Swiss Superleague is Currently Off-Season
Live odds comparisons, vig rankings, and best-line analysis for Swiss Superleague will return automatically when the season resumes and sportsbooks begin posting lines.
This page updates 3x daily from The Odds API. When Swiss Superleague events are listed, you'll see full sportsbook data here.
The Swiss Super League typically runs from late July through late May, split into a traditional autumn-spring format with a winter break spanning roughly mid-December through late January. The regular season consists of 36 matchdays played in a round-robin format, with all ten teams facing each other four times. Following the regular season, the bottom-placed club is relegated and the ninth-placed team enters a relegation playoff against the Challenge League runner-up. Championship and European qualification spots are settled on final league standings rather than a separate playoff bracket. Preseason odds for the upcoming campaign generally begin surfacing in late June, shortly after squads return for preseason training and the summer transfer window opens on July 1.
Off-season futures markets for the Swiss Super League center heavily on the outright title winner, top-four finish props, and relegation betting — all of which are shaped disproportionately by the transfer activity of BSC Young Boys, FC Basel, Servette, and FC Lugano. Because Swiss clubs frequently sell key players to larger European leagues during the summer window, squad departures can cause dramatic odds shifts well before the season kicks off. Top scorer markets are also available and tend to offer value when a prolific striker moves to a club with improved creative supply. The managerial carousel matters too — coaching changes at mid-table sides like FC Luzern or FC St. Gallen can meaningfully alter relegation and top-six pricing. Monitoring Champions League and Conference League qualifying rounds in July and August is critical, as early European exits often refocus a club's domestic ambitions and affect squad depth calculations.
Vig patterns in Swiss Super League match odds tend to be widest during early-season rounds in late July and August, when bookmakers are still calibrating their models to new rosters and tactical setups. This window often presents the best value for informed bettors who closely track preseason friendlies and early European qualifiers. Margins generally tighten as the season progresses and market data accumulates, with the sharpest pricing typically found mid-autumn when sample sizes stabilize. During the winter break, futures markets can offer exploitable inefficiencies — particularly when January transfer deals are announced before books fully adjust their title and relegation odds. Late-season matches in April and May, especially those involving relegation-threatened clubs, tend to carry slightly inflated margins due to the unpredictable motivational dynamics at the bottom of the table.
In-Season Sports
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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.