
Live Seattle Seahawks 2026-27 Super Bowl odds, NFC West race, and player-movement markets tracked across the prediction markets covered by Prediction Genius.
The Seattle Seahawks are among the more actively traded NFC franchises in NFL prediction markets, a function of a roster that closed the 2025 season as one of the conference's strongest. As of June 4, 2026, the board is in its offseason shape: there are no weekly game lines yet, and the volume concentrates in 2026-27 futures. The Seahawks come off a 14-3 finish, the NFC's top seed, and the durable swing factor on their forward price is roster continuity through free agency and the draft rather than any single offseason headline. The contracts span the Super Bowl and NFC Championship futures, the NFC West division, and a cluster of player-movement binaries. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above; the analysis below covers what those numbers mean.
The 2026-27 Super Bowl future is the highest-volume Seahawks-relevant market by a wide margin, with the full field trading well over $60 million across platforms. The board slots Seattle in the NFC's upper contender tier rather than as the outright favorite, and the gap between the NFC Championship price and the Super Bowl price is the number sharp traders read most closely. That spread captures the market's discount for clearing the AFC, and it is why the conference future trades richer than the title future. The durable driver here is roster construction: a defense that posted a +191 point differential last season and an offense that has to prove it travels in January. For the exact cents on each contract, see the live board above.
The NFC West is one of the league's deepest divisions, and the 2026 division future prices that congestion directly. The Los Angeles Rams sit as the board's division favorite, with Seattle, the San Francisco 49ers, and the Arizona Cardinals all carrying live prices behind them. The market reads this as a roster-strength race more than a results race in June, because no games have been played in the 2026 season; the contract is effectively a projection of offseason moves. Seattle's 14-3 record and top NFC seed from the just-completed 2025 season, as of June 4, 2026, anchor the team's standing, but the division price will move on free agency, the draft, and the head-to-head schedule once it sets. The live division odds sit on the board above.
Seattle's volume comes from two structural sources. The first is the futures stack: the Super Bowl, NFC Championship, NFC West, and 2027 playoff-participation contracts all carry the franchise as a real contender, which keeps liquidity flowing even in the offseason. The second is roster churn. A long list of player-movement binaries trades on whether names like George Pickens, Joey Bosa, Maxx Crosby, David Njoku, and Brandon Aiyuk land in Seattle for 2026-27, and the market currently leans No across most of them. The forward catalysts are the obvious ones: the draft, the bulk of free agency, and training-camp roster cuts. Each of those windows is where the durable price moves, not the quiet June stretch the board is in now.
Beyond the team futures, the Seahawks anchor a set of player-movement binaries that resolve on roster decisions rather than on-field stats. These markets ask whether a specific veteran joins Seattle for the 2026-27 season, and they trade because the franchise is an active, cap-relevant buyer every offseason. The board leans No on most of the named targets as of early June, which reflects how rarely any single rumored signing actually closes. There is also a novelty binary on whether the Seahawks visit the White House in 2026, a contract tied to championship recognition rather than performance. The current price on each of these sits on the live board above.
The Seattle Seahawks have won one Super Bowl, the 2013 season's Super Bowl XLVIII, a 43-8 rout of the Denver Broncos. The franchise also reached Super Bowl XL and Super Bowl XLIX and lost both, the latter on the goal-line interception that closed the 2014 season. That single title, paired with two near-misses, frames how the market weights the current roster: Seattle is treated as a franchise capable of reaching the championship round, which is why its NFC Championship future trades closer to the top of the conference than its outright Super Bowl number does. Founded in 1976, the team's contender-tier pricing rests on a recent body of work, including the 14-3 2025 season, more than on a deep title history.
As of June 4, 2026, the Seahawks have no standalone priced Super Bowl contract on the board, but their 2026-27 NFC Championship future trades near 14 to 15 cents (15c on Kalshi, 14c on Polymarket), behind the Los Angeles Rams at roughly 25 cents. Check the live board above for the latest cents.
Seattle's futures trade on both Kalshi and Polymarket, and the two platforms price the contracts within a cent or two of each other. The NFC Championship future, for example, recently sat at 15c on Kalshi and 14c on Polymarket. The playoff-participation market is currently Polymarket-only.
Coverage includes the 2026-27 Super Bowl and NFC Championship futures, the NFC West division market, 2027 playoff participation, and a cluster of player-movement binaries on veterans potentially joining Seattle. There are no weekly game lines during the June offseason.
Seattle won its only Super Bowl after the 2013 season, beating the Denver Broncos 43-8 in Super Bowl XLVIII. The franchise also lost Super Bowl XL and Super Bowl XLIX, the latter on the goal-line interception that ended the 2014 season.
Roster construction is the durable driver. Seattle's contender-tier pricing rests on a defense that posted a +191 point differential during its 14-3 2025 season, and the forward number moves most on free agency, the draft, and training-camp roster decisions rather than on any single offseason headline.