World Cup Betting Odds 2026 (Updated Odds Daily)
In this article we collect all odds on the 2026 World Cup from UKGC licensed bookmakers.
England is once again participating in the World Cup, and has qualified for the Round of 32! This year the team is one of the favourites to lift the trophy.
This makes the tournament especially interesting for UK punters, and the UK bookies aren’t far behind. Making sure you have interesting odds for all your bets.
We will be updating World Cup odds for you daily.
World Cup betting odds:Key takeaways
- Germany and Netherlands are both out, beaten on penalties in the round of 32, and it’s shaken up the top of the outright market. France look the biggest beneficiaries, with Spain, Brazil and Argentina all still very much in the picture behind them.
- The bigger story is how fast prices are moving at this stage. A team can go from safe bet to eliminated within 90 minutes plus penalties, so anything you’re reading on an outright market should be treated as a snapshot rather than gospel, always check the live price before backing anything.
- With the group stage wrapped up, “to qualify” and group winner markets have nothing left to offer, that ship has sailed. The action’s moved on to match result, to reach the final, and stage of elimination markets, where every round adds another chapter to the story.
- England remain firmly in the conversation rather than a hopeful outsider, sitting just behind the new market leaders with a route through the bracket that looks kind on paper.
- The knockout rounds reward patience as much as conviction. Backing a team now for a deep run locks in a price before the market reacts to their next result, whereas waiting means chasing shorter odds if they keep winning.
Friday Odds Boosts – July 3rd
With the round of 32 coming to an end and the round of 16 starting, World Cup excitement levels are rising. And the bookies are following with odds. Here are the latest odds boosts:
Odds Boosts Odds Pharaohs Fire – Australia to Qualify; Mohamed Salah to Score Anytime; Over 2.5 Goals (Australia v Egypt) 9/2 Knockout Drama – 2+ Match Goals; 9+ Total Corners; 3+ Match Cards (Australia v Egypt) 7/2 Miami Masterclass – Argentina to Win Both Halves; Argentina Most Corners; Cape Verde Most Cards (Argentina v Cape Verde) 5/2 La Albiceleste Attack – Argentina 3+ Goals; Argentina 8+ Corners; Argentina 8+ Shots on Target (Argentina v Cape Verde) 6/1 Cafeteros Domination – Colombia to Win; Colombia Most Corners; Ghana Most Cards (Colombia v Ghana) 7/2 South American Flare – Colombia to Win; Luis Diaz 2+ Shots on Target; Luis Suarez 1+ Shots on Target (Colombia v Ghana) 5/1
Odds on England in the 2026 World Cup
England head into 2026 as one of the genuine contenders, and the bookies have priced them accordingly. From a near-certain Round of 32 spot to the longer shot of going all the way, here’s how the odds stack up across every stage of England’s tournament, and where the value lies as the Three Lions chase a first World Cup since 1966.
World Cup odds: Round of 32
The competition is heating up, with some big players already out in the round of 32, like Germany, Japan and Netherlands the odds have shifted massively. Here are the latest odds:
Match 1 X 2 Result South Africa v Canada, Sun 28 June N/A N/A N/A Canada won 0-1 Brazil v Japan, Mon 29 June N/A N/A N/A Brazil won 2-1 Germany v Paraguay, Monday 29 June N/A N/A N/A Draw 1-1 (Paraguay won 4-3 pens) Netherlands v Morocco, Tuesday 30 June N/A N/A N/A Draw 1-1 (Morocco won 3-2 pens) Ivory Coast v Norway, Tuesday 30 June N/A N/A N/A Norway won 2-1 France v Sweden, Tuesday 30 June N/A N/A N/A France won 3-0 Mexico v Ecuador, Wednesday 1 July N/A N/A N/A Mexico won 2-0 England v DR Congo, Wednesday 1 July 2/7 4/1 11/1 England won 2-1 Belgium v Senegal, Wednesday 1 July 6/5 11/5 5/2 Belgium won 3-2 USA v Bosnia & Herzegovina, Wednesday 1 July 12/25 10/3 6/1 USA
won 2-0Spain v Austria, Thursday 2 July 7/20 9/2 11/1 Spain
won 3-0Portugal v Croatia, Friday 3 July 5/6 27/10 17/4 Portugal
won 2-1Switzerland v Algeria, Friday 3 July 11/10 47/20 10/3 Switzerland won 2– Australia v Egypt, Friday 3 July 5/2 2/1 31/20 Pending Argentina v Cape Verde, Friday 3 July 2/11 7/1 20/1 Pending Colombia v Ghana, Saturday 4 July 10/11 23/10 10/1 Pending
Who wins the 2026 World Cup? Outright winner odds
With 48 teams in the mix for the first time, the outright market is bigger than ever, but the favourites are familiar faces. France and Spain lead the way, with England and Argentina not far behind. Below are the latest outright winner odds for all 48 nations, from the front-runners down to the 2500/1 outsiders.
Winner Sky Bet odds Paddy Power odds France 15/8 15/8 Spain 6/1 6/1 Argentina 4/1 4/1 England 9/1 9/1 Portugal 14/1 14/1 Brazil 11/1 11/1 USA 33/1 35/1 Norway 50/1 50/1 Morocco 25/1 25/1 Mexico 25/1 25/1 Colombia 33/1 33/1 Belgium 40/1 40/1 Switzerland 66/1 66/1 Canada 250/1 250/1 Egypt 500/1 500/1 Australia 500/1 500/1 Cape Verde 750/1 500/1 Paraguay 250/1 500/1 Croatia Eliminated in Round of 32 / Senegal Eliminated in Round of 32 / Austria Eliminated in Round of 32 / Algeria Eliminated in Round of 32 / Ghana Eliminated in Round of 32 / DR Congo Eliminated in Round of 32 / Bosnia & Herzegovina Eliminated in Round of 32 / South Africa Eliminated in Group Stage / Germany Eliminated in Round of 32 / Netherlands Eliminated in Round of 32 / Japan Eliminated in Round of 32 / Ivory Coast Eliminated in Round of 32 / Sweden Eliminated in Round of 32 / Ecuador Eliminated in Round of 32 / Uruguay Eliminated in Group Stage / South Korea Eliminated in Group Stage / Iran Eliminated in Group Stage / Turkey Eliminated in Group Stage / Tunisia Eliminated in Group Stage / Saudi Arabia Eliminated in Group Stage / New Zealand Eliminated in Group Stage / Uzbekistan Eliminated in Group Stage / Panama Eliminated in Group Stage / Scotland Eliminated in Group Stage / Czechia Eliminated in Group Stage / Iraq Eliminated in Group Stage / Qatar Eliminated in Group Stage / Curaçao Eliminated in Group Stage / Haiti Eliminated in Group Stage / Jordan Eliminated in Group Stage /
Who wins the Golden Boot?
The race for the World Cup’s top scorer is always one of the most popular markets, and 2026 has a stacked field of contenders. Kylian Mbappé and Harry Kane head the betting, with Messi, Haaland and Yamal all fancied to fire. Here are the latest Golden Boot odds for the players most likely to finish as the tournament’s leading marksman.
Player to win Golden Boot bet365 odds Sky Bet odds Kylian Mbappé (France) 11/2 1/1 Harry Kane (England) 13/2 16/1 Lionel Messi (Argentina) 12/1 7/5 Erling Haaland (Norway) 14/1 16/1 Lamine Yamal (Spain) 14/1 66/1 Mikel Oyarzabal (Spain) 16/1 66/1 Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal) 20/1 55/1 Ousmane Dembélé (France) 20/1 16/1 Lautaro Martínez (Argentina) 25/1 100/1 Vinícius Júnior (Brazil) 25/1 30/1 Jonathan David (Canada) 25/1 66/1 Julián Álvarez (Argentina) 33/1 100/1
Who wins the Golden Ball?
The Golden Ball goes to the tournament’s standout overall player, not just its top scorer, so creativity and influence count as much as goals.
Michael Olise and Kylian Mbappe are among the frontrunners for France, with Spain’s Lamine Yamal also firmly in the conversation.
Here are the latest Golden Ball odds for the players most likely to be named the tournament’s best.
Player bet365 odds Paddy Power odds Michael Olise (France) 11/2 9/2 Kylian Mbappe (France) 7/2 2/1 Lamine Yamal (Spain) 12/1 14/1 Pedri (Spain) 20/1 33/1 Jude Bellingham (England) 25/1 25/1 Lionel Messi (Argentina) 3/1 3/1 Vinicius Junior (Brazil) 12/1 12/1 Bruno Fernandes (Portugal) 20/1 16/1 Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal) 33/1 40/1 Erling Haaland (Norway) 28/1 12/1
Who wins the Golden Glove?
The Golden Glove rewards the tournament’s best goalkeeper, judged on clean sheets, saves and overall composure between the posts.
Mike Maignan heads the market on the back of France’s defensive record, with Spain’s Unai Simon and Argentina’s Emiliano Martinez also in the mix.
Here are the latest Golden Glove odds for the shot stoppers most likely to take the award.
Who wins the Best Young Player award?
Reserved for the tournament’s top performer aged 21 or under, this award has thrown up some of the World Cup’s breakout stars in recent editions. Lamine Yamal leads the betting after a stunning run of form for Spain, with a handful of teenage talents from elsewhere in the draw also fancied.
Here are the latest Best Young Player odds for the rising stars most likely to make this tournament their own.
Which player will have the most assists?
Often overlooked next to the Golden Boot, the most assists market rewards the player creating the most goals rather than scoring them. Bruno Fernandes leads the way after a record-breaking season of chance creation for Manchester United, with playmakers from across the tournament’s leading sides also in contention.
Here are the latest odds for the player most likely to top the assists charts.
Player bet365 odds Sky Bet odds Bruno Fernandes (Portugal) 25/1 20/1 Kevin De Bruyne (Belgium) 33/1 25/1 Jude Bellingham (England) 125/1 100/1 Pedri (Spain) 66/1 50/1 Michael Olise (France) 11/4 11/4 Lionel Messi (Argentina) 90/1 100/1 Kylian Mbappe (France) 66/1 66/1 Raphinha (Brazil) 100/1 100/1 Cole Palmer (England) 50/1 50/1
Group odds: Who wins, who qualifies, and who will be second
Before the knockouts come the groups, and that’s where plenty of punters find their early value. From the runaway favourites to the tight three-way battles, here are the latest odds on who wins each group and who makes it through to the Round of 32, broken down group by group.
Group A
| Country | Winner / Qualified / Eliminated |
|---|---|
| Mexico | Winner |
| South Korea | Eliminated |
| Czechia | Eliminated |
| South Africa | Qualified |
Group B
| Country | Winner / Qualified / Eliminated |
|---|---|
| Canada | Qualified |
| Switzerland | Winner |
| Bosnia and Herzegovina | Qualified |
| Qatar | Eliminated |
Group C
| Country | Winner / Qualified / Eliminated |
|---|---|
| Brazil | Winner |
| Morocco | Qualified |
| Scotland | Eliminated |
| Haiti | Eliminated |
Group D
| Country | Winner / Qualified / Eliminated |
|---|---|
| USA | Winner |
| Australia | Qualified |
| Paraguay | Qualified |
| Turkiye | Eliminated |
Group E
| Country | Winner / Qualified / Eliminated |
|---|---|
| Germany | Winner |
| Ivory Coast | Qualified |
| Ecuador | Qualified |
| Curacao | Eliminated |
Group F
| Country | Winner / Qualified / Eliminated |
|---|---|
| Netherlands | Winner |
| Japan | Qualified |
| Sweden | Qualified |
| Tunisia | Eliminated |
Group G
| Country | Winner / Qualified / Eliminated |
|---|---|
| Egypt | Qualified |
| Iran | Eliminated |
| Belgium | Winner |
| New Zealand | Eliminated |
Group H
| Country | Winner / Qualified / Eliminated |
|---|---|
| Spain | Winner |
| Uruguay | Eliminated |
| Cape Verde | Qualified |
| Saudi Arabia | Eliminated |
Group I
| Country | Winner / Qualified / Eliminated |
|---|---|
| France | Winner |
| Norway | Qualified |
| Senegal | Qualified |
| Iraq | Eliminated |
Group J
| Country | Winner / Qualified / Eliminated |
|---|---|
| Argentina | Winner |
| Austria | Qualified |
| Algeria | Qualified |
| Jordan | Eliminated |
Group K
| Country | Winner / Qualified / Eliminated |
|---|---|
| Colombia | Winner |
| DR Congo | Qualified |
| Portugal | Qualified |
| Uzbekistan | Eliminated |
Group L
| Country | Winner / Qualified / Eliminated |
|---|---|
| England | Winner |
| Ghana | Qualified |
| Panama | Eliminated |
| Croatia | Qualified |
Understanding World Cup odds
Odds are a numerical representation of how likely a bookmaker believes an outcome is. They tell you two things: your potential return, and the implied probability of the selection winning. UK bookmakers display odds in two formats, and most apps let you switch between them in the settings.
Fractional vs decimal odds
Fractional odds (e.g. 5/1) are the traditional UK format and show your profit relative to your stake: at 5/1, a £10 bet returns £50 profit plus your £10 stake back, for £60 in total. Decimal odds (e.g. 6.0) show your total return per £1 staked, stake included: 6.0 means a £10 bet returns £60. The two are just different ways of writing the same price – 5/1 is the same as 6.0.
Implied probability
Every price carries an implied probability. A selection at 5/1 implies roughly a 17% chance of winning, while a short-priced favourite at 1/2 implies around 67%. Working out the implied probability is the quickest way to judge whether a price represents value: if you think a team’s true chance is higher than the odds imply, the bet is worth considering.
Why odds move during a tournament
World Cup odds are not fixed. They shift in response to injuries, suspensions, squad announcements, results and sheer weight of money from other punters. A contender’s price can shorten dramatically after an impressive opening win, or drift after a defeat or a key injury.
What can you bet on? World Cup 2026 markets explained
One of the appeals of a World Cup is the sheer breadth of markets. Some run for the length of the tournament, others are settled in a single match. Here are the main ones you will come across.
Outright winner
The headline market: you back the nation you believe will lift the trophy. It settles only when the tournament is over, so an outright bet placed before kick-off rides with you all the way to the final in July. Prices shorten as contenders progress, so backing a team early can lock in a bigger price than waiting.
To reach the final & stage of elimination
If backing a team to win it all feels like a stretch, “to reach the final” lets you bet on a side making the showpiece regardless of whether they win it.
The “stage of elimination” market goes further, asking you to predict exactly how far a team will go – group stage, round of 32, round of 16, quarter-final, semi-final, runner-up or winner. It is a useful way to back a side you fancy to overperform or underperform without having to nail the exact outcome.
Group winner & to qualify
The “group winner” market asks you to pick which of the four teams will finish top of a given group, while “to qualify” simply requires a team to reach the knockout stage.
With 12 groups at World Cup 2026, group winner is one of the most popular ways to bet on the tournament. Bear in mind the 48-team format (see below) has made “to qualify” short for the bigger nations, so group winner often offers more meaningful odds on the favourites.
Top goalscorer & player awards
The Golden Boot, awarded to the tournament’s top scorer, is the most popular player market. You can also bet on the Golden Ball (best overall player), the Golden Glove (best goalkeeper) and the Best Young Player award. These settle across the whole tournament and reward backing a player you expect to feature deep into the knockouts.
Match markets
For individual games, the most common markets are:
- Match result (1X2): home win, draw or away win. Remember football has three outcomes – unlike many sports, the draw is a genuine option, and a “to win” bet loses if the game is level.
- Both teams to score (BTTS): a simple yes/no on whether both sides find the net.
- Over/Under goals: betting on the total number of goals being above or below a line, most commonly Over/Under 2.5.
- Correct score: predicting the exact scoreline – high risk, high reward.
- Double chance & Draw No Bet: safer alternatives that cover two outcomes, or return your stake if the match is drawn.
Player props, cards & corners
Beyond the result, bookmakers price up dozens of in-game markets: anytime and first goalscorer, shots and shots on target, player and team bookings, total cards, corners and more. These are where bet builders (below) come into their own.
Bet builders & same-game multis
A bet builder lets you combine several markets from the same match into a single wager, with the odds multiplying together for a bigger potential return.
For example, you might pair a team to win, Over 2.5 goals and a forward to score anytime, all in one bet. Every leg has to land for the bet to win, so the more you add, the longer the odds and the lower the chance of success.
Accumulators
An accumulator combines selections across different matches into one bet. With 104 games to choose from, accas are hugely popular at a World Cup – string together a handful of group winners or match results and the potential payout grows quickly. As with bet builders, every selection must win, so the probability compounds with each leg you add. The stats below are worth a look before you build one.
In-play (live) betting
In-play betting lets you bet during a match, with the odds updating constantly in response to the action. It opens up opportunities a pre-match bet cannot – we cover some specific in-play tactics for the group stage further down.
How to place a World Cup bet, step by step
Placing a bet on World Cup 2026 could not be easier. Here is the process from start to finish:
- Choose a UKGC-licensed bookmaker. Every official UK sportsbook is offering odds on the tournament. It is worth comparing sign-up offers first – see our World Cup betting offers page for the latest free bets and price boosts.
- Sign up and deposit. Register an account, complete the verification checks and deposit some money to get started.
- Find the World Cup. Navigate to the football section and select World Cup 2026, then choose the match or tournament market you want.
- Add your selection to the bet slip. Tap the odds next to your pick and it will drop into your bet slip.
- Enter your stake and confirm. Type in how much you want to bet, check the potential return the slip shows you, then place the bet.
Worked example – placing an outright bet: say you fancy Spain to win the tournament. Go to the outright winner market, select Spain, and they drop into your bet slip at their current price. Stake £10 at, for illustration, 5/1, and the slip will show a potential return of £60 (£50 profit plus your £10 stake). The bet then settles at the end of the final.
Settlement rules to know before you bet
A few rules trip up newcomers, so it is worth knowing how markets settle before you stake:
- 90 minutes plus stoppage time. Most match markets – match result, BTTS, Over/Under, goalscorers – settle on regulation time only. Extra time and penalties do not count unless the market explicitly says so. This matters most in the knockout rounds, where a team can win on penalties yet your “to win” bet still loses.
- The draw is a real outcome. Group-stage and regulation-time games can finish level, and a draw is a main option in the match-result market. If you back a team to win and the game is drawn, the bet loses.
- “To qualify” and “to advance” include everything. Unlike the match-result market, knockout “to qualify/advance” bets usually settle on who actually progresses – so they do include extra time and penalties.
- Draw No Bet returns your stake if the match is drawn, a useful safety net in tight games.
Vital stats for acca builders
With 104 games scheduled between 11th June and 19th July, World Cup 2026 provides ample betting opportunities, and accumulators are especially popular as a result. We have crunched the numbers using World Cup 2022 in Qatar as the benchmark to provide some useful reference points for acca builders. Bear in mind the nature of the expanded 2026 tournament could induce a change in approach from several sides, but these base rates are a sensible starting point:
- Average goals: 2.69 per game
- Over 1.5 goals: 73.4% hit rate
- Both teams to score: 46% hit rate
- Second-half goals: 61% of all goals scored after the break
- Yellow cards: 3.55 per game
- Total red cards: 4 across the tournament
- Goals in the first 10 minutes: 12
- Goals in the last 10 minutes: 33
The takeaway for acca builders: Over 1.5 goals is a far more reliable building block than Over 2.5 or both teams to score, both of which carry more variance than punters tend to expect.
Will there be any upsets?
There have already been a few! Cape Verde and Curaçao, as two of three smallest nations ever to qualify for a World Cup, have produced three huge shocks in their respective groups.
The African side, who topped a qualifying section ahead of Cameroon, held European Champions Spain to a goalless draw in their first ever game at the tournament, and backed that up with a stunning 2-2 draw with Uruguay which – on another day – they might’ve won.
The Caribbean islanders, meanwhile, showed great resolve in coming back from a sobering 7-1 defeat to Germany and held Ecuador to a 0-0 draw. Goalkeeper Eloy Room made history in making a record 15 saves to thwart the South Americans in that one!
While it made not have made headlines to the same extent, DR Congo frustrated Portugal – and Cristiano Ronaldo – in their opener too. It’s only the second time the Africans have qualified, and the first time under the name DR Congo – they were known as Zaire back in 1974.
With 48 teams and a brand-new Round of 32, we’re bound to see more as the newly-expanded tournament plays out. The format will see the majority of the third place teams in the group stages sneaking through, so a team many wrote off before a ball was kicked could still be standing in the Round of 16.
For punters, that unpredictability is the appeal. The favourites are favourites for a reason, but if the last few tournaments have taught us anything, it’s that the World Cup always finds a way to surprise. Backing an outsider to spring a group-stage shock, or an underdog to reach the latter rounds, is where some of the tournament’s best value tends to hide.
Biggest World Cup shocks in modern times
The World Cup has never been short of moments that turned the form book upside down. The bigger the favourite, the sweeter the fall – and recent tournaments have delivered some of the most spectacular shocks in the competition’s history.
Senegal 1-0 France (2002) – Reigning world champions France, with Zinedine Zidane, Thierry Henry et al, were beaten by the tournament debutants in the opening game and crashed out at the group stage without scoring a single goal.
Brazil 1-7 Germany (2014) – Not an underdog story, but arguably the most stunning scoreline ever. Host nation Brazil were dismantled in their own semi-final, four goals down inside 29 minutes in front of a stunned home crowd.
Germany 0-2 South Korea (2018) – The defending champions became the latest holders to fall at the first hurdle, dumped out in the group stage by South Korea in one of the great giant-killings.
Saudi Arabia 2-1 Argentina (2022) – Lionel Messi’s side, who would go on to lift the trophy weeks later, were beaten in their opener by a Saudi team ranked 51st in the world. The eventual champions losing their first game made it all the more remarkable.
Japan’s double (2022) – The Samurai Blue beat both Germany and Spain to top a group of heavyweights, coming from behind in both fixtures.
Morocco’s run to the semis (2022) – The Atlas Lions became the first African and first Arab nation to reach a World Cup semi-final, knocking out Spain and Portugal along the way.
And the shocks aren’t only on the pitch: Italy, four-time winners, have now failed to qualify for three tournaments in a row, missing 2026 after losing to Bosnia and Herzegovina in a playoff.
Does England have a shot at winning?
England arrive in North America as one of the genuine favourites to win the 2026 World Cup, sitting just behind France and Spain at the top of the market and level with Argentina in the chasing pack. For UK punters, that puts the Three Lions firmly in the conversation rather than as hopeful outsiders, and the draw has been kind.
The route is about as favourable as England could have wished for. They go in as strong favourites to win Group L ahead of Croatia, who they defeated in matchday one, plus Ghana and Panama, and the bookies rate them among the safer bets to reach the quarter-finals. From there, the odds still lean their way to reach the semis and go all the way to the final, a price ladder that reflects a side expected to go deep rather than flatter to deceive.
Up front, England have arguably the most reliable finisher in the tournament. Harry Kane comes in off the most prolific season of his career, 61 goals in 51 appearances for Bayern Munich, and is England’s all-time leading scorer as well as the team’s penalty taker.
He’s among the leading fancies for the Golden Boot, and with Thomas Tuchel having built the attack around him, England’s outright chances and Kane’s individual markets are closely linked. Add in back-to-back European Championship final appearances in 2021 and 2024, and this is a squad with real tournament pedigree behind it.
FAQ
What are the shortest odds to win the 2026 World Cup?
France are the shortest price at 4/1, followed by Spain at 5/1. England and Argentina are next at 13/2, then Portugal at 11/1 and Brazil and Germany at 12/1.
What are the best value outsiders in the outright market?
Among the mid-priced teams, Belgium and Colombia (both 50/1) and Switzerland and Croatia (both 100/1) stand out as sides with the squad depth to outperform their odds. Norway at 33/1 also catch the eye given they’re as short as 3/1 to win their group.
Who is favourite for the Golden Boot and at what odds?
Kylian Mbappé leads at 11/2, with Harry Kane at 13/2. Lionel Messi is 12/1, while Erling Haaland and Lamine Yamal are both 14/1.
What odds are Harry Kane to be top scorer?
Harry Kane is 13/2 for the Golden Boot, second only to Mbappé and the shortest-priced England player in the market.
Which group is the hardest to call on odds?
Group G is the tightest at the top, with Egypt (20/37), Iran (47/20) and Belgium (47/20) closely matched to win it. Group B is also competitive once you look past the favourites, with Bosnia and Herzegovina at 30/1 to win and 7/2 to qualify.
Where can I find tips and predictions for the 2026 World Cup?
Odds tell you what the bookies think, but they don’t tell you where the value is. For match-by-match analysis, best bets and outright predictions, see our 2026 World Cup tips and predictions, updated throughout the tournament as the picture changes from the group stage to the knockouts.
What betting offers are available for the 2026 World Cup?
Most UKGC-licensed bookmakers are running enhanced odds, free bets and acca boosts to mark the tournament. To make the most of the prices on this page, check our roundup of the latest World Cup betting offers and free bets before placing your bets, so you’re claiming the best welcome offers and ongoing promotions available.
About the author
Nathan Hill
Nathan Hill is an experienced sports writer who obsessively follows football – both the round ball and American kind – as well as range of other sports including F1, basketball, darts and snooker.
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