FIFA World Cup 2026 Crypto Betting: Odds, Markets and Predictions
The 2026 FIFA World Cup runs from June 11 to July 19, spreading across 16 stadiums in the United States, Canada, and Mexico. With 48 national teams competing across 12 groups, there are more matches, more markets, and more ways to back your picks than at any previous World Cup. Whether you are interested in match winner odds, outright tournament bets, or individual player markets, you will find every angle covered here at our sportsbook. Crypto deposits and withdrawals mean you stay in control of your money at every stage, and bets settle fast regardless of when the match ends.
FIFA World Cup 2026 Betting Markets: What's Available
The World Cup page covers four distinct betting areas, each accessible from the navigation tabs at the top of the page.
The Matches section is the main event. All 104 group stage games are listed, organized by groups A through L. Each fixture shows the standard 1X2 market, where you pick a win, draw, or away win. Early group matches start on June 11, with kickoffs spread across multiple time zones. Some fixtures are already priced up, including USA vs. Paraguay (USA at 1.98), Brazil vs. Morocco (Brazil at 1.61), and Mexico vs. South Africa (Mexico at 1.48). For deeper season markets beyond the tournament window, the soccer betting page covers leagues and competitions year-round.
The Knockout section displays the bracket as it fills in, letting you follow the tournament path from the round of 32 all the way through to the final in New York. In the Predictions tab, you will find a set of proposition markets built around Yes/No outcomes, ranging from team winner questions to individual player achievements. These are distinct from traditional match betting and function closer to event prediction markets. The Outrights section contains all the season-long futures markets, covered in detail below.
World Cup 2026 Outright Betting: Winner, Goalscorer, and Player Awards
Outright markets close on June 11, 2026 at 22:00, so placing these early gives you the best prices before the field narrows. The main markets available are: Tournament Winner, Top Goalscorer, Top Player of the Tournament, Best Goalkeeper of the Tournament, Best Young Player of the Tournament, First-Time Winner, Name the Finalists, To Reach 1/4 Finals, 1/2 Finals, or the Final, Top Team Goalscorer, and Winning Continent.
Current odds in the Top Player market: Harry Kane 8.0, Lamine Yamal 9.0, Lionel Messi 11.0, Kylian Mbappe 11.0, Michael Olise 11.0, Vinicius Jr. 15.0, Bruno Fernandes 21.0. Many of these players arrive off strong UEFA Champions League form, which is worth factoring into your outright picks.
In the Top Goalscorer market, odds vary sharply. Mbappe and Kane sit at 7.0 to 8.0, while longer shots like Erling Haaland (15.0), Lamine Yamal (17.0), and Lautaro Martinez (25.0) represent genuine value if a less-fancied attacking side runs deep into the knockout stage.
World Cup 2026 Prediction Bets: How the Yes/No Markets Work
The Predictions tab is a separate product from standard match betting. These are sports prediction markets where you stake on a binary outcome: Yes or No. A selection of markets currently live:
- Will Argentina win the 2026 FIFA World Cup? (Yes: 9.0 / No: 1.03)
- Will Brazil win? (Yes: 9.0 / No: 1.03)
- Will France win? (Yes: 6.0 / No: 1.1)
- Will Germany win? (Yes: 14.0)
- Will Colombia win? (Yes: 35.0)
- Will Cristiano Ronaldo be the Top Goalscorer? (Yes: 20.0)
- Will Kylian Mbappe be the Top Goalscorer? (Yes: 7.0 / No: 1.07)
- Will Erling Haaland be the Top Goalscorer? (Yes: 15.0)
- Will any 2026 FIFA World Cup game in the U.S. be relocated abroad? (Yes: 9.53)
These markets close June 11, so they are suited to pre-tournament positioning rather than reactive betting. If you have a firm view on a team's chances or a player's form, Yes/No markets are a clean way to express that at a defined price. For non-football content, the predictions hub covers crypto markets, politics, business, and other categories year-round.
How to Bet on the FIFA World Cup 2026 with Bitcoin
FIFA World Cup 2026 bitcoin betting works the same way as any crypto transaction: fast confirmation, no bank delays, and no card limit issues during high-traffic match nights.
Here is how to get set up:
- Sign up and complete the quick registration form.
- Open Wallet, pick your crypto (Bitcoin, Ethereum, USDT, and more), and copy your deposit address.
- Send funds from your exchange or wallet to that address.
- Once confirmed on-chain, your balance updates and you can place bets on any World Cup market right away.
- Withdrawals follow the same steps in reverse, with payouts typically clearing within one block.
During the group stage, multiple matches run simultaneously in the evenings. Having funds already on the platform means you are not waiting on a bank transfer when you spot a market you want to act on. That speed also carries over into live soccer betting, where odds update in real time as each match progresses and positions shift with every goal or card.
World Cup Betting Tournament: Compete Against Other Bettors
The eSoccer Masters leaderboard runs June 1 to June 10, 2026 and rewards the top 500 participants with Free Bets valid exclusively on World Cup 2026 matches. Place qualifying bets on e-Soccer markets during the campaign window and accumulate points through turnover: every euro wagered on a qualifying bet adds to your leaderboard score.
To qualify, each bet must be at least €5 / 5 USD / 5 GBP at minimum odds of 1.30. Singles and Combo (Won or Lost) bet types both count. Bets must be placed and settled before June 10, 2026 at 23:59 CET to be included in the final standings. Top prizes reach €600 for 1st place, €450 for 2nd, and €300 for 3rd. Positions 4 through 10 earn €150, and all finishers through 500th place receive Free Bets, credited to your account within 7 days of the campaign closing.
World Cup 2026: Top Contenders and Outright Odds
France leads as the shortest-priced tournament favorite at 6.0, followed by England at 7.0 and South American heavyweights Argentina and Brazil, both priced at 9.0. Germany sits at 14.0 as the main European alternative at a mid-range price. Colombia (35.0) and Belgium (35.0) represent longer-odds options for those backing a surprise deep run, while Japan at 50.0 is the longest-priced qualifier in the current board with a realistic knockout stage path.
| Team | Tournament Winner | To Reach Final |
| 🇫🇷 France | 6.0 | 3.75 |
| 🏴 England | 7.0 | 4.0 |
| 🇦🇷 Argentina | 9.0 | 4.5 |
| 🇧🇷 Brazil | 9.0 | 5.0 |
| 🇩🇪 Germany | 14.0 | 6.0 |
| 🇨🇴 Colombia | 35.0 | 15.0 |
| 🇧🇪 Belgium | 35.0 | 15.0 |
| 🇯🇵 Japan | 50.0 | 25.0 |
Why Crypto Fits the Pace of World Cup Betting
With 104 group matches spread across five weeks, the World Cup schedule runs nearly every day from June 11 onward. A winning bet on a Tuesday evening match should be accessible before Wednesday's fixtures kick off, and with crypto settlements, that timeline is consistent.
Beyond speed, placing World Cup bets through a crypto sportsbook removes geographic payment friction. There are no currency conversion fees, no card issuer blocks, and no delays tied to bank processing windows. The same availability you get for Premier League betting applies across every World Cup fixture from opening day through the final.
Whether you are focused on the group stage opening weekend, tracking a specific player's goalscoring run, or building a position in the outright winner market ahead of the knockouts, crypto keeps your bankroll accessible throughout the full 40-day tournament.
Bet on the 2026 FIFA World Cup Now
The 2026 FIFA World Cup runs from the June 11 group opener through to the July 19 final in New York. Group stage match odds, outright futures, player award markets, and binary prediction bets are all live here. Outrights and predictions close on June 11, so early positions carry the best pre-tournament prices. For in-progress matches during the group stage and knockout rounds, the live betting section updates odds in real time throughout each game. Pick your markets, back your picks at the price that makes sense, and follow every match from the first group game through the final.