
Live Tennessee Titans Super Bowl odds, AFC South race, and roster free-agency markets tracked across the prediction markets aggregated by Prediction Genius.
The Tennessee Titans are one of the rebuilding franchises traders watch closely in NFL prediction markets, a small-market club coming off a 3-14 finish that left them picking near the top of the 2026 draft. Across roughly ten active contracts, the 2026-27 Super Bowl futures carry the most volume, and the board consistently slots the Titans deep in the longshot tier rather than the contender group. With the season not kicking off until September, the board is futures-heavy in June 2026, anchored by championship and AFC South division markets plus a cluster of free-agency contracts on which veterans land in Nashville. The durable swing factor on their price is roster construction around a young quarterback, not any single result. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above.
The market does not treat the Tennessee Titans as a championship threat. Coming off a 3-14 season with a points differential of minus 194, the franchise sits at the bottom of the Super Bowl futures board, far behind the contender tier traders price around clubs like the Los Angeles Rams and Buffalo Bills. The structural read is clear: a roster mid-rebuild does not generate championship equity, and the live board reflects that with one of the lowest implied probabilities of any NFL team.
The gap between the Titans' Super Bowl price and the AFC Championship price is small, because both markets agree the team has a long climb. For sharp money, the durable driver here is not this week's number but whether the front office builds a competent offensive line and pass rush around its young core. Point to the live board above for the exact cents.
The AFC South is the more realistic market for the Titans, and the board prices it accordingly. The division is structurally winnable in a way the conference and championship are not, with the Houston Texans sitting as the durable favorite and the Indianapolis Colts and Jacksonville Jaguars rounding out the grouping. The Titans trade as the clear longshot of the four, a reflection of last season's 11-game gap behind the division leaders rather than a permanent ceiling.
What moves this race over the season is roster turnover and schedule structure, not the June price. A division this top-heavy means the Titans' number is sensitive to the favorite's health and to head-to-head results inside the AFC South. The live board above shows where each club sits today.
Most of the live volume on the Tennessee Titans right now is free-agency speculation, not game outcomes. With the NFL in its June 2026 offseason, the board carries a cluster of "will this player sign" contracts covering names like David Njoku, Maxx Crosby, Joey Bosa, George Pickens, and Brandon Aiyuk. These markets trade because roster construction is the single biggest lever on a rebuilding team's forward value, and traders use them to price how aggressively Tennessee fills holes.
The durable swing factors are draft capital and cap space, both of which the Titans hold in quantity after a losing season. Forward catalysts include training camp in July and the regular-season opener in September. Reference the live board above for current prices on each free-agency contract.
The Tennessee Titans have never won a Super Bowl. Their lone appearance came in Super Bowl XXXIV after the 1999 season, a loss to the St. Louis Rams that ended one yard short on the final play, the "Music City Miracle" run remembered as much for how it ended as how it began. The franchise traces to the Houston Oilers, founded in 1960 as an original American Football League club, before relocating to Tennessee in 1997. That zero-championship history is why the market assigns the current roster no title premium and prices every Titans futures contract as a rebuild bet rather than a contention play.
As of June 4, 2026, the Tennessee Titans trade near 1c on the 2026-27 Super Bowl champion market, one of the longest shots on the board. The favorite, the Los Angeles Rams, trades around 16.5c. Prices update live on the board above.
The Titans' markets trade on multiple platforms aggregated by Prediction Genius. The AFC South division contract, for example, has carried a slightly higher Titans price on Polymarket than on Kalshi. Deeper books tend to sit on the high-volume Super Bowl futures rather than the division markets.
Coverage includes 2026-27 Super Bowl champion futures, AFC Championship, AFC South division, NFL playoff participation, and a set of free-agency contracts on whether veterans such as David Njoku, Maxx Crosby, and Joey Bosa sign with Tennessee. Game markets appear once the season starts.
The Tennessee Titans have never won a Super Bowl. Their only appearance was Super Bowl XXXIV after the 1999 season, a loss that ended one yard short. The franchise began as the Houston Oilers in 1960 and moved to Tennessee in 1997.
Roster construction around a young quarterback is the biggest durable driver. After a 3-14 season with a minus 194 point differential, the market prices the Titans on how well the front office uses its high draft capital and cap space, not on near-term game outcomes.