Funniest Super Bowl Prop Bets That Actually Exist

THE RESULTS ARE IN!

The updated Prop Bet Results are in... Read all about them here: How Every Super Bowl LX Prop Bet Actually Played Out — From the Gatorade Shower to the Guy Who Ran on the Field

Funniest Super Bowl Prop Bets That Actually Exist
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Funniest Super Bowl Prop Bets That Actually Exist

Las Vegas sportsbooks have turned Super Bowl LX into more than just a football game — it's become a pop culture extravaganza where you can literally bet on anything. With the Seattle Seahawks facing the New England Patriots this Sunday at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, the 2026 edition promises some of the most ridiculous prop bets ever conceived.

These entertainment-focused wagers have exploded in popularity because, let's face it, sometimes the commercials and halftime show are more entertaining than the actual game. The SuperBook at Westgate Las Vegas just released a 53-page prop betting menu with approximately 500 individual wagers — and that's just one sportsbook. When you add BetMGM, FanDuel, DraftKings, and the offshore books into the mix, you've got thousands of ways to lose money that have absolutely nothing to do with football.

Get ready for a journey through the wonderfully weird world of Super Bowl prop betting, where your knowledge of Bad Bunny's discography might be more valuable than understanding defensive schemes.

1. The Bad Bunny Halftime Extravaganza

1. The Bad Bunny Halftime Extravaganza

Bad Bunny headlines the Super Bowl LX halftime show, and sportsbooks have gone absolutely wild with the prop betting options. The biggest question: which song opens the show? "Tití Me Preguntó" is the current favorite at -125 (meaning you'd bet $125 to win $100), which makes sense — it's high-energy and the crowd would erupt. Though "Me Porto Bonito" could absolutely sneak in as a surprise opener — and honestly, the crowd would lose it either way.

Here's where it gets ridiculous. BetOnline is actually offering odds on whether Bad Bunny will expose a nipple during the performance. The "No" is a massive favorite, obviously, but the prop exists because — well, this is Vegas, and we haven't forgotten the Janet Jackson halftime show from Super Bowl XXXVIII. Of course, Adam Levine showed both nipples and a gallery of tattoos during his Maroon 5 performance in 2019, so the bar for what constitutes a "malfunction" has shifted considerably for male performers.

The costume change over/under is another popular one. Bad Bunny is known for dramatic fashion statements, so expect the number to be set higher than your average halftime performer. And yes, there are props on whether he'll bring out a surprise guest — because the Super Bowl halftime guest appearance has become almost as anticipated as the show itself.

Fun fact: Bad Bunny already has Super Bowl halftime experience. He was a guest performer during the Shakira and Jennifer Lopez show at Super Bowl LIV in 2020. The man knows the stage.

2. Charlie Puth and the National Anthem Time Trial

2. Charlie Puth and the National Anthem Time Trial

Singer-songwriter Charlie Puth handles national anthem duties for Super Bowl LX, and the over/under on his rendition sits at 119.5 seconds (-110 both ways at FanDuel). That's almost exactly two minutes — tight for a performer known for his precision but also his emotional delivery.

The anthem length bet is one of the oldest and most popular Super Bowl props because it turns the pregame ceremony into a legitimate gambling event. Bettors analyze everything from rehearsal footage to the performer's previous anthem renditions. Some create detailed spreadsheets tracking historical timing patterns. Others factor in weather conditions and emotional moments that might inspire a longer performance. The level of dedication is genuinely impressive.

But the real gem is the sub-prop: how long will Puth hold the final note on "brave"? The over/under is 3.5 seconds. If you've ever watched Puth perform, you know he's capable of going long — but his style tends toward precision rather than Whitney Houston-style vocal marathons.

There's also a "Will a player or coach cry during the National Anthem?" prop, which FanDuel has at Yes -230 / No +184. Given the magnitude of the moment and the cameras hunting for emotional reactions, the Yes has cashed more often than you'd think.

3. The Cardi B and Stefon Diggs Love Saga

3. The Cardi B and Stefon Diggs Love Saga

This might be the most entertaining celebrity prop of any Super Bowl in recent memory. New England Patriots wide receiver Stefon Diggs is dating Cardi B, and sportsbooks are having a field day with it. There are actual odds posted on whether Diggs will propose to Cardi B after the game. Yes, really.

Remember, this prop has history. For the past few years, the Travis Kelce / Taylor Swift proposal angle dominated Super Bowl celebrity props. Plenty of people genuinely believed Kelce would have proposed on the Super Bowl stage had the Chiefs completed a three-peat. Now the spotlight shifts to Diggs and Cardi B, and the betting public is eating it up.

The related props include whether Cardi B will be shown wearing a Patriots jersey (she wore Diggs' jersey during her "Call Her Daddy" interview, but she's been less visible in team gear at actual games), and whether the broadcast will show her in the crowd during a Diggs catch or touchdown. If Diggs scores and NBC doesn't cut to Cardi B, what are we even doing here? That's the whole reason cameras exist.

4. The Malcolm Butler Revenge Game Props

Here's where Super Bowl history collides with the 2026 matchup in the most beautiful way. The last time the Seahawks and Patriots met in the Super Bowl — Super Bowl XLIX after the 2014 season — New England's Malcolm Butler intercepted Russell Wilson at the goal line in the final moments. It's arguably the most infamous play in Super Bowl history. Pete Carroll chose to pass instead of giving Marshawn Lynch the ball from the one-yard line, and the football world has never let him forget it.

Now Seattle is back against New England, and the prop betting around this historical parallel is — honestly — kind of perfect:

Will NBC show a replay of the Butler interception? This is practically a lock to happen — the broadcast will absolutely reference it. The real question is when and how often.

Will the broadcast mention Pete Carroll's decision to pass? Again, nearly inevitable if the game is close in the fourth quarter and Seattle has the ball near the goal line. Mike Tirico won't be able to resist.

Will the Seahawks run or pass if they have a goal-line situation in the fourth quarter? This is where prop betting becomes genuinely hilarious. Eleven years of memes and second-guessing come down to one play call. If Seattle faces a goal-to-go situation late, every person in America will be screaming "GIVE IT TO THE RUNNING BACK."

5. The Gatorade Bath Color Showdown

5. The Gatorade Bath Color Showdown

The post-game Gatorade shower is one of the most consistently popular Super Bowl novelty bets. The winning team's players dump a cooler on their head coach, and sportsbooks set odds on what color the liquid will be.

Current odds have orange and yellow/green/lime as co-favorites. Historical context matters here: the Eagles used yellow/lime/green on Nick Sirianni last year, the Chiefs went with purple on Andy Reid two of the last three years, and blue had a nice run before that. With both teams sporting blue as a primary color, blue Gatorade feels like a logical choice — but that's exactly the kind of thinking that makes this prop so tricky.

Here's where it gets wonderfully nerdy — some bettors actually research which Gatorade flavors each team keeps on their sideline. They're scanning practice footage for cooler colors like it's game film. The dedication is genuinely impressive, and it's exactly the kind of deep-dive research that makes prop betting so much fun.

6. Sam Darnold's Redemption Arc Props

Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold has one of the wildest career arcs in recent NFL history. He's about to become the first quarterback ever to play in the Super Bowl with his fifth NFL team in just six years. The betting props around his journey are pure entertainment:

Will the broadcast mention Darnold "seeing ghosts"? During a terrible performance with the Jets, Darnold was caught on a hot mic saying he was "seeing ghosts out there." It became an instant meme — the kind of moment the internet never lets you live down. The odds on Tirico or Collinsworth referencing it? They increase dramatically if Darnold throws an interception.

Will they show footage of Darnold at Levi's Stadium as a 49er? Darnold played for San Francisco before landing in Seattle. The Super Bowl is being played at the 49ers' home stadium. The broadcast irony is too good for NBC to ignore.

7. The Coin Toss — Yes, People Bet Real Money on This

7. The Coin Toss — Yes, People Bet Real Money on This

The coin toss is the purest 50/50 bet in sports, and it generates massive betting volume every year. You'd think sportsbooks would offer even odds, but the real action is in the correlated props:

Historically, the team that wins the coin toss has actually lost the Super Bowl 33 times out of 59. The Chiefs won the toss three straight years and went 2-1. Last year, the Eagles lost the toss but steamrolled the Chiefs 40-22.

The fun prop isn't heads or tails — it's "Will the coin toss winner also win the game?" at roughly even money. You're essentially betting on whether a meaningless ceremony predicts the outcome of a football game, and thousands of people do it every year. Only in Vegas.

8. Commercial Apocalypse Bingo

Super Bowl commercials cost roughly $7 million for 30 seconds in 2026, and the advertising itself has spawned an entire category of prop bets. Sportsbooks take action on which companies will air the first commercial after kickoff, how many ads will feature AI or cryptocurrency references, and whether certain animals will appear.

The beauty of these bets lies in their unpredictability — advertisers guard their Super Bowl spots like state secrets, making inside information nearly impossible to obtain. The props usually include:

  • First celebrity shown in a commercial
  • Total number of movie trailers aired
  • Will a commercial make a political statement?
  • Which beer brand airs more spots: Bud Light or Michelob Ultra?

Some sportsbooks even offer a "commercial stock market" where you can bet on which ad will be rated highest by USA Today's Ad Meter. It's capitalism betting on capitalism, which feels appropriate for the Super Bowl.

9. The Streaker Prop and Other Chaos Bets

9. The Streaker Prop and Other Chaos Bets

Will an unauthorized person run onto the field? BetOnline has this at +300 — meaning a $10 bet pays $30 if someone decides that national television is the right moment to make a life choice. The catch: the person must be referenced by the broadcast, and some commentators choose to ignore streakers entirely. However, Mike Tirico famously narrated a Bills fan leaving the stadium with a game ball earlier this season, so he might be more inclined to acknowledge on-field chaos than your average play-by-play voice.

Other chaos-category props include:

  • Will a player be ejected? (Long odds, but not impossible in a physical game)
  • Will there be a power outage? (It happened at Super Bowl XLVII — the Superdome went dark for 34 minutes)
  • Over/under on total penalty flags (Referee crew tendencies are actually analyzable here)
  • Will a kick hit the upright? (The "doink" prop is always popular)

10. The Scorigami and Octopus — For the Deep-Cut Nerds

If you're deep enough into football culture to know what a Scorigami is, these props are for you. And if you don't know — honestly, you're about to learn something delightful.

A Scorigami is a final score that has never occurred in NFL history. We haven't had one in the Super Bowl since the Seahawks beat the Broncos 43-8 in Super Bowl XLVIII. The odds are long, but the payout is worth it if you believe this game produces a weird final score.

An Octopus is when a player scores a touchdown AND the subsequent two-point conversion — eight points from one player on one drive. Jalen Hurts actually cashed this prop in Super Bowl LVII. The SuperBook has No at -6000 and Yes at +1600 for this year's game. It's a total lottery ticket, but at +1600, a $10 bet pays $160, and it only needs one desperate fourth-quarter two-point conversion attempt to be in play.

Where to Place These Bets in Las Vegas

If you're in town for the Big Game, every major sportsbook on the Strip will have these props available. The SuperBook at Westgate is the gold standard for prop betting — their 53-page menu is legendary. BetMGM, Caesars, and the South Point are also popular destinations for novelty bets.

A few tips from a local: lines move fast on novelty props, especially in the 48 hours before kickoff. If you see a number you like, grab it. And always check multiple books — the odds on Gatorade color can vary significantly between sportsbooks because the betting volume is relatively low.

For first-time Super Bowl bettors in Vegas, check out our complete guide to betting the Super Bowl in Las Vegas for everything you need to know about placing wagers, finding the best sportsbook deals, and making the most of game day in Sin City.

Alex Mercer
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Alex Mercer covers pop culture, fandom, and the many ways nerd life shows up in Las Vegas — from conventions and screenings to streaming obsessions and cult favorites. A fan first and a writer second, Alex brings curiosity, enthusiasm, and just the right amount of nerd energy to everything they cover.
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