Live tennis odds across the ATP and WTA tours, Grand Slam futures, and tournament winner markets tracked across prediction markets.
Tennis trades across roughly 1,519 active prediction markets, with combined volume in the seven figures as of June 5, 2026 and the four Grand Slam winner futures consistently carrying the most volume on the board. Coverage spans the men's ATP Tour and the women's WTA Tour, the Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon, and US Open, plus head-to-head match markets and tournament-advancement contracts. The board is structured around a small contender tier the market revisits at every major, with Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner, Iga Swiatek, and Aryna Sabalenka among the names traders most often price near the top. The live board above ranks the current top markets and movers; the Grand Slam calendar is the season's largest forward catalyst, with futures repricing sharply through each fortnight of main-draw play.
Tennis splits into two governing tours that anchor nearly all of the sport's market volume. The ATP Tour covers the men's game across 250, 500, Masters 1000, and Tour Finals events, while the WTA Tour governs the women's circuit on a parallel tier structure. Both feed into the four Grand Slams, which sit above the tour calendar and draw the deepest books of the year. Prediction markets carry winner futures for each major, tour-level title odds at marquee events, and per-match head-to-head contracts. The ATP and WTA also run their season-ending championships, the ATP Finals and WTA Finals, which reprice the year-end No. 1 race. Coverage tracks both tours through their full calendar, with depth concentrating around the majors and the largest Masters 1000 and WTA 1000 stops.
The premier tennis futures resolve on the four Grand Slam singles titles: the Australian Open in January on hard courts, the French Open in May and June on Roland Garros clay, Wimbledon in June and July on grass, and the US Open in August and September on hard courts. Each major is a single-elimination 128-player draw, so a champion is decided across seven rounds, and the futures market reprices round by round as seeds fall. The contender tier the market revisits every season includes Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner, Novak Djokovic, and Daniil Medvedev on the men's side, with Iga Swiatek, Aryna Sabalenka, and Coco Gauff anchoring the women's board. Surface specialists shift the value: clay rewards a different profile than grass, and the futures reflect it. The live board above shows the current favorites and exact cents for each major.
Tennis volume is calendar-driven, spiking through the two-week windows of each Grand Slam and again at the largest Masters 1000 and WTA 1000 events. Between majors, volume thins, then surges as draws are released and seeds are set. Injury cycles move the board hard in an individual sport, where a single withdrawal can collapse a futures price overnight, so retirements and walkovers are a recurring catalyst. Surface transitions between hard, clay, and grass reset the contender hierarchy three times a year, pulling repricing across both tours. The year-end No. 1 race and the ATP Finals and WTA Finals add a second futures layer late in the season. Head-to-head match markets carry their own steady flow on every match day, independent of the futures cycle.
Coverage spans the ATP and WTA tours across roughly 1,519 active markets: Grand Slam winner futures for the Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon, and US Open, tour-level title odds, head-to-head match markets, and tournament-advancement contracts.
The four Grand Slam singles winner futures structurally carry the most volume, drawing the deepest books of the season across both the men's and women's draws. Per-match head-to-head markets add steady flow on every match day. The live board above ranks the current leaders.
Each market is a binary contract that settles to 100 cents if the outcome happens and zero if it does not. A price near 60c implies roughly a 60 percent chance. Traders buy and sell those contracts, and the price tracks the implied probability as draws and results move.
As of June 5, 2026, the 2026 Wimbledon men's singles winner futures carry the most volume on the board, with Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner pricing near the top. See the live board above for current cents and the latest leader.
Grand Slam futures often show a deeper order book on one platform and tighter spreads on another, so the same contract can differ by a few cents. Compare the live prices on the board above; the structural picture holds as new platforms are added to coverage.