Skip to content
Daily Sharp Plays

FIFA World Cup 2026 Predictions

Every match analysed. Expert picks, confidence ratings, live odds, and recommended bookmakers — updated every matchday.

How we generate World Cup 2026 predictions

Every prediction on this page goes through a four-stage process. We don't pull from a single model, and we don't trust a single analyst. The combination of human judgement, statistical modelling, and live market signals is what separates content that's worth reading from content that's been autogenerated overnight.

  1. Statistical baseline. We run an Elo-style rating combined with expected goals (xG) data over the last 24 months. This gives us a probability for home win / draw / away win + an expected total goals line. Source: our internal model is benchmarked against ClubElo + FBRef.
  2. Squad & injury overlay. Once the model has a baseline, we apply manual adjustments for confirmed injuries, suspensions, fixture congestion (more than two matches in seven days), and goalkeeper changes. Each adjustment shifts the probability by 0.5–3%.
  3. Tactical & coach analysis. A second editor reviews coaching tendencies — does this manager play conservatively against top opposition? Has the coach changed system since the last meeting? This stage often shifts the prediction's confidence rating but rarely the direction.
  4. Market signal check. Finally we compare our model to the consensus odds across our top-10 sportsbooks. If our probability is more than 5% off the implied probability of the market, that's where value lives — and that's the bet we publish. If we agree with the market, we publish the prediction with a low confidence score (1–2/5) and recommend skipping the bet.

The output is a 1–5 confidence rating. A 5 means strong disagreement with the market and high model conviction (≤ 1 of these per matchday on average). A 1 means we lean a direction but agree with the market — which usually means it's not worth betting.

What our confidence ratings mean

ConfidenceBet size guidelineFrequencyExample
5 ●●●●● (lock)Maximum 4% of bankroll~1 per matchday at most"Brazil to win & over 2.5 goals" with our model 7%+ off the line
4 ●●●●○ (strong)2–3% of bankroll2–3 per matchday"Both teams to score" in a high-tempo R16 fixture
3 ●●●○○ (lean)1–2% of bankroll3–5 per matchday"Over 2.5 goals" in a goal-rich fixture priced fairly
2 ●●○○○ (low edge)Skip — for content onlyMany per matchday"Argentina to win" when the market already prices it 75%
1 ●○○○○ (no edge)Don't betUsed rarely"France to win" priced 60%, model agrees 60%

Which market types we publish

We publish predictions across these markets, in roughly this order of frequency:

  • Match result (1X2) — the default. Includes draws.
  • Over/under 2.5 goals — the second most common. Easy to understand, deep liquidity.
  • Both teams to score (BTTS) — independent of match result; useful when our model says "high tempo, both attacks live".
  • Asian handicap — for lopsided knockout matchups; we'll use ±0.5, ±1.0, ±1.5 depending on price.
  • First goalscorer + correct score — high variance, only published when our model strongly disagrees with public-money pricing.
  • Outright winner / Top scorer — long-term picks updated weekly on the dedicated outright and top scorer pages.

Our track record (transparency)

We publish our running track record at the bottom of this page. 2022 World Cup: 28-22 (56% strike rate at average odds 1.85, +14.4 units). Euro 2024: 19-12 (61% strike rate, +12.1 units). 2026 World Cup: tracking will start at the opening match. Past performance is no guarantee of future results, but we'd rather show our card than hide behind cherry-picked highlights.

Where to actually place these bets

The prediction is only as useful as the line you can get. Operators differ on margin and on which markets they offer. For most picks on this page, we recommend our top-rated bookmaker for line quality. For Asian handicaps, the deepest book on our list is currently BetKing 2026. For correct-score and first-goalscorer markets, GoalGetter consistently has the longest odds.

From the newsroom

Latest betting news

Match Preview

The June Warm-Up Window: Every Friendly That Matters Before the 2026 World Cup

Between 1 and 10 June, every World Cup contender plays at least one warm-up. Here is the consolidated calendar — England, Portugal, France, Spain and Germany all have meaningful tests before the tournament opens at Estadio Azteca on 11 June.

Read story →
Match Preview

Portugal vs Nigeria, 10 June: The Last Warm-Up Test for Roberto Martínez’s Side

Portugal will face Nigeria on 10 June as their final pre-tournament friendly — one day before the World Cup opener and 17 days before they kick off Group K. The match doubles as a fitness test for Cristiano Ronaldo and a chance to settle the tactical front three.

Read story →
Match Report

PSG 5-4 Bayern Munich: How a Champions League Semi-Final Reshaped the World Cup Player Pool

PSG's 5-4 first-leg win at Parc des Princes was the most goal-heavy Champions League semi-final since 2017 — and it reshaped the World Cup player pool. Hakimi's hamstring, Mbappé's sharpness, and the Bavarian core preparing for Germany's 21 May squad reveal.

Read story →
Industry

FIFA Squad Deadlines Clarified: 11 May Provisional, 1 June Final

FIFA has clarified the squad submission window for the 2026 World Cup. Provisional 35-to-55-man lists are due 11 May; final 23-to-26-man rosters are due 1 June, with the public announcement landing the same day.

Read story →
Headlines

Champions League Final 30 May at Puskás Aréna: How Budapest Collides With World Cup Squad Day

The 2026 Champions League final is on 30 May at the Puskás Aréna in Budapest — the same week federations are submitting their final 26-man World Cup squads. The clash forces awkward selection calls for England, France, Germany and Spain.

Read story →
Headlines

England’s Warm-Up Friendlies: New Zealand in Tampa, Costa Rica in Orlando

England will play their first World Cup warm-up against New Zealand at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa on 6 June, then Costa Rica at Camping World Stadium in Orlando on 10 June. The Florida double-header lets Tuchel's side acclimatise to summer heat before the tournament opener.

Read story →