Live UFC fight winner odds, championship title markets, event-card futures, and method-of-victory props tracked across prediction markets in one place.
The UFC trades across dozens of active prediction markets, with combined volume in the low seven figures as of June 5, 2026 and individual title-fight winner markets consistently carrying the most volume on the board. Coverage spans per-fight moneyline contracts, championship markets across the promotion's weight classes, full event-card futures, and method-of-victory and round props tracked across prediction market platforms. The board is structured around marquee bouts the market revisits each event, with champions and contenders such as Alex Pereira, Ilia Topuria, Sean O'Malley, and Belal Muhammad among the fighters traders most often price near the top. The live board above ranks the current top markets and movers; each numbered UFC pay-per-view and Fight Night card is a forward catalyst, opening fresh winner and prop markets the week of the event.
UFC championship markets resolve on a single fight rather than a season-long standings table, which makes them the sharpest contracts on the board. Each title bout settles when one fighter wins by knockout, submission, or decision, so the market weights durable factors the data revisits every camp: a fighter's finishing rate, reach and weight-class size, layoff length, and how the styles match. The contender set spans the promotion's divisions, with names like Alex Pereira at light heavyweight, Ilia Topuria across featherweight and lightweight, Sean O'Malley at bantamweight, and Belal Muhammad at welterweight among the champions and challengers the market prices most actively. Reference the live board above for the current favorites and cents on each platform; title fights reprice hard on fight-week news, weigh-ins, and any late replacement.
Beyond the headline title bout, the UFC structures markets around the full event card. A numbered pay-per-view or Fight Night slate carries a winner market for nearly every bout, from the main event down through the prelims, which is why a single card can open more than a dozen tradeable contracts. The structure rewards depth: undercard fighters such as Diego Lopes, Petr Yan, Ciryl Gane, and Justin Gaethje draw real volume when their bouts anchor a card. Underdog and short-notice fights tend to show the widest gaps between roster-strength expectations and where the money lands. One slow-moving truth holds across cards: main-event and title bouts consistently out-volume the prelims. Point to the board for the current per-fight prices.
The UFC anchors a deep set of within-fight prop markets that draw volume precisely because MMA outcomes branch so many ways. Method-of-victory contracts split a fight into knockout, submission, and decision paths; round and over-under markets price how long a bout lasts. These structurally draw volume because a heavy favorite on the moneyline can still offer value on the method, and fighters with high finishing rates, like Alex Pereira's knockout pedigree or a grappler such as Charles Oliveira's submission threat, reprice the prop board independently of the straight winner line. Reference the live board for current method and round prices.
UFC prop coverage extends to fighter-level and event-level markets that sit alongside the winner lines. The board carries performance-bonus markets, fight-of-the-night style contracts, and futures on whether marquee names such as Conor McGregor return to compete, plus contender markets tracking who earns the next title shot in a given division. The stat categories are narrower than a team sport's box score, but the depth comes from the volume of fighters and events: a single 12-bout pay-per-view card can put two dozen or more active contracts on the board at once across the promotion's roughly 12 weight classes. Reference the live board above for current lines and the fighters trading at the top today.
Prediction Genius aggregates per-fight winner markets, championship title contracts across the UFC's weight classes, full event-card futures, and method-of-victory, round, and fighter props. Coverage tracks numbered pay-per-views and Fight Night cards, pulling dozens of active markets across the promotion's divisions into one board.
The highest-volume UFC markets are the main-event and title-fight winner contracts, which consistently out-trade the prelims and prop board. Method-of-victory props on marquee fighters add depth. The live board above ranks the current top markets and movers rather than any single contract that happens to lead today.
Each UFC market is a binary contract that settles to 100 cents if the outcome happens and zero if it does not. A fighter-winner contract pays out when that fighter wins by knockout, submission, or decision. Prices move with implied probability, so a contract at 60 cents implies a roughly 60 percent chance.
As of June 5, 2026, the UFC board carries 54 active markets, led by the highest-volume title-fight winner contract on the current event card. The live board above shows the exact contract, its current cents, and the leading fighter, refreshed continuously as fight week reprices the lines.
Prices for the same UFC fight can differ across platforms, with one venue often showing a deeper book on marquee title bouts and another carrying tighter spreads on undercard contracts. When a precise current price is quoted, the platform is named. The structural picture holds as new platforms are added to the board.