
Live Denmark national team odds, World Cup and tournament futures, and match markets tracked across the platforms covered by Prediction Genius.
Denmark are one of the most consistently traded mid-tier nations in international soccer prediction markets, a function of a program that punches above its population and reaches almost every major tournament. The Danes carry the durable weight of Euro 1992, the fairytale title won as late call-ups, and a modern core built around Christian Eriksen and striker Rasmus Hojlund. The defining market story of this cycle is absence rather than presence: Denmark missed the 2026 World Cup, losing the UEFA playoff final to Czechia on penalties on March 31, 2026, after finishing second in qualifying Group C. That outcome reshapes how the board prices every Denmark contract, from tournament futures to the individual fixtures shown live above.
With Denmark out of the 2026 World Cup, the board no longer treats the Danes as a live contender in the headline winner and qualifier futures. Those markets remain tagged to Denmark for completeness, but the structural read is settled: a team that exits at the playoff stage does not carry meaningful championship-tier probability. The durable driver here is squad depth against elite competition. Denmark have historically been a top-20 FIFA side and a regular at World Cups and European Championships, yet the program has rarely been priced as a true title threat, sitting a clear tier below the perennial favorites such as France, Brazil, and Argentina. Traders use Denmark futures less as a championship bet and more as a read on a reliable qualifier whose ceiling is a deep knockout run rather than a trophy. For where any live tournament contract sits today, the odds board above carries the current number.
With the World Cup off the table, Denmark's near-term market activity centers on individual fixtures, including the Serbia versus Denmark match shown on the live board above. These match markets price moneyline, spread, and exact-score outcomes for a single game, and they turn over quickly as lineups and form shift. The durable read is that Denmark are favored against most second-tier European opposition on talent alone, anchored by a Premier League and top-flight European spine. Per-match pricing swings on availability of key players and home advantage rather than on any season-long structure, so the board above is the only reliable source for a current line. Denmark's broader path back toward relevance runs through the UEFA Nations League and the next qualification cycle.
Denmark draw steady prediction-market interest for reasons that outlast any single result. The program is a fixture at major tournaments, the squad features recognizable names who trade in player-prop and award markets across club soccer, and the 1992 European title gives the nation a narrative gravity larger than its size. The durable swing factors on any Denmark price are squad health, the form of the Eriksen-led midfield, and whether Hojlund and the forward line are converting. The most important catalyst of this cycle has already landed: the failed World Cup playoff in March 2026 removed Denmark's biggest stage and pushed market focus toward rebuilding under the Nations League and the road to future tournaments. The live board above reflects where sentiment sits now.
Denmark's defining achievement remains the 1992 European Championship, won after the team was a late entrant to the tournament, a result still referenced as one of soccer's great upsets and the origin of the Danish Dynamite identity. Since then the Danes have been a dependable qualifier, reaching the World Cup and the Euros repeatedly, including a run to the Euro 2020 semi-finals. That history explains why the market keeps Denmark in the conversation even after a missed cycle: this is a program with a proven ceiling and a track record of returning to the major stage. The 2026 World Cup absence is a setback against that baseline, not a redefinition of it.
As of June 8, 2026, Denmark are out of the 2026 World Cup after losing the UEFA playoff final to Czechia on penalties, so the winner and qualifier futures no longer carry live title probability for the Danes. The most active current Denmark market is the individual fixture shown on the live board above.
Denmark's match markets generally show the deepest books on the larger platforms covered by Prediction Genius, with tournament futures thinner now that the Danes are eliminated. Spreads tighten on the highest-volume fixtures. The live board above compares the current price wherever Denmark trades.
Coverage includes Denmark tournament futures (World Cup winner and qualifiers), individual-fixture moneyline, spread, and exact-score markets, and player-level prop and award markets where the squad's stars trade. The live board above lists every active Denmark contract.
Denmark last won a major tournament at Euro 1992, beating Germany in the final after entering as a late replacement. It remains the program's only major title and the source of the Danish Dynamite identity. Denmark have not won a World Cup.
Squad strength against elite opposition is the durable driver. Denmark are a long-standing top-20 FIFA program with a reliable qualifying record, but a clear tier below the title favorites, so the market prices them as a dependable qualifier rather than a trophy contender.