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NFL Odds

NFL Championship Game Winner

Kansas City Chiefs
Baltimore Ravens
San Francisco 49ers
Detroit Lions
Buffalo Bills
Houston Texans
Minnesota Vikings
Philadelphia Eagles
Dallas Cowboys
Green Bay Packers
Atlanta Falcons
New York Jets
Washington Commanders
Cincinnati Bengals
Chicago Bears
Pittsburgh Steelers
Seattle Seahawks
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Arizona Cardinals
Los Angeles Chargers
New Orleans Saints
Indianapolis Colts
Jacksonville Jaguars
Denver Broncos
Miami Dolphins
Cleveland Browns
Los Angeles Rams
New York Giants
Tennessee Titans
Las Vegas Raiders
New England Patriots
Carolina Panthers

NFL Championship Game: Exact Outcome - Divisions

NFC North to beat AFC West
AFC West to beat NFC North
AFC North to beat NFC North
NFC North to beat AFC North
NFC West to beat AFC West
AFC West to beat NFC West
AFC West to beat NFC East
AFC North to beat NFC West
AFC East to beat NFC North
NFC East to beat AFC West
NFC North to beat AFC East
AFC South to beat NFC North
NFC West to beat AFC North
NFC East to beat AFC North
NFC North to beat AFC South
AFC North to beat NFC East
NFC West to beat AFC East
AFC East to beat NFC West
AFC East to beat NFC East
NFC East to beat AFC East
NFC West to beat AFC South
AFC South to beat NFC West
NFC East to beat AFC South
AFC West to beat NFC South
AFC South to beat NFC East
NFC South to beat AFC West
AFC North to beat NFC South
NFC South to beat AFC North
NFC South to beat AFC East
AFC East to beat NFC South
NFC South to beat AFC South
AFC South to beat NFC South

NFL odds guide

What do NFL odds look like?

There are three common NFL betting lines: the side, total and moneyline.

Side: The side refers to the point spread. While the odds can fluctuate, most sides are -110, meaning you have to bet $110 to win $100.

Cowboys -7 -100

Giants +7 -110

In that example, the Cowboys are a 7-point favorite and must win by more than 7 to win the bet. If the game ends with a 7-point Cowboys win, the bet is a push and you get your money back.

Total: The total also generally has -110 odds on each side. The sportsbook sets a line, such as 48.5, and bettors decide whether the game will go over or under that total.

Moneyline: The moneyline removes the point spread. Bettors take a team to win straight up.

Packers -200

Bears +180

In this example, a bettor must lay $200 to win $100 on the Packers. A $100 bet on the Bears would win $180, but Chicago has to win straight up.

Are there extra bets for big games like the Super Bowl?

Sportsbooks will offer proposition bets, or “props,” on big games. Props are famously associated with Super Bowl betting.

For the Super Bowl there are prop bets on many different things, like which player will score the first touchdown and even the color of the Gatorade dumped on the winning coach. A common prop bet is on yards for specific players, such as “Tom Brady over/under 305.5 passing yards.”