Live golf odds across the PGA Tour, LIV Golf, the DP World Tour, the four majors, and the Ryder Cup tracked across prediction markets.
Golf trades across roughly 444 active prediction markets, with combined volume in the high eight figures as of June 5, 2026 and the season's biggest tournament weeks consistently carrying the most volume on the board. Coverage spans the PGA Tour, LIV Golf, and the DP World Tour, the four men's majors, the biennial Ryder Cup, and the LPGA Tour, with outright winner odds, end-of-round leader markets, top-finish props, and head-to-head matchups all priced. The board is structured around the rotation of weekly events and the four majors, with names such as Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, and Jon Rahm the most heavily traded across tours. The live board above ranks the current top markets and movers, with major championship weeks the largest forward catalysts on the calendar.
Golf prediction markets are organized around three professional circuits plus the sport's premier team and women's competitions. The PGA Tour is the deepest pool by far, anchoring roughly 51 active markets and the overwhelming majority of golf volume as the primary US-based circuit running January through the FedEx Cup playoffs. LIV Golf, the rival breakaway league launched in 2022 and built around 54-hole, no-cut team-and-individual events, carries the widest spread of contracts at roughly 69 markets, while the DP World Tour, the European circuit formerly branded the European Tour, rounds out the weekly schedule with about 9. The biennial Ryder Cup, the United States versus Europe team match-play event, and the LPGA Tour fill out the board. The live tiles above show each tour's current active market count and aggregate volume.
The premier futures on the golf board are the four men's majors: the Masters at Augusta National, the PGA Championship, the U.S. Open, and The Open Championship. Each resolves to a single outright winner from a field of roughly 150 players, which is why major-winner markets price the entire field rather than a two-way head-to-head and why the favorite rarely clears the implied probability a heavy chalk pick would in a smaller field. Season-long cross-major markets, such as whether a player wins multiple majors in a calendar year or completes the career Grand Slam, layer on top. The market durably revisits the same contender tier week to week, with Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm, Xander Schauffele, and Bryson DeChambeau the names traders most often price near the top. Reference the live board above for the current favorites and exact cents rather than a number that moves between tee times.
Golf volume is sharply seasonal and event-driven. The four major weeks, the Players Championship, and the FedEx Cup playoffs concentrate the bulk of liquidity, while ordinary tour stops trade thinner. Within a tournament, volume builds through end-of-round leader markets that reprice after every round, turning a four-day event into a series of fresh contracts. Field strength is the largest structural input: when the top names enter the same event, the outright market tightens and matchup props deepen. Weather, course setup, and Sunday pressure drive the in-tournament swings that sharp money fades or backs. Off-season, attention shifts to LIV Golf roster moves, schedule and tour-merger questions, and futures on who claims the season's player-of-the-year honors.
Coverage spans roughly 444 active golf markets across the PGA Tour, LIV Golf, and the DP World Tour, plus the four majors, the Ryder Cup, and the LPGA Tour. Market types include outright winner odds, end-of-round leader markets, top-finish props, head-to-head matchups, and season-long major and award futures.
The four major championship weeks, the Players Championship, and the FedEx Cup playoffs structurally carry the most volume, led by outright-winner futures and end-of-round leader markets that reprice each round. The live board above shows which event and contract lead right now.
Each market is a binary contract that settles at 100 cents if the outcome happens and zero if it does not, so a price of 35 cents implies a 35 percent chance. A golf outright winner market lists every contender as a separate yes-or-no contract priced against the full field.
As of June 5, 2026, The Memorial Tournament is the highest-volume golf market on the board, with combined volume in the tens of millions, followed by its end-of-round leader markets and the U.S. Open winner futures. The live board above carries the current top contract and exact cents.
Prices for the same golf outcome can diverge across platforms, with one venue often carrying a deeper book on major-winner futures and another posting tighter spreads on weekly events. The aggregated board reconciles them so the best available price surfaces, and added platforms fold in the same way.