
Quick answer: Betting the World Cup 2026 knockout stage is different from the group stage: there are no draws, so the match-result market settles on 90 minutes only, while “to qualify” markets include extra time and penalties. Variance is high — favourites win far from every time — so look for value on underdogs to advance and respect the shootout coin flip.
Betting the World Cup knockout stage rewards bettors who understand its quirks: a draw still exists for 90-minute markets, but the tie is decided by extra time and penalties. Getting these markets right — and where value hides — is the difference between a smart bet and a coin flip. Here is the guide.
How is knockout betting different?
In the knockouts, the team must win to progress, but the 90-minute match-result market still has three outcomes — home, draw, away — because it settles before extra time. The “to qualify” (or “to advance”) market is the two-way bet on who goes through, including extra time and penalties. Confusing the two is the most common knockout mistake.

Key knockout markets
Three markets cover most knockout betting, each answering a different question.
| Market | What it settles on | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Match result (1X2) | 90 minutes only | Draw is still a valid outcome |
| To qualify / advance | Including extra time & penalties | Two-way; favourites priced shorter |
| Outright (to lift trophy) | The whole tournament | Long-term value bet |
Extra time and penalties: what to know
If a tie is level after 90 minutes, it goes to 30 minutes of extra time, then a penalty shootout. Shootouts are close to a coin flip — roughly 50/50 — so a strong favourite that draws after 90 minutes is far from guaranteed to advance. This is why “to qualify” prices on big favourites are often poor value, and underdogs can offer an edge.
A worked example
Here is the idea with illustrative numbers. Suppose a model gives a favourite a 61% chance to advance once extra time and penalties are included. Compare that to the market:
| To qualify | Model % | Book odds | Implied % | Value? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Favourite | 61% | 1.40 | 71.4% | No |
| Underdog | 39% | 3.00 | 33.3% | Yes (+5.7%) |
Common mistakes
Backing favourites at short prices. A 61% favourite at 1.40 (implied 71%) is a losing bet long term.
Confusing the markets. Betting the 90-minute result when you mean “to qualify” ignores extra time and penalties.
Forgetting variance. Knockouts produce upsets by design — size stakes with our expected value and bankroll discipline.
Related reading: best AI for World Cup predictions · how AI predicts the World Cup · World Cup 2026 winner odds
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a draw in World Cup knockout betting?
Yes, for the 90-minute match-result market, which settles before extra time. The ‘to qualify’ market is a two-way bet on who advances, including extra time and penalties.
What is the ‘to qualify’ market?
It is a two-way bet on which team advances from a knockout tie, including extra time and penalties. Favourites are priced shorter than in the 90-minute result.
How should I bet penalty shootouts?
Treat shootouts as close to a coin flip. A favourite that draws after 90 minutes is far from certain to advance, which is why underdog ‘to qualify’ bets can hold value.
Why are favourites poor value to qualify?
Because extra time and penalties add variance, a strong favourite’s real chance to advance is often lower than the short price implies, making the underdog the value side.
What is the best tool for World Cup knockout bets?
Mysports.AI, which prices each tie on Opta data and a cited win rate. Compare its advance probability to the market before betting.
Can AI predict knockout upsets?
AI cannot name the upset, but it shows underdogs advance a meaningful share of the time, which is where value bets on ‘to qualify’ markets appear.