
Live New York Giants Super Bowl futures, NFC Championship and NFC East division odds, plus roster markets tracked across prediction markets.
| Team | W-L | GB |
|---|---|---|
Eagles | 11-6 | — |
Cowboys | 7-9 | 3.5 |
Commanders | 5-12 | 6 |
Giants | 4-13 | 7 |
The New York Giants are one of the most closely watched rebuild stories in NFL prediction markets, a function of a flagship franchise in the league's biggest media market coming off a losing season. Across roughly eleven active contracts, the 2026-27 Super Bowl and NFC Championship futures carry the most volume, and the board consistently slots the Giants in the longshot tier rather than the contender group. They finished 4-13 in 2025-26 with a points differential of minus 58, and as of June 4, 2026 the offseason board prices them as a team that needs roster proof before its number moves. The durable swing factor is quarterback and pass-rush construction, not any single result. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above; the analysis below covers what those numbers mean.
The market structurally slots the New York Giants in the longshot tier of the 2026-27 Super Bowl field, well outside the contender group that prices around the Los Angeles Rams, Philadelphia Eagles and the other perennial NFC favorites. That placement is a read on roster, not on noise. A 4-13 finish with a negative point differential gives traders little reason to price the Giants near the title chalk, and in an offseason board the number reflects projected strength rather than results. The pennant-versus-title relationship matters here: the Giants trade meaningfully higher to win the NFC than to win it all, which tells traders the market sees a path to a conference run as far more plausible than a championship. For the exact current cents, the live board above is the reference.
The NFC East is one of the most top-heavy divisions in football, and that structure drives how the Giants trade. Philadelphia anchors the division as the market favorite, with Dallas and Washington completing a grouping where New York consistently prices as the fourth name. The durable read is that this market values the Giants on roster construction rather than early results, because the division's hierarchy rarely shifts on a single September week. New York finished last in the NFC East in 2025-26, and as of June 4, 2026 the board reflects a team expected to chase rather than lead. What moves this race over the season is the head-to-head schedule against Philadelphia and Dallas, not the offseason number sitting on the board today.
The Giants draw volume for structural reasons: a large-market franchise with deep history and national narrative gravity trades heavily even in a down year. The durable swing factors on the price are quarterback play and pass-rush construction, the two roster questions traders weigh most for this team. Player-availability markets add a second layer of volume, with contracts on whether specific free agents and trade targets land in New York. Forward catalysts include the NFL training camp window opening in late July 2026 and the regular-season opener in September, both of which give the market fresh information. Where the price sits today is on the live board above; this section explains what durably pushes it.
Beyond the futures, the Giants anchor a cluster of roster-destination markets asking whether specific players will suit up in New York for the 2026-27 season. These contracts cover names like George Pickens, Maxx Crosby, Tyreek Hill and Joey Bosa, and they trade because roster construction is the single biggest lever on the Giants' title and division numbers. The market treats most of these as unlikely, pricing the No side as the favorite on the longer-shot targets. These markets matter because a franchise quarterback or an elite edge rusher landing in New York would reprice the futures board. The live odds for each player contract sit above.
The New York Giants have won four Super Bowls, most recently after the 2011 season, and the franchise dates to 1925 as one of the NFL's founding members. Two of those titles are among the most cited upsets in league history: Super Bowl XLII, where the Giants ended the New England Patriots' bid for a 19-0 perfect season, and Super Bowl XLVI, a second championship-game win over that same Patriots dynasty. That history shapes how the market weights the current roster, because the Giants are a franchise whose business model and fanbase assume eventual contention. The recent 4-13 trajectory is why the board prices them as a rebuild rather than a contender today.
As of June 4, 2026, the New York Giants sit in the longshot tier of the 2026-27 Super Bowl futures and trade off the top of the board, with the Los Angeles Rams the market favorite near 16c. On the NFC Championship market the Giants price around 3 to 4 cents. Check the live board above for exact cents.
The Giants futures trade on multiple prediction market platforms, and prices can differ. As of June 4, 2026 the NFC Championship contract shows the Giants near 5c on Kalshi and 2c on Polymarket, a spread that reflects thinner offseason liquidity. The live board above reconciles the current cross-platform picture.
Prediction Genius covers New York Giants Super Bowl futures, NFC Championship odds, NFC East division markets, NFL playoff participation, and player roster-destination contracts asking whether specific free agents and trade targets will play in New York for the 2026-27 season.
The New York Giants last won the Super Bowl after the 2011 season, defeating the New England Patriots in Super Bowl XLVI. It was the franchise's fourth Super Bowl title and its second over that Patriots dynasty, following the Super Bowl XLII upset that ended New England's 18-0 run.
Roster construction is the biggest durable driver, specifically quarterback play and pass-rush talent. Coming off a 4-13 season with a minus 58 point differential, the Giants price as a rebuild, and the futures will move most on whether the team adds difference-makers at those two positions rather than on individual game results.