Live mixed martial arts odds across UFC fight cards, championship bouts, and per-fight markets tracked across prediction markets in one place.
Mixed martial arts trades across roughly 172 active prediction markets, with combined volume in the high six figures as of June 5, 2026 and individual UFC championship bouts consistently carrying the most volume on the board. Coverage spans the UFC, the sport's dominant promotion, across all eight men's weight classes plus the women's divisions, with fight-winner markets, method-of-victory contracts, and round and over/under props on the marquee cards. The board is structured around the pay-per-view headliners and title fights that draw the heaviest action, with champions and top contenders across divisions the names traders price most often. The live board above ranks the current top fights and movers; each numbered UFC event and Fight Night card opens a fresh slate of markets as the schedule rolls forward.
Mixed martial arts coverage on prediction markets is concentrated almost entirely in the Ultimate Fighting Championship, the sport's premier global promotion founded in 1993 and the source of nearly all tracked MMA volume as of June 5, 2026. The UFC structures its calendar around roughly a dozen pay-per-view events and a steady run of Fight Night cards each year, and the prediction-market board mirrors that cadence: every numbered event and televised card opens fight-winner contracts and a layer of props. The promotion spans eight men's weight classes from flyweight to heavyweight and four women's divisions, which gives the board a wide entity set of champions and ranked contenders rather than a single dominant figure. Other promotions such as the PFL and Bellator's successor circuits surface only intermittently in tracked markets, so UFC title fights and main events drive the overwhelming share of the roughly 172 active MMA markets.
The highest-stakes MMA markets are the individual title bouts, where a single fight resolves a binary winner contract rather than a season-long futures race. Because mixed martial arts crowns a champion per weight class with no playoff structure, the championship board reshapes every time a belt is contested, and the contender tier the market revisits is defined by the official UFC rankings within each division. Pound-for-pound debates across champions like the lightweight, welterweight, and middleweight title holders give the board a recurring set of marquee names that traders price whenever a title fight is booked. Beyond the straight winner, championship cards carry method-of-victory markets (knockout, submission, or decision) and total-rounds over/under contracts that deepen the book on the biggest fights. The live board above shows the current favorites and exact cents on each fight; the structure stays constant even as the names and prices on top rotate with the schedule.
MMA volume is event-driven rather than seasonal. Unlike league sports with a fixed regular season, the UFC runs nearly year-round, and trading spikes around the pay-per-view headliners and title fights that anchor each card. A booked championship bout or a high-profile main event between ranked contenders pulls the heaviest action, while undercard fights trade thinner. Fight-week catalysts move prices sharply: weigh-in results, missed weight, late injury withdrawals, and short-notice replacement opponents can swing a contract in hours, which makes MMA one of the more volatile categories on the board. Method-of-victory and round props add a second volume layer for traders who have a read on a stylistic matchup rather than just the winner. Because each fight is a discrete binary event with a hard resolution date, the board turns over completely from card to card, keeping fresh markets flowing as the UFC schedule advances through 2026.
Coverage spans roughly 172 active MMA markets, almost entirely UFC: fight-winner contracts across all eight men's weight classes and the women's divisions, plus method-of-victory (KO, submission, decision) and round and over/under props on the marquee cards.
The individual UFC title fights and pay-per-view main events carry the most volume, because each is a discrete binary winner contract on a marquee matchup. Championship bouts draw the heaviest action; the live board above ranks the current top fights and movers.
Each fight is a binary contract that resolves when the bout ends. A share pays out if your fighter wins and expires worthless if they lose, so the price between 0 and 100 cents reflects the market's implied probability of that outcome.
As of June 5, 2026, the highest-volume MMA markets are the booked UFC title fights and pay-per-view headliners. The live board above shows the current top fight, the favorite, and exact cents on each platform, refreshed continuously as the schedule advances.
Pricing on a given UFC fight is usually close across platforms, with one venue often carrying a deeper book on marquee title bouts and another offering tighter spreads on undercard fights. Cross-platform price discovery surfaces the sharpest line as new platforms are added.