
Live Pittsburgh Steelers 2026 Super Bowl odds, AFC North race, and roster-move markets tracked across the platforms covered by Prediction Genius.
The Pittsburgh Steelers are one of the most consistently traded teams in NFL prediction markets, a function of a six-time Super Bowl franchise with one of the deepest national followings in the league. Across roughly ten active contracts in this June 2026 offseason, the 2026-27 Super Bowl and AFC Championship futures carry the most volume, with player-movement props filling out the board. The Steelers finished 10-7 and reached the playoffs as the AFC's fourth seed, and the board treats them as a fringe contender rather than a title favorite. The durable swing factor on their price is roster construction around the quarterback position and Mike Tomlin's standing as the league's longest-tenured head coach. Exact cents for every contract sit on the live board above.
The Steelers price as a longshot on the 2026-27 Super Bowl market, well outside the championship tier the board reserves for the league's top seeds. That structural read reflects an offseason where Pittsburgh is rebuilding around its skill positions rather than entering as a finished contender. The gap between their AFC Championship price and their Super Bowl price tells traders the market sees a wild-card-caliber roster with a narrow path to the conference title. The franchises the board treats as the durable favorites in this window are the Buffalo Bills, the Kansas City Chiefs, and the Baltimore Ravens. What durably moves the Steelers number is quarterback stability and the health of the defensive front. The live board above carries the current price.
The AFC North is one of the most physically contested divisions in football, and the Steelers share it with three perennial rivals in the Baltimore Ravens, the Cincinnati Bengals, and the Cleveland Browns. The board slots Pittsburgh behind Baltimore, which sits as the durable division favorite, and prices the AFC North as a two-team race at the top with the Steelers in striking distance. Pittsburgh's 10-7 finish kept them in the playoff field through the AFC's fourth seed, and the market prices the division more on projected roster strength than on any single result given the long offseason runway. Head-to-head meetings with the Ravens and Bengals will drive the race once the regular season opens in September 2026.
The Steelers trade heavily because of franchise stature and a national fan base that gives every Pittsburgh contract liquidity even in the quiet summer months. In a June offseason, the volume concentrates in two places: the long-dated championship futures and a cluster of player-movement props asking whether names like Maxx Crosby, David Njoku, Tyreek Hill, Joey Bosa, and Brandon Aiyuk land in Pittsburgh. Those binary markets price the team's pursuit of marquee talent, and most sit firmly on the No side. The durable swing factors are the quarterback room, the pass rush built around the defensive front, and Mike Tomlin's track record of avoiding losing seasons. The next real catalysts are training camp in late July and roster cutdowns ahead of Week 1.
The offseason board leans on roster-move binaries rather than in-season player props. Active contracts ask whether free-agent and trade candidates such as Maxx Crosby, David Njoku, Tyreek Hill, Joey Bosa, and Brandon Aiyuk play for the Steelers in 2026-27. These markets trade because Pittsburgh is an annual buyer in the veteran market and because national interest keeps even low-volume props liquid. The board prices most of these moves as unlikely, with the No side carrying the weight. Once the season starts, this slot shifts toward weekly game lines and skill-position production markets. The live board above shows the current price on each contract.
The Steelers own six Super Bowl titles, tied for the most in NFL history, with their most recent championship coming in the 2008 season behind a defense rooted in the Steel Curtain tradition. That history matters to the market because it anchors Pittsburgh as a franchise the board never fully discounts, even in a rebuilding year. The Rooney family's ownership has delivered organizational stability that few teams match, and Mike Tomlin has never posted a losing season across his tenure. That durable floor is why the Steelers rarely price as a true bottom-tier team, and why their longshot championship number still draws steady offseason volume.
As of June 4, 2026, the Pittsburgh Steelers trade around 1.5c on the 2026-27 Super Bowl market (roughly 2c on Kalshi, 1c on Polymarket), pricing them as a longshot. The Los Angeles Rams lead the board near 16.5c.
Steelers futures trade on multiple platforms tracked by Prediction Genius, with Polymarket and Kalshi typically carrying the deepest books on the Super Bowl and AFC Championship contracts. Prices sit within a cent or two of each other, with spreads widening on low-volume offseason props.
Coverage includes 2026-27 Super Bowl and AFC Championship futures, the AFC North division market, playoff participation, and a cluster of player-movement binaries on free agents and trade candidates. In-season game lines and player props are added once the regular season begins.
The Steelers last won the Super Bowl after the 2008 season, defeating the Arizona Cardinals in Super Bowl XLIII. It was their sixth title, tied for the most in NFL history.
The biggest durable driver is roster construction at quarterback paired with the franchise's organizational stability. Mike Tomlin has never had a losing season, and the Steelers' six Super Bowl titles keep the market from ever pricing them as a true bottom-tier team.