Knockout Odds
    LeaderboardNewsFeedFightersSportsbooks

    Boxing Odds Comparison

    Compare real-time boxing betting odds from 15+ sportsbooks side by side — PPVs, DAZN/ESPN+ main events, and regional cards, with the best moneyline highlighted on every fight.

    Why compare boxing odds across sportsbooks?

    Lines are pulled continuously from DraftKings, FanDuel, BetMGM, Bovada, BetUS, Pinnacle, and more, so the number on screen matches what the sportsbook is currently offering. Odds update within minutes of any movement — if a book pulls a line ahead of weigh-ins, you'll see it. Alongside moneylines we surface over/under rounds, method-of-victory markets (KO/TKO, decision, draw), round betting, and fight specials where sportsbooks post them.

    Boxing is a less-efficient betting market than the major US sports, and the same bout can trade 20+ cents apart between books on fight week. On a championship moneyline priced at -180 vs +160, locking in the best price instead of the worst compounds into real returns over a full year of cards. Shopping odds is effectively free alpha — especially on big-name fighters where public books skew the favorite harder than the sharp books do.

    Tap any fight for the full book-by-book breakdown, recent odds movement, and community fan-pick percentages. If you're new to boxing betting, the Education section covers how to read a moneyline, when to take the underdog, and what the odds movement is telling you in the final 24 hours.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Where can I compare boxing odds?
    Knockout Odds is one of the only sites that compares boxing odds from 15+ sportsbooks on a single page. We show real-time moneyline odds from DraftKings, FanDuel, BetMGM, Bovada, BetUS, Pinnacle, and more for every upcoming boxing fight — from world title PPVs to regional cards.
    What sportsbooks offer boxing betting?
    Most major US sportsbooks offer boxing betting, including DraftKings, FanDuel, BetMGM, Bovada, BetUS, and BetRivers. Pinnacle is the sharpest book internationally. Boxing odds are typically available 1-2 weeks before a fight and are updated as money comes in and trainers release fight-week news.
    How do boxing odds work?
    Boxing odds are displayed as American moneyline odds. A favorite might be -250 (bet $250 to win $100) while an underdog might be +200 (bet $100 to win $200). Comparing odds across sportsbooks helps you find the best payout for your pick. Even a small difference — like +170 at one book vs +160 at another — compounds meaningfully over many bets.
    What boxing bet types are available?
    Boxing betting markets include moneyline (picking a winner), over/under total rounds, method of victory (KO/TKO, decision, draw), round betting (exact round of a finish), and fight specials like "fight goes the distance" or "both fighters to score a knockdown". Knockout Odds compares moneyline across every book and surfaces the rest on individual fight pages where books post them.
    Which sportsbook has the best boxing odds?
    It depends on the fight. For high-profile PPVs, FanDuel and DraftKings often compete aggressively on favorites while Bovada and BetUS sometimes post better underdog prices. For less-covered regional cards, Pinnacle is usually the sharpest book in the world. Knockout Odds highlights the best available moneyline on every fight so you don't have to check each book individually.
    Why do boxing odds vary so much between sportsbooks?
    Boxing is a less-liquid market than the NFL or NBA, which means books move lines more aggressively to balance action and often don't match each other. Variance of 20-30 cents on the same fight between books is common, especially 1-2 weeks out. That spread is the opportunity — taking the best available price consistently adds up, and it's free if you can see every book's number at once.
    What happens to a boxing bet if the fight ends in a draw?
    Draws are a real possible outcome in boxing (unlike UFC where they're rare). Moneyline bets typically settle as a loss if the fight is scored a draw, though some books offer a separate draw option that pays out higher odds if you call it right. Always check the specific rules on the sportsbook you're betting with, especially for fights that look close on paper or fight-week buzz suggests controversy at the scorecards.
    May 25 – 31
    Jun 1 – 7
    Jun 8 – 14
    Jun 15 – 21
    Jun 22 – 28
    Jun 29 – Jul 5
    Jul 20 – 26
    Jul 27 – Aug 2
    Sep 7 – 13
    Sep 21 – 27