Coupe de France is Currently Off-Season

Live odds comparisons, vig rankings, and best-line analysis for Coupe de France will return automatically when the season resumes and sportsbooks begin posting lines.

This page updates 3x daily from The Odds API. When Coupe de France events are listed, you'll see full sportsbook data here.

The Coupe de France operates on a unique timeline that distinguishes it from standard league competitions. The tournament begins its earliest rounds in September, with lower-division and amateur clubs entering regional preliminary stages. Professional clubs from Ligue 1 and Ligue 2 typically enter in the seventh or eighth round, usually in December or January. The competition then progresses through knockout rounds from January to April, culminating in the prestigious final at the Stade de France, traditionally held in May. This extended calendar means the true off-season window for Coupe de France betting is relatively narrow — roughly June through August — before early-round action resumes and bookmakers begin posting outright winner futures, usually by late September or early October once the draw for later rounds starts taking shape.

Off-season betting opportunities for the Coupe de France center primarily on the outright winner market, which is heavily influenced by Ligue 1 transfer activity during the summer window (June through early September). PSG's perennial dominance — they won four consecutive titles from 2020 to 2024 — means their odds are perpetually short, but the real value lies in tracking mid-table Ligue 1 sides and ambitious Ligue 2 clubs making significant roster upgrades. Managerial appointments at clubs like Lyon, Marseille, or Lens can shift their cup odds meaningfully, as a new coach's tactical approach to knockout football often differs dramatically from their league strategy. Bettors should also monitor dual-competition fatigue: clubs involved in European campaigns frequently rotate squads in early cup rounds, creating upset potential that sharper books begin pricing in before the casual market reacts.

Vig patterns in the Coupe de France follow a distinct arc. Early-round markets — particularly matches involving amateur or National-level sides — tend to carry wider margins (often 8-10%) because bookmakers have limited data on lower-division form. Margins compress noticeably from the round of 32 onward, when matchups feature well-known professional sides and sharper money enters the market, driving overrounds closer to 4-5%. The best value window historically arrives in the round of 64 and round of 32, when Ligue 1 clubs face lower-league opponents and bookmakers occasionally misprice the upset potential of motivated amateur sides playing at home on smaller pitches — a factor unique to French cup football that algorithms often underweight.

In-Season Sports

Browse by Sportsbook

How We Calculate These Numbers

Data Source
All odds on this page come from The Odds API, which aggregates real-time lines from licensed US and offshore sportsbooks. We track moneyline, spread, and totals markets across every sport with active betting lines.
Update Frequency
We pull a fresh snapshot of every tracked market three times per day — at 6:00 AM, 2:00 PM, and 10:00 PM UTC. Each snapshot captures the latest lines from every sportsbook that has posted odds for a given event. The timestamp at the top of each page tells you exactly when the data was last refreshed.
Vig Calculation
Vig (short for vigorish, also called juice or overround) measures the margin a sportsbook builds into its odds. We calculate it by converting the odds on each side of a market to implied probabilities, summing those probabilities, and subtracting 100%. For example, a market priced at -110/-110 implies 52.38% on each side — a total of 104.76%, meaning a vig of 4.76%. Lower vig means better value for bettors because you keep more of your winnings.
Per-Market Breakdown
We compute vig separately for each market type: moneyline (h2h), point spreads, and totals (over/under). The "average vig" shown for each sportsbook is the mean across all market types weighted by the number of events sampled in each market.
Grading Scale
Every sportsbook receives a letter grade based on its average vig: A+ (under 2%) is exceptional and rare — these are typically sharp-friendly books. A (2–3%) is excellent. B+ (3–4%) is above average. B (4–5%) is the industry standard for most recreational sportsbooks. C (5–6%) is below average. D (above 6%) indicates high-juice markets where bettors face a steep cost per wager.
Trend Tracking
We store daily snapshots for 30 days, allowing us to show 24-hour and 7-day vig trends. A downward trend (improving) means sportsbooks are tightening their lines — often in response to increased competition or higher betting volume as a season heats up.