
Live Saint Kitts and Nevis World Cup qualifying odds, CONCACAF results, and match markets for the Sugar Boyz tracked across prediction markets.
Saint Kitts and Nevis is one of the smaller-nation sides traders follow in international soccer prediction markets, a Caribbean program that punches above its population through the CONCACAF qualifying pathway. Nicknamed the Sugar Boyz and based out of Warner Park in Basseterre, the team plays its competitive matches in the World Cup qualifiers and the CONCACAF Nations League, where most of its tradeable contracts appear. Through four CONCACAF World Cup qualifying matches as of June 14, 2026, the side sat fourth in its group with three points, the durable backdrop on its price being a thin player pool drawn from a nation of roughly 50,000 rather than any single result. The live odds for every contract sit on the board above; the analysis below covers what those numbers mean.
Prediction markets treat Saint Kitts and Nevis as a longshot in the CONCACAF World Cup qualifying structure, and the pricing reflects the math. With FIFA member nations across the region competing for a handful of confederation slots, the board consistently slots the Sugar Boyz well outside the qualification tier, behind regional heavyweights like Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, and Panama. The durable read for traders is roster depth: a national pool drawn from a country of about 50,000 people cannot rotate the way larger CONCACAF programs can, so the price keys on availability of overseas-based professionals more than on any home result. For the exact current number, the live board above carries it.
The relevant race for Saint Kitts and Nevis is the CONCACAF qualifying group, not a domestic league table. The group structure pits the Sugar Boyz against a mix of established Caribbean and Central American sides, and the market prices the team on talent gap rather than form streaks. Through four qualifying matches as of June 14, 2026 the side carried three points from one win, which left it fourth in its group. The durable swing factor over a qualifying window is the schedule: a favorable home draw at Warner Park moves the price more than an away result, because the market already assumes road losses to the group's top seeds.
Volume on Saint Kitts and Nevis contracts is thin relative to CONCACAF's marquee programs, and that is structural. Smaller-nation markets trade in bursts tied to the international calendar, spiking around World Cup qualifying matchdays and CONCACAF Nations League windows, then going quiet between them. The durable driver is the squad's reliance on a handful of diaspora professionals based in England and North America, whose call-ups and fitness shape every line. Forward catalysts are calendar-bound: the next FIFA international windows and the remaining qualifying fixtures are when liquidity returns. The live board above shows where each match contract sits today.
Saint Kitts and Nevis has never reached a FIFA World Cup, and the program has never advanced to the final round of CONCACAF qualifying, which is the structural fact the market anchors to. The team played its first international in 1938 against Grenada and remains a Caribbean Football Union member within CONCACAF. Its high-water marks are competitive runs in the Caribbean Cup rather than global qualification, and that history is exactly why prediction markets weight the current roster as a longshot: the business of a 50,000-person nation is to compete regionally, not to chase a World Cup berth that has never been close.
As of June 14, 2026, prediction markets price Saint Kitts and Nevis as a clear longshot to advance in CONCACAF World Cup qualifying, with the side sitting fourth in its group on three points from four matches. Check the live board above for exact current prices.
Saint Kitts and Nevis match markets appear mainly around CONCACAF qualifying and Nations League windows, with the deepest book on whichever platform lists the specific fixture. Liquidity is thin between international windows, so spreads widen and prices can diverge until a matchday approaches.
Prediction Genius tracks Saint Kitts and Nevis match-result markets, World Cup qualifying advancement, and CONCACAF Nations League contracts where they list. Coverage concentrates around FIFA international windows when the Sugar Boyz play competitive fixtures.
Saint Kitts and Nevis has never qualified for a FIFA World Cup. The program, which played its first international in 1938, has never advanced to the final round of CONCACAF qualifying, with its strongest runs coming in the regional Caribbean Cup.
Squad depth is the durable driver. With a national pool drawn from a country of roughly 50,000 people, the price keys on the availability of diaspora-based professionals more than on any single result, which is why call-ups and fitness move the lines most.