factor on every Saints price is roster construction: who plays quarterback, how the cap is managed, and which veterans the team adds or sheds. As of June 4, 2026, forward catalysts include the 2026 NFL Draft fallout, training camp in late July, and the September season opener. The live board above shows where each contract sits today.
The Saints anchor an unusually deep set of roster-destination markets, more than most non-contenders carry. Active contracts ask whether David Njoku, Maxx Crosby, George Pickens, Joey Bosa, and Brandon Aiyuk suit up for New Orleans, each trading as a speculative "will he sign" binary rather than a performance prop. These markets exist because the Saints are seen as an aggressive offseason buyer reshaping a roster that underdelivered, and the volume on the Njoku contract in particular shows traders take the team's pursuit of names seriously. The board above carries the live price on each destination market; the durable read is that New Orleans is treated as a team in acquisition mode.
The New Orleans Saints have won one Super Bowl, Super Bowl XLIV following the 2009 season, the franchise-defining title behind Drew Brees and Sean Payton. Founded in 1967, the Saints spent decades as one of the league's most snakebitten franchises before the 2009 run rewrote that history. The years since have included multiple playoff appearances but also stretches of cap-driven roster churn, and the 6-11 finish in 2025-26 marked the back end of that cycle. That history matters to the market because it frames the Saints as a franchise capable of a fast turnaround but currently priced as a rebuild, which is exactly why the division future trades so far above the Super Bowl number.
As of June 4, 2026, the New Orleans Saints trade as a deep longshot for the 2026-27 Super Bowl, well behind the Los Angeles Rams near 16.5c at the top of the board. Their NFC Championship contract trades around 2c on both Kalshi and Polymarket. See the live board above for the latest price.
Saints futures trade on both Kalshi and Polymarket, with the NFC South division market the most actively priced. As of June 4, 2026, that division contract sits near 35c on Kalshi and 27c on Polymarket, a wider gap than the tighter NFC Championship market. Prices converge as more platforms list the same contracts.
Coverage includes 2026-27 Super Bowl and NFC Championship futures, the NFC South division winner market, NFL playoff participation, and a set of player-destination contracts for free agents and trade candidates such as David Njoku and George Pickens. All trade across major platforms.
The New Orleans Saints won their only Super Bowl in Super Bowl XLIV following the 2009 season, defeating the Indianapolis Colts behind quarterback Drew Brees and head coach Sean Payton. It remains the franchise's lone championship since its founding in 1967.
Roster construction is the durable driver. After a 6-11 finish in 2025-26 with a minus-77 point differential, the market prices the Saints as a rebuild, so quarterback decisions, cap management, and free-agent signings move every contract more than any single game result.