
Live Liechtenstein national team odds, World Cup qualifying markets, and friendly result lines tracked across the prediction markets followed by Prediction Genius.
Liechtenstein are one of the longest-priced national sides in international soccer prediction markets, a function of a microstate program that ranks near the bottom of the FIFA table yet plays a full competitive calendar. The Liechtensteiner Fussball-Verband, founded in 1934, fields a fully amateur and semi-professional squad and joined UEFA and FIFA in 1974. Across active contracts the dominant volume sits on individual qualifier and friendly results, where the board almost always installs Liechtenstein as the heavy underdog. The durable swing factor on their price is the strength of the opponent and home advantage at Rheinpark Stadion rather than any single roster change. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above; the analysis below covers what those numbers mean.
Liechtenstein sit at the absolute longshot end of every World Cup qualifying market they appear in. The structural reason is simple: a population of roughly 40,000 produces a player pool that cannot match full UEFA member nations, and the FIFA ranking near 206th confirms where the market slots them. Traders treat Liechtenstein qualifying for a World Cup as a tail event, so the meaningful action is not on outright tournament odds but on individual match results, draw-no-bet lines, and goal totals. The board prices each fixture on opponent quality first. Against fellow minnows the implied probability of a Liechtenstein result climbs; against ranked sides it collapses toward zero. Point to the live board above for the current number on any given qualifier.
Liechtenstein compete in UEFA qualifying groups for both the World Cup and the European Championship, and the structure is consistent: they are seeded in the lowest pot and drawn against stronger nations. In their 2026 World Cup qualifying campaign in Group J, Liechtenstein finished bottom, taking zero points across seven matches and conceding heavily, including a 0-7 defeat at Belgium in November 2025. The market prices these groups on roster strength rather than results because results are largely predetermined by the talent gap. What moves a given fixture line is venue and opponent: a home match at Rheinpark Stadion against a comparable side is where Liechtenstein's implied chance is highest, while away trips to seeded nations carry the longest prices.
Liechtenstein draw prediction market volume less from championship narratives and more from the steady cadence of UEFA qualifiers and the Nations League, where the schedule guarantees regular fixtures across the calendar. The durable swing factors on any single line are opponent ranking, home advantage at Rheinpark Stadion, and the availability of the small core of experienced players the program leans on, with captain Nicolas Hasler anchoring the side under head coach Konrad Fuenfstueck. Forward catalysts arrive on fixed FIFA international windows in September, October, and November, when qualifying and Nations League matchdays cluster. Reference the live board above for where each fixture price sits today rather than reading a static number here.
As of June 14, 2026, Liechtenstein remain ranked near 206th in the FIFA table. Their competitive history began with an unofficial 1-1 draw against Malta in 1981 and a first official match, a 0-1 loss to Switzerland, in 1983. The program's defining quirk is that it has never qualified for a World Cup or European Championship, and its results page is dominated by defeats, including a record 1-11 loss to Macedonia in 1996. That history is exactly why the market weights every Liechtenstein contract as a longshot by default: the franchise's structural ceiling is the occasional home upset, not tournament contention. The most cited Liechtenstein result remains a 2004 World Cup qualifying draw with Portugal, the kind of rare outlier that defines the upside tail traders price into their lines.
As of June 14, 2026, the board prices Liechtenstein as a heavy longshot in every qualifier, with implied chances on individual match results typically in the low single digits against ranked UEFA opponents. See the live board above for the exact price on each fixture.
Liechtenstein national team markets trade thinly because of low ranking and limited fixtures, so books are shallow and spreads can be wide. Liquidity concentrates on qualifier and Nations League matchdays. Check the live board for the deepest market on any given fixture.
Coverage spans Liechtenstein World Cup and European Championship qualifying results, UEFA Nations League fixtures, friendly match lines, and goal totals. Outright tournament-qualification markets appear when a campaign is live, though they price as deep longshots.
No. Liechtenstein has never qualified for a FIFA World Cup or a UEFA European Championship since joining FIFA and UEFA in 1974. Its most celebrated result is a 2004 World Cup qualifying draw against Portugal.
Opponent strength is the single biggest durable driver, given Liechtenstein's FIFA ranking near 206th and a player pool drawn from a population of roughly 40,000. Home advantage at Rheinpark Stadion is the secondary factor that lifts the implied chance.