Futures markets are slow-moving things. They absorb information over months, absorbing qualification drama, injury news, managerial changes, draw reveals, and the best bets often come from identifying where the line has moved for the right reasons and where it’s moved by noise. The BetMGM World Cup Winner market has been running since before qualification was complete, and the shift from those first prices to where we stand today tells a story that goes well beyond which teams qualify.
Below is a full breakdown of the market as it stands, with a focus on the biggest line movements, what’s driving the favourites, and the dark horses worth putting on your radar before the tournament kicks off.

The Favourites: Who’s Shortened, Who’s Drifted
The most dramatic change at the top of the market has been France. They opened at +600, drifted out as far as +700 before they then came back in sharply, cutting to +450 current, shorter than they’ve been at any point in the market. The money is clearly on Les Bleus. They’re now the sole outright favourite, pulling clear of Spain and England who’ve both held more stable price profiles throughout.
Current Favourites: BetMGM World Cup Winner
Spain’s movement is the most notable of any major team. They opened at +1000, a full 400 cents longer than France at that same point, and they’ve come in to match France at +450 on the back of a sustained period of strong form and a draw that put them in an ostensibly manageable half.
The sharp money on Spain has been consistent throughout the tracking period, and despite holding at +450 they’re still attracting 13.9% of tickets against 15.3% of the handle, which suggests a relatively tight spread between public and sharp interest.
England are a curious case. They’ve barely moved, opening at +700 and sitting at +650 now, but they’re pulling 13.4% of tickets against just 11.8% of handle. That’s one of the cleaner reverse-line movement signals in the market. The public backs England, but the sharps aren’t following. Whether that’s residual scepticism after years of tournament underperformance or a genuine structural concern about Thomas Tuchel’s latest iteration of the squad, the money side of the ledger is telling you something the ticket side is hiding.
Brazil is the biggest casualty among the co-favourites. They co-opened with France at +600 and have drifted out to +800, a significant move for a team with this kind of traditional market weight. Unusually, though, the handle percentage is still substantial at 12.9%, higher than England, which means the money hasn’t completely abandoned them. This is a team the market is uncertain about, not one it’s written off.
The Handle vs. Ticket Split: Where the Sharp Money Lives
Reading the percentage splits carefully produces some interesting conclusions. A team whose handle percentage comfortably outstrips its ticket percentage is attracting larger-than-average wagers, which is the definition of sharp action. The converse, where tickets exceed handle, indicates recreational money on familiar names.
Ticket % vs Handle %: Selected Teams
France’s handle percentage outpacing tickets by over five points is the clearest sharp indicator in the market. Portugal is the other name generating handle disproportionate to ticket volume. At +1000 they’re attracting 12.8% of money against 10.2% of bets. Those are serious numbers for a team most casual bettors consider a distant outsider. The implication is that larger, more informed wagers are landing on a talented Portugal side at Cristiano Ronaldo’s last tournament.
The Biggest Drifters: Market Losers
Some price journeys going the wrong direction deserve as much attention as the teams shortening. The USA is the single most dramatic drift in the market. They opened at +1800 before the landscape had fully taken shape, moved up as high as +6600 in the middle of the tracking period, and have settled at +4000, still more than double their opening number.
The combination of a relatively weak CONCACAF cohort, a draw that put them in a challenging group, and a scepticism about whether the domestic fanbase’s enthusiasm translates to genuine footballing quality has all accumulated in the price. They still attract 5.8% of tickets (this is a home tournament co-host), but the handle barely reaches 3.6%.
Germany’s drift from +900 to +1400 is significant given the expectation most had of them being one of the market’s anchor teams. They’ve been consistently deprioritised as the tournament has taken shape, and the current number reflects a meaningful shift in how the market views their prospects, particularly interesting given they were quarter-final favourites for most of the qualification cycle.
Dark Horses: The Best Value in the Market
Finding dark horse value at a World Cup is about identifying teams whose market price hasn’t kept pace with their genuine tournament potential. Four names jump out from the current sheet.
Japan
The market has halved their price since opening, and for good reason. Japan’s Asian qualification was dominant and they’ve shown in recent tournaments that the Samurai Blue can disrupt European and South American giants when the conditions are right. The handle-to-ticket split is tight, suggesting the sharp money is starting to take notice.
Norway
Also halved since opening. Erling Haaland is the obvious headline. He’s the most lethal striker at the tournament and Norway have built a direct, counter-attacking structure around him that suits knockout football. The drift from +5000 to +2500 is the market catching up with what Haaland alone can do in a short tournament. Still offers value at this number.
Morocco
Their 2022 semi-final run wasn’t a fluke. Morocco have retained much of that tournament squad, benefit from a settled coaching structure, and have a style of play, a low block devastating on the break, that can grind down favourites in a knockout format. A cut from +6600 to +4000 still leaves them at a price that prices in no path to the final.
The USA: Tournament Co-Host, Betting Longshot
There’s a specific dynamic worth exploring with the USA that you don’t see at every tournament. They’re a co-host, which historically provides an advantage. Pochettino’s men have the home crowd advantage, familiar conditions and potentially favourable routing through to the knockout stages depending on draw outcomes. And yet BetMGM has them at +4000, more than triple their opening price. The ticket volume at 5.8% is the fourth-highest in the market. The American public is absolutely betting on the USMNT, but the handle at 3.6% tells you the sharp money isn’t following that enthusiasm.
The core question is whether the home advantage factor is priced in at all. In 2002, South Korea reached the semi-finals as co-hosts despite having far less footballing depth than the USA currently possesses. If the draw is kind and Christian Pulisic is fit, +4000 for a home nation with Premier League and Serie A players throughout is a number that could look very different by the quarter-final stage.
Portugal’s Quiet Case at +1000
The sharp handle signal on Portugal is hard to ignore. At +1000 they’ve come in from +1400 at opening, and the 12.8% handle against 10.2% tickets is the clearest sign in the market of informed money landing on a non-favourite.
The arithmetic makes sense: Portugal have Cristiano Ronaldo at what will almost certainly be his final World Cup, they have Bruno Fernandes, Rafael Leao, Bernardo Silva, Vitinha, Joao Neves and Ruben Dias in arguably the best squad generation they’ve ever assembled. The market prices in the narrative risk of overreliance on an ageing icon. The handle suggests some bettors think that narrative is overdone.
You don’t need Norway to win the tournament to make this a worthwhile bet. You need them to run deeper than the market prices in. Haaland is the most physically dominant striker in world football right now. Norway’s structure is built to protect a lead and punish transitions. A 48-team format with expanded group stage means more games against lower-ranked opposition where Haaland can build rhythm. At +2500, half the opening price and still the longest of any serious contender, the expected value is there. A unit outright, with the understanding this is a lottery ticket attached to a generational striker at his peak.
Summary: What the Market Is Telling You
If you squint at the full picture, the market is essentially telling you three things. First, France have emerged as the most credible favourite, sharper than their opening price, backed heavily by money, and sitting at a number that still offers a real return if they win.
Secondly, England are overbet by the public and underbet by the sharps, which is a signal worth taking seriously. Third, the value window for Norway and Japan has already narrowed considerably since opening, and it will narrow further as the tournament approaches. If you’re interested in either, the time to act is before the group stage draw is fully processed and recreational money floods those names.
Odds sourced from BetMGM as of May 19, 2026. Odds subject to change. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER. 21+ only. Please gamble responsibly.

