2026 World Cup Odds: Who Will Win, Reach the Final and the Semi-Finals?
1xBet has published its most comprehensive odds for the biggest football tournament in history. Forty-eight teams. Three host nations. One trophy. The 2026 World Cup is the largest in the tournament’s history, and the expanded format has made the betting markets simultaneously more interesting and more complicated. More teams means more potential upsets, more stories, more paths to the final — and a prize pool of knockout drama that no previous edition could match. What the odds tell us, though, is that for all the democratic ambition of the new format, the top of the mountain looks remarkably familiar. Spain, England, France, Brazil and Argentina occupy the five shortest prices. Some things don’t change, no matter how many teams you invite.
Who Will Win the 2026 World Cup
| Team | 1xBet |
|---|---|
| Spain | 5.95 |
| England | 6.85 |
| Brazil | 7.40 |
| France | 7.60 |
| Argentina | 9.70 |
| Portugal | 10.50 |
| Germany | 13.70 |
| Netherlands | 23.00 |
| Norway | 28.00 |
| Belgium | 38.00 |
| USA | 46.00 |
| Switzerland | 46.00 |
| Colombia | 55.00 |
| Morocco | 55.00 |
| Japan | 70.00 |
| Uruguay | 70.00 |
| Mexico | 85.00 |
| Croatia | 85.00 |
| Ecuador | 85.00 |
| Algeria | 100.00 |
| Senegal | 100.00 |
| Austria | 100.00 |
| Paraguay | 100.00 |
| Sweden | 100.00 |
| Czech Republic | 100.00 |
| Turkey | 100.00 |
| Egypt | 100.00 |
| Australia | 100.00 |
| Canada | 100.00 |
| Scotland | 100.00 |
| Bosnia and Herzegovina | 100.00 |
| Ivory Coast | 100.00 |
| South Korea | 100.00 |
| Tunisia | 100.00 |
| Ghana | 100.00 |
| Iran | 100.00 |
| DR Congo | 100.00 |
| Saudi Arabia | 100.00 |
| Uzbekistan | 100.00 |
| Jordan | 100.00 |
| Iraq | 100.00 |
| New Zealand | 100.00 |
| Cape Verde | 100.00 |
| Panama | 100.00 |
| Qatar | 100.00 |
| Curacao | 100.00 |
| Haiti | 100.00 |
| South Africa | 100.00 |
The Elite Tier: Spain, England, France, Brazil and Argentina
The top five in this market are not an accident. They represent a genuine concentration of quality, coaching experience and tournament pedigree that the rest of the field cannot currently match.
Spain enter as the shortest-priced side and the most convincing case for favouritism. They are FIFA’s top-ranked team, European champions, and playing some of the most attractive and effective football in the world under Luis de la Fuente. The squad has Lamine Yamal at 18, Rodri in the engine room, Pedri driving from midfield — and that is before you mention Dani Olmo, Alejandro Grimaldo or Mikel Oyarzabal. Spain’s draw in Group H against Uruguay, Saudi Arabia and Cape Verde is among the most manageable for any top seed. If they stay healthy and avoid the kind of penalty shootout collapse that ended their 2018 and 2022 campaigns, they are the most complete team in the tournament.
England sit just behind at 6.85, and the price reflects both genuine quality and genuine scepticism. The Three Lions have finished third at the 2018 World Cup, reached the Euro 2020 and Euro 2024 finals, and carry a squad depth — Bellingham, Saka, Foden, Alexander-Arnold, Rice — that few nations can rival. What they have not done is win anything. The market is pricing in both possibilities: a squad talented enough to lift the trophy, and a team with a recent history of almost.
France are the defending finalists, having pushed Argentina to the very end in Qatar. The new generation — Mbappe, Olise, Dembele, Camavinga, Tchouameni — is arguably the most talented France have assembled since the Zidane era. Their draw in Group I with Norway, Senegal and Iraq is reasonably kind. If Mbappe is firing, France are capable of winning any game against any opponent.
Brazil are the five-time champions and the only team to have appeared at all 23 World Cups. Carlo Ancelotti’s appointment as head coach brings tactical sophistication and Champions League experience. The squad around Vinicius Junior, Rodrygo, Raphinha and Casemiro is formidable. But Brazil’s qualifying campaign was unexpectedly difficult, and the 7.40 price reflects some doubt about whether Ancelotti has had sufficient time to build a coherent system around his extraordinary individual talent.
Argentina are the defending champions and arrive with Messi for what is almost certainly his final tournament. The 9.70 places them slightly behind the European trio, which arguably underestimates what this squad can do — they have Alvarez, De Paul, Mac Allister, Fernandez and Romero supporting their captain, and Martinez between the posts for penalty shootouts. The question is sustainability: can a squad built so specifically around Messi function at peak level if he is managed carefully through the group stage?
The Second Wave: Portugal, Germany, Netherlands and Norway
Portugal at 10.50 represent excellent value if you believe the squad depth around Ronaldo — Fernandes, Leao, Bernardo Silva, Ramos, Neves — can deliver. Germany at 13.70 are rebuilding around Wirtz and Musiala in the most exciting way the Mannschaft have managed since their 2014 triumph, with a draw in Group E that is one of the most favourable for any top seed.
Netherlands at 23.00 are the most statistically unlucky team in World Cup history — three finals without a title in 1974, 1978 and 2010. The current squad, with Van Dijk, Gravenberch, Simons and Gakpo, is strong enough to reach the later rounds. But the Dutch bracket presents challenges: a potential round of 16 meeting with a strong third-placed side and a quarter-final path that could involve France or Brazil.
Norway at 28.00 are the tournament’s most interesting second-wave option. Haaland scored 16 goals in eight qualifying games. Odegaard controls the tempo. They are in Group I with France, Senegal and Iraq — a challenging group that nonetheless offers a clear route to second place. If they advance, a round of 16 clash likely involves a beatable opponent. At 28.00, Norway represent genuine value for those who believe Haaland can replicate his club form on the international stage.
The Dark Horses: Colombia, Morocco, Belgium, Japan and Turkey
Colombia at 55.00 are seriously underpriced by some bookmakers. Their 28-match unbeaten run, Copa America 2024 silver medal, James Rodriguez’s continued brilliance and Luiz Diaz’s transformation into one of the world’s elite wide players make them a legitimate quarter-final contender. Morocco at 55.00 are the highest-placed African team in the market and the only one with a realistic claim to reaching the final stages — their 2022 semi-final run was not a fluke.
Belgium at 38.00 are transitioning from promise to performance with Onana, De Ketelaere, Doku and Openda. Japan at 70.00 have reached the round of 16 at each of their last four World Cups with their most talented squad ever assembled, though a coaching change just before the tournament introduces uncertainty. Turkey at 100.00, with Guler and Yildiz alongside Calhanoglu, are priced as pure outsiders but carry real threat in the knockout phase if they advance from Group D.
The teams at 100.00 flat represent a wide range of actual probability. Uruguay with Bielsa and Valverde are genuinely capable of a deep run. Mexico, as hosts with the Azteca behind them, deserve respect. Ecuador, with the best defensive record in South American qualifying, are not simply making up numbers. But for teams like Cape Verde, Curacao, Haiti and South Africa, 100.00 is the floor rather than an honest assessment of realistic title ambitions.
Who Will Reach the Final
New wpDataTable
| Team | 1xBet |
|---|---|
| Spain | 3.25 |
| England | 3.75 |
| France | 4.50 |
| Brazil | 4.75 |
| Argentina | 5.00 |
| Portugal | 5.75 |
| Germany | 6.00 |
| Netherlands | 9.00 |
| Norway | 13.00 |
| Belgium | 15.00 |
| Switzerland | 19.00 |
| USA | 19.00 |
| Colombia | 20.00 |
| Morocco | 21.00 |
| Uruguay | 23.00 |
| Japan | 24.00 |
| Croatia | 25.00 |
| Mexico | 26.00 |
| Ecuador | 30.00 |
| Senegal | 31.00 |
| Turkey | 31.00 |
| Canada | 34.00 |
| Sweden | 41.00 |
| Paraguay | 43.00 |
| Austria | 43.00 |
| Bosnia and Herzegovina | 55.00 |
| Scotland | 60.00 |
| South Korea | 70.00 |
| Czech Republic | 80.00 |
| Egypt | 80.00 |
| Ivory Coast | 80.00 |
| Algeria | 90.00 |
| Iran | 100.00 |
| Tunisia | 100.00 |
| Australia | 100.00 |
| DR Congo | 100.00 |
| Ghana | 100.00 |
| Saudi Arabia | 100.00 |
| Iraq | 100.00 |
| New Zealand | 100.00 |
| Panama | 100.00 |
| Cape Verde | 100.00 |
| Uzbekistan | 100.00 |
| Jordan | 100.00 |
| Qatar | 100.00 |
| Curacao | 100.00 |
| Haiti | 100.00 |
| South Africa | 100.00 |
The finalist market reveals something important: the bracket matters enormously, and in a 48-team tournament with an extended group stage and a round of 32 before the proper knockout begins, the draw is more significant than ever.
Spain’s path from Group H — facing Uruguay, Saudi Arabia and Cape Verde — gives them the softest route of any major contender through to the round of 16. A price of 3.25 for reaching the final is a market saying: this team is not only the best side, it is also the best placed.
England’s 3.75 reflects a slightly more demanding expected bracket. Group F with Japan, Sweden and Tunisia is manageable, but the knockout path leads through more unpredictable territory. England’s penalty record adds an additional element of uncertainty that every price in their market quietly incorporates.
The most interesting comparison in this section is USA at 19.00 versus Colombia at 20.00. The Americans have home advantage, crowd support and genuine quality in Pulisic, Balogun and Reyna. But Colombia’s price signals real belief in James, Diaz and Lorenzo’s system — and a potential bracket that avoids Spain until the semi-final.
Norway’s 13.00 for reaching the final is one of the more intriguing numbers in the market. A team that finished with a perfect qualifying record, led by the leading scorer in the history of World Cup qualification, is being given roughly a one-in-thirteen chance of reaching the final. That feels like reasonable value for anyone who believes Haaland can replicate his club output on the international stage.
Who Will Reach the Semi-Finals
The semi-final market is where the conversation becomes genuinely interesting, because this is the stage where individual brilliance and bracket fortune converge most dramatically.
Spain’s price of 2.375 is the shortest in any of the three markets and makes them the firm overall favourite across all three stages — implying roughly a 40% probability of being in the final four. France at 2.62 sit just behind, with their path from Group I offering a clear runway to the later stages if Mbappe and Olise are both performing.
The most striking number in this table is Colombia at 7.00. Across all three markets — winner, finalist, semi-finalist — Colombia’s price has been consistently underestimated by some bookmakers. A team with Luiz Diaz, James Rodriguez, Davinson Sanchez and a coach who built a 28-match unbeaten run should not be priced as a semi-final outsider.
USA at 19.00 is another number worth examining, with home advantage and growing squad quality creating real uncertainty about how far Pulisic and company can go. At 19.00, the market is saying there is roughly a one-in-nineteen chance the home nation reaches the semi-finals of their own World Cup — which would recall 2002’s extraordinary sequence of results.
Belgium at 15.00 for the semi-finals deserves attention. This is a team in transition between generations, with genuine attacking talent in Doku, Openda and De Ketelaere. If the new core delivers what qualifying suggested, the semi-final is not an unreasonable ambition.
Norway at 5.00 is perhaps the most compelling number across all three tables. Haaland at a World Cup is genuinely new information — nobody knows what he does at this stage, and the market has not fully accounted for a centre-forward who scored 16 goals in eight qualifying games.
Our Predictions
Spain win the 2026 World Cup. This is not simply a market position — it is the most defensively sound conclusion from everything this tournament presents. They have the best player in the world right now in Lamine Yamal, the best holding midfielder in Rodri, the most technically sophisticated squad in the competition, and the most favourable expected bracket of any major contender. The system under De la Fuente is clear, collective and repeatable under pressure.
The final: Spain vs France. Two of the three shortest-priced teams in the tournament, from opposite sides of the expected bracket. France’s path from Group I — through Norway, Senegal and Iraq, then potentially into a round of 16 against a third-placed side — gives them a clear runway to the later stages. Mbappe, Olise and Dembele against Yamal, Pedri and Olmo is the final the tournament deserves, and the one the bookmakers are quietly pricing towards.
Semi-finalists: Brazil and England complete the final four. Brazil’s individual quality — Vinicius, Raphinha and Rodrygo supported by Guimaraes and Casemiro — is too strong for any team below the absolute elite. England’s path from Group F, combined with the depth of their squad, makes them the most natural opponents for Spain on the opposite side of the draw. At Euro 2024, Spain beat England in the final. There is a real chance the 2026 World Cup final tells an almost identical story.
The tournament’s great dark horse is Norway. Haaland at a World Cup is genuinely new information — nobody knows what he does at this stage. If Norway emerge from Group I and avoid Spain or France until the quarter-final, a semi-final appearance is not a fantasy. At 28.00 to win the tournament outright, the value case is real.
All Groups WC-2026 at 1xBet



Aiden Brooks 
