The 2026 MLB season is approaching, as pitchers and catchers have reported, and spring training games are soon to follow.

The MLB playoff odds market is a simple “yes/no” proposition. You look at a team’s odds and decide whether or not you think they’ll be playing in October.

With a clean slate, let’s look at how MLB odds look before any action has occurred.

2026 MLB playoff odds

Team

Yes

No

Los Angeles Dodgers

-5000

+1800

New York Yankees

-380

+300

New York Mets

-310

+250

Philadelphia Phillies

-290

+225

Toronto Blue Jays

-280

+225

Seattle Mariners

-280

+220

Chicago Cubs

-250

+200

Atlanta Braves

-220

+175

Boston Red Sox

-195

+160

Milwaukee Brewers

-190

+160

Detroit Tigers

-185

+140

Houston Astros

-185

+150

San Diego Padres

-155

+130

Baltimore Orioles

+100

-120

Texas Rangers

+115

-145

Cincinnati Reds

+145

-175

Kansas City Royals

+160

-200

Cleveland Guardians

+185

-230

San Francisco Giants

+215

-270

Arizona Diamondbacks

+270

-340

Tampa Bay Rays

+310

-400

Pittsburgh Pirates

+425

-650

Athletics

+475

-700

Miami Marlins

+500

-750

Minnesota Twins

+500

-750

St. Louis Cardinals

+600

-1000

Los Angeles Angels

+750

-1400

Washington Nationals

+1600

-5000

Chicago White Sox

+2000

-5000

Colorado Rockies

+3500

-20000

Odds courtesy of DraftKings.

Covers MLB betting tools

MLB Postseason format

The MLB playoffs expanded in the 2022 season, adding an extra wild card to both the AL and NL, making it a total of 12 teams in the postseason.

The new format will see the top two division winners in each league (Seeds 1 and 2) get a first-round bye, while the third-best division winner (Seed 3) will host the third wild card (Seed 6) — and the two remaining wild cards (Seeds 4 and 5) will face off — in a three-game series.

Following the Wild Card Round, the No. 1 seed will face the winner of the two wild cards (Seeds 4/5), while the No. 2 seed will face the No. 3 vs No. 6 winner in the Divisional Round.

If the second-best record in the league does not come from a division winner (e.g. the San Francisco Giants in 2021), they will remain the top wild card — and not get a first-round bye.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here

Read the full article here

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