Betting on the Super Bowl has become almost a national pastime. Industry estimates say U.S. adults will legally wager more than $1.5 billion on next Sunday’s matchup between the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots — and that figure only counts money placed through licensed sportsbooks.
These days the surge in Super Bowl betting is driven largely by prop markets. Instead of wagering on the game winner, point spread, or total score, many bettors prefer to place bets on specific events — for example, whether a field goal will be longer than 38 yards or if Sam Darnold will throw an interception.
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Each year the Westgate SuperBook in Las Vegas publishes a massive packet of prop bets about a week before the game. This year’s booklet runs 53 pages and lists more than 400 different betting options. The props were released Wednesday night, and people who showed up in person could wager up to $2,000 per prop (with up to three bets at a time) and then return to the back of the line to place additional wagers.
Jeff Sherman, SuperBook’s vice president of risk, said the opening night brought “numbers in the low six figures” and was busier than a normal release. Staff tracked betting activity in real time, adjusting lines as action came in. For example, the reception total for Mack Hollins was trimmed from 29.5 and 27.5 down to 25.5 as money pushed the market; the under was heavily backed at various prices until an over bet came in.
That process is essentially price discovery: early sharp money sets the initial benchmarks and will keep nudging numbers until kickoff at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara. Sherman pointed to Jake Bobo as another instance — SuperBook priced him for very few receiving yards (listed at -140 on the under) because he only recently made a splash with a last-game touchdown, and the book expects that spike to be temporary and hopes to attract over-money in response.
Sherman also noted that for the next several days the market is dominated by sharp bettors, with the public beginning to weigh in about a week out. One notable line move was on the first rushing attempt for Rashid Shahid, where the under was cut from 4.5/3.5/2.5 yards down to about 1.5.
On a personal note, the writer prefers the under 7.5 for first-quarter scoring — Super Bowl opening quarters tend to be conservative and awkward, with defenses often dictating play and teams getting only one or two drives, and the average first-quarter score over the last 11 Super Bowls is 6.6 points. Books have adjusted first-quarter totals around 9.5–10 for years and defend those numbers aggressively; anything set below 8.5 can feel close to the edge but can be tempting.
Fan Take: The explosion of prop betting shows how engaged fans are becoming with individual players and moments, not just final outcomes — that can make the game more entertaining for viewers but also shifts attention toward micro-events. As betting continues to grow, the NFL and sportsbooks will need to balance fan engagement with safeguards to protect the integrity and public perception of the sport.

