These 5 NFL Teams are the Most Likely to Win Super Bowl LX

“At Super Bowl” Licensed Under CC BY-NC-ND 1.0

The 2025 NFL season is stone’s throw from kicking off, and you know what that means: Super Bowl LX picks are rolling in like an avalanche.

This is standard protocol for all major North American sports leagues. Championship predictions ramp up during preseason play, just before the beginning of their regular seasons. The proliferation of legal sports betting in the United States has only served to inflate this practice—and the interest in it. No sports in the U.S. is more popular to bet on than football. More specifically, the NFL is the creme de le creme among all pro leagues.

Betting lines to win Super LX are available early and everywhere. When interest reaches a fever pitch, though, they can change often and be difficult to track. That’s why monitoring them at MyTopSportsbooks and other trustworthy sites has become a favored practice. Not only is real-time accuracy a luxury, but you customers can also shop around for their most appealing Super Bowl odds across the web. 

And yes, devoting some time to the impact of sports betting on the NFL is absolutely prescient when talking about contenders. For the Super Bowl in 2025, Americans wagered an estimated $1.39 billion on the big game alone, according to ESPN. The NFL futures market can be just as lucrative.

Also, even if you are not an avid gambler, a comprehensive ranking of the team’s most likely to win Super Bowl XL still carries a ton of interest. It is a primer for the season, or at the very least a valuable discussion point.

Enter the reason why we are here. These five NFL teams are laying the best Super Bowl 2026 odds entering Week 1 of the regular season. Whether they are the right selections is for us all to decide.

  1. Baltimore Ravens (+650)

The Baltimore Ravens continue to hold strong among most odds-to-win ladders. Quite frankly, this is something of a surprise.

Sure, Lamar Jackson is among the best QB1s in the game—a threat to win MVP in any given season. The Ravens also took a top-10 defense overall and proceeded to improve its pass defense. By the end of the NFL draft, they wound up with two consensus top-25 prospects in safety Malaki Starks and edge Rusher Mike Breen.

This isn’t to say the two rookies are a luxury. Baltimore last season ranked 31 first in total passing yards allowed, as well as 19th in total passing touchdowns allowed. This team needs its newbies to help generate pressure up front and lock down the secondary.

Quite frankly, this could be a tall order. There seems to be some combustibility to the Ravens’ stock as a result. They are absolutely a Super Bowl contender, but the absolute favorite comes off as a stretch.

  1. Buffalo Bills (+750)

A spotty defensive line wound up undermining a mesmerizing 13-4 campaign from Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills last year. The team turned in its worst third-down and passing defense over the past eight years. 

Buffalo has addressed this issue via the draft. Not only did they add free agents like Joey Bosa, Larry Ogunjobi and Michael Hoecht. They also drafted Deone Walker, Landon Jackson and T.J. Sanders, all of whom could find themselves in the regular rotation from Week 1. 

If the passing defense winds up hovering around the league average, the Bills have a stronger case as odds-on favorites than the Ravens. 

  1. Philadelphia Eagles (+750)

Reigning champs always curry favor in this discussion unless they have blown their core to smithereens. The Philadelphia Eagles have not. Most of their key players are all back, and franchise quarterback Jalen Hurts remains young enough that he could still get better.

Of course, the offseason wasn’t all sunshine and dandelions for this group. A handful of standout edge rushers in Josh Sweat and Brandon Graham are gone. The same goes for cornerback Darius Slay Jr. and safety C.J. Garner-Johnson. This could compromise what was no worse than the second-best defense in the NFL last year.

Philadelphia offsets some of the uncomfortable vibes by returning its entire linebacker core, while also having added Jihaad Campbell with a first-round pick. Still, the Eagles’ offensive may need to do more of the heavy lifting compared to last year. That explains why they “slip” to third, even though they play in the weaker conference.

  1. Kansas City Chiefs (+800)

None of us are used to seeing the Kansas City Chiefs tumble outside the top two or three of this exercise. But it’s a new day. 

Numerous long postseason runs have a way of grating upon a core. The Chiefs have made five Super Bowls in the past seven years, winning three of them. The two years in which they didn’t make the championship they still made it to the conference championship game. 

At the same time, Hollywood Brown’s and Rashee Rice’s return from injuries should supercharge an offense that struggled in the deep-ball department for arguably the first time of the Patrick Mahomes era. Kansas City did recently deal away Skyy Moore, but as Arrowhead Addict’s Matt Connor noted, he didn’t profile as a major piece of the puzzle anywhere. 

Basically, if you still believe Mahomes is the best QB1 in the game, the Chiefs belong no lower than second—regardless of what the odds say. 

  1. Detroit Lions (+1000)

There seems to be a “plays in the NFC” bump happening here for the Detroit Lions

Sure, they were one of the best overall units in football last season. But the defense showed some cracks as time wore on, culminating in the 45 points they gave up to the Washington Commanders in their divisional round loss.

The front office has nevertheless done a good job of continuing to surround quarterback Jared Goff with weapons and pass protection. Whether they have done enough to improve a passing defense that 23rd in net yards allowed per passing attempt and 30th in overall passing yards surrendered is a separate matter.

We do not think they did, and we prefer rolling with a longer shot like the San Francisco 49ers (+1900) or Green Bay Packers (+1900) for the fifth spot as a result.

By Jess Klintan

Jess Klintan, Editor in Chief and writer here on Sportsrater.co.uk Email: sportsrater5@gmail.com

Related Post

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *