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AuthorEvgeniy Volkov
PublishedMar 22, 2026
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CategoryGuides
Super Bowl Betting Sheet 2026: Free Printable Prop Bets

Super Bowl Betting Sheet 2026: Free Printable Prop Bets

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Super Bowl Betting Sheet 2026: Free Printable Prop Bets

Picture this: it's Super Bowl Sunday 2026, the wings are out, the TV is cranked up, and everyone at your party has a prop sheet in their hands. The national anthem starts and someone screams "OVER!" before the singer even hits the second verse. That's the magic of a Super Bowl betting sheet — it turns every single play into a moment where the whole room explodes.

Here's the thing: you don't need to know a single thing about football to win a prop pool. The coin toss? Pure luck. The Gatorade color? Nobody has inside information on that. But some props DO have historical edges — and if you know which ones, you'll have a serious advantage over your friends. We've analyzed every Super Bowl prop bet going back decades, and we're giving you the data, the printable sheets, and an interactive scorer that none of our competitors offer.

Whether you're hosting a party for 50 or just filling out a sheet with your roommates for Super Bowl LX between the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots, this page has everything you need.

TL;DR -- Super Bowl Prop Sheet at a Glance

What You Get on This Page

FeatureDetails
Printable PDF2 versions — casual (15 props) + hardcore (30 props)
Online ScorerTrack picks live, auto-score, compare to history
Historical DataWhich props hit most often (chart with 12 categories)
Pool CalculatorCalculate payouts for your party (Pool Mode)
Strategy TipsWhich props have real edges vs. which are traps
Super Bowl LXSeahawks vs. Patriots — all props updated for 2026

Bottom line: this is the most complete Super Bowl prop sheet resource on the internet. Every competitor gives you a PDF and sends you on your way — we give you the PDF, the data, and the tools to actually win your pool.

What Is a Super Bowl Prop Bet Sheet?

A Super Bowl prop bet sheet is a form — paper or digital — listing 15 to 30 proposition bets about the game. Everyone fills it out before kickoff, and whoever gets the most right wins. It's like a quiz about the future, except the questions involve touchdowns, coin tosses, and what color liquid gets dumped on the winning coach.

Props vs. Regular Bets

Regular sports bets are about one thing: who wins and by how much. Props are about everything ELSE. Will there be a safety? How long is the anthem? What position does the MVP play? That's what makes them perfect for parties — you don't need to understand how odds are set or know the spread to have fun.

If you're into actual sports betting, props have a different edge structure than point spreads or moneylines. Check our odds converter to see how sportsbooks price these differently from standard bets.

Why Prop Sheets Are the Best Party Game

Prop sheets beat football squares for one reason: everyone stays engaged the entire game. With squares, your numbers are locked — you either have good ones or bad ones. With a prop sheet, every single play could swing the results. The coin toss resolves in 10 seconds. The anthem settles in 2 minutes. And by the fourth quarter, the room is chaos.

The Super Bowl betting handle regularly exceeds $16 billion, and a huge chunk of that comes from casual prop bettors. You're part of the biggest single-day betting event on the planet.

The 2026 Super Bowl LX Matchup Context

Super Bowl LX features the Seattle Seahawks against the New England Patriots — a matchup that hasn't happened since Super Bowl XLIX in 2015. Geno Smith leads Seattle's offense, while Drake Maye is the young quarterback for New England's latest dynasty push. The opening total is set at 45.5, and Seattle is a 2.5-point favorite.

This context matters for your prop sheet. Maye's willingness to throw deep affects passing yard props. Seattle's run-first identity impacts first play and total TD predictions. And New England's historically conservative coaching style means fewer lead changes.

Free Printable Super Bowl Prop Sheet (2026)

Casual Version (15 Props -- Best for Parties)

This is the version you print for the group that includes your aunt who thinks a "safety" is something you teach kids. Fifteen props, all binary (pick A or B), scorable in under 2 minutes after the game.

#PropOption AOption B
1Coin toss resultHeadsTails
2National anthem lengthOver 2:00Under 2:00
3Game winnerSeahawksPatriots
4Total pointsOver 45.5Under 45.5
5First score typeTouchdownField goal/other
6First team to scoreSeahawksPatriots
7First offensive playRushPass
8Will there be a scoreless quarter?YesNo
9Will there be overtime?YesNo
10MVP positionQBNon-QB
11Gatorade shower colorOrange/YellowBlue/Clear/Other
12Longest TD over 25 yards?YesNo
13Will there be a missed extra point?YesNo
14More than 3 lead changes?YesNo
15Winning margin 7+ points?YesNo

Tiebreaker: Total combined points (write a number). Closest without going over wins.

Hardcore Version (30+ Props -- For Serious Bettors)

This version adds player props, specific stats, and multi-option questions. Use it for groups that actually follow football — or anyone who wants a bigger challenge. Same rules, more depth.

#PropOptions
1-15All casual props above(same)
16Geno Smith passing yardsOver 250 / Under 250
17Drake Maye passing yardsOver 225 / Under 225
18Total touchdowns in the game2 or less / 3-4 / 5-6 / 7+
19Winning margin1-3 / 4-7 / 8-14 / 15+
20First TD scored by which teamSeahawks / Patriots
21Longest field goalOver 45 yds / Under 45 yds
22First accepted penalty againstSeahawks / Patriots
23Total turnovers in the game0-1 / 2-3 / 4+
24Will a team score 3 consecutive times?Yes / No
25Lead changes0-1 / 2-3 / 4+
26First coach's challengeSeahawks / Patriots / None
27Halftime performer sings more than 6 songsYes / No
28Any player rushes for 100+ yards?Yes / No
29Game-winning score comes in which quarterQ1 / Q2 / Q3 / Q4 / OT
30MVP is on the winning team?Yes / No

How to Download and Print

Print the version that matches your crowd. For a mixed group (football fans + casual viewers), go with the casual 15-prop version — everyone has fun, nobody feels lost. For a dedicated watch party where people check sports betting systems and track line movement, use the hardcore 30+ version.

Pro tip: print a few extra copies. Someone will spill beer on theirs. It's Super Bowl Sunday — plan for chaos.

Game Props (Score, Winner, Total)

Game props are the backbone of any Super Bowl betting sheet. These cover the final outcome, scoring dynamics, and game flow. The most commonly bet game props:

  • Game winner — Seahawks vs. Patriots (the one everyone has an opinion on)
  • Total points over/under 45.5 — the value bet crowd lives here
  • First team to score — resolved within the first 5-10 minutes
  • Winning margin — covers how close the game will be
  • First score type — touchdown (~68% historically), field goal (~28%), or safety (~4%)

Player Props (MVP, Passing Yards, First TD)

Player props require actual football knowledge — this is where the hardcore sheet separates itself. Key ones for 2026:

  • Super Bowl MVP — QBs win ~58% of the time, WRs ~18%, RBs ~10%
  • Geno Smith passing yards (over/under 250) — Seattle's passing game has been efficient
  • Drake Maye passing yards (over/under 225) — the rookie factor adds uncertainty
  • First touchdown scorer — the single hardest prop on the sheet (~12.5% for any named player)

Fun Props (Anthem, Coin Toss, Gatorade)

These are the equalizers. No football expertise required. Just vibes and luck.

  • Coin toss — exactly 50/50, no edge, the ultimate party prop
  • National anthem over/under 2:00 — the over hits ~62.5% historically
  • Gatorade shower color — orange and clear/water are the most common, but it changes every year

Coin Toss History

Through 58 Super Bowls, the coin toss has landed heads 29 times and tails 29 times. It's the closest thing to a perfect 50/50 in all of sports. Some people swear they see patterns — they don't. The coin doesn't have memory. Pick your favorite and move on.

Here's where a real edge exists. The anthem has gone OVER 2 minutes approximately 62.5% of the time in recent Super Bowls. Pop and R&B singers tend to add flourishes and hold notes longer — if the performer is a pop star, lean over. Country artists tend to be straighter and faster — lean under. In 2026, check who's singing before locking your sheet.

Which Props Win Most Often? Historical Data

This is the data that separates our Super Bowl betting sheet from every other printable prop sheet on the internet. Nobody else shows you the historical win rates — they just give you a PDF and wish you luck.

The "Easy" Props: Over 60% Hit Rate

Two props have historically hit more than 60% of the time:

  1. First score is a touchdown (68.3%) — NFL teams score touchdowns on their opening drives far more often than field goals. The defense is still figuring out the game plan while the offense runs their scripted plays.
  2. National anthem over 2:00 (62.5%) — Performers know they're on the biggest stage and tend to elongate the anthem. The over is the historically correct play.

If you're building a sharp prop sheet, these two should be your anchors.

The Coin Flips: True 50/50 Props

Props in the 40-60% range are genuine coin flips. Don't overthink these:

  • Coin toss: Heads (50.0%) — literally a coin flip
  • Total goes over (55.4%) — slight lean over, but volatile year to year
  • MVP is QB (58.3%) — leans toward QBs but not strongly enough to call it "easy"
  • Winning margin 7+ (46.4%) — close games are slightly more common

The Traps: Props That Sound Easy but Aren't

These are the props that FEEL predictable but have terrible historical hit rates. If you're building a strategy for your prop pool, avoid putting too much weight on these:

  • Correct Gatorade color (16.7%) — there are 6+ possible colors, and it changes every year
  • Correct first TD scorer (12.5%) — even the "obvious" pick only hits 1 in 8
  • Safety scored (8.3%) — safeties are rare events in the NFL, period
  • Game goes to overtime (3.6%) — only 1 Super Bowl in 58 has gone to OT

The lesson? Don't let these props swing your confidence. They're noise. Fun to bet, impossible to predict.

How to Run a Super Bowl Prop Pool

If you're organizing a prop pool for your Super Bowl party, here's how to do it right. A well-run pool keeps everyone engaged from coin toss to the final whistle — and avoids the "wait, what are the rules?" arguments at halftime.

Step 1: Choose Your Props (15 or 30)

Pick the casual or hardcore version based on your crowd. Mixed group? Go casual. All sports bettors who think they can make a living? Go hardcore. Never mix — having two different sheets creates confusion.

Step 2: Set the Rules and Scoring

Standard scoring (recommended): 1 point per correct answer. Simple, fast, no arguments.

Weighted scoring (advanced): Award 1-3 points based on difficulty. Easy props (coin toss) = 1 point. Hard props (exact Gatorade color) = 3 points. This rewards knowledge but takes longer to score.

Announce the scoring system BEFORE handing out sheets. Don't change it after.

Step 3: Collect Entries and Lock Sheets

Collect all entry fees before handing out sheets — this prevents the "I'll pay you later" problem. $5-$10 per person is standard. Use our Pool Mode calculator below to figure out exact payouts.

Lock time: start of the national anthem. No exceptions. Some props (anthem length, coin toss) resolve in the first 5 minutes — if sheets aren't locked, people will cheat.

Step 4: Score During the Game

Score props as they resolve throughout the game. Keep a running tally visible to everyone — a whiteboard, a shared Google Sheet, or just announce it after each quarter. The excitement builds when people see the leaderboard changing.

Tiebreaker Rules

The standard tiebreaker is a total points prediction (written on the sheet before kickoff). Closest without going over wins the tie. If still tied, split the prize evenly — don't create a secondary tiebreaker. Use our parlay calculator if anyone wants to know the math behind their accumulation bets on the side.

Super Bowl Prop Sheet Strategy (2026)

You can approach your prop sheet two ways: play for fun (random picks, who cares) or play to win (use the data). If you want to win your pool, here's what to focus on.

Focus on Props with Historical Edges

Lock in the two "easy" props first: first score = touchdown and anthem over 2:00. Those are your highest-confidence picks at 68.3% and 62.5% respectively. Then lean toward QB for MVP (58.3%) and total over (55.4%). Four props, four historically correct picks — that's your foundation.

For the coin flip props, go with your gut. There's no edge in the 40-60% range, so pick whatever feels right and move on. Don't waste mental energy here.

Avoid the "Fun" Traps

The Gatorade color, first TD scorer, and safety props are fun to bet but terrible for your win rate. In a standard scoring system (1 point each), they're worth the same as the easy props but hit at 8-17% instead of 55-68%. If you want to evaluate picks like a handicapper would, focus your confidence on the high-percentage plays.

The one exception: if your pool uses weighted scoring (3 points for hard props), then Gatorade color becomes a high-value swing pick. But that's a calculated risk, not a blind guess.

Bankroll Tips for Prop Pools

For prop pool entry fees, never spend more than you'd spend on snacks for the party. $5-$10 is the right range for most groups. If someone suggests a $50 buy-in, check whether they're serious about this or just showing off.

If you're betting individual props at a sportsbook (not a casual pool), treat each prop as a separate bet and use flat betting — the same dollar amount on every prop. Prop markets have higher juice than standard bets, so your edge is thinner. Don't overweight any single prop no matter how confident you feel.

For teaser bettors, Super Bowl Wong teasers through key numbers can offer value on the spread — but that's a different strategy than the prop sheet game.

Interactive Super Bowl Prop Scorer

This is our secret weapon — and the one thing no other Super Bowl betting sheet on the internet offers. Pick your answers for all 20 props, and our scorer instantly tells you how your sheet compares to historical trends. Switch to Pool Mode to calculate payouts for your party.

How to Use the Scorer

  1. Click My Picks and select your answer for each prop
  2. Watch the progress bar fill as you complete the sheet
  3. Your verdict updates in real time based on how many picks match historical trends
  4. Switch to Pool Mode to enter your group size and entry fee for automatic payout calculation

Try these approaches:

  • Sharp sheet: pick all historical favorites (aim for 70%+ match rate)
  • Contrarian sheet: go against the trend on 15+ props (high risk, high reward in pools)
  • Balanced sheet: mix favorites and contrarian picks (best for competitive pools)

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

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Evgeniy Volkov

Evgeny Volkov

Verified Expert
Math & Software Engineer, iGaming Expert

Over 10 years developing software for the gaming industry. Advanced degree in Mathematics. Specializing in probability analysis, RNG algorithms, and mathematical gambling models.

Experience10+
SpecializationiGaming
Status
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