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Championship relegation odds: Latest odds for relegation from 2025/26 Championship

Championship relegation odds: Latest odds for relegation from 2025/26 Championship

Independent5 days ago
The Championship remains one of the most popular and fascinating leagues in European football, and the relegation battle is especially unpredictable, with clubs of all sizes at risk
The wide-open nature of most Championship relegation battles makes it one of the most intriguing betting heats in the second tier, along with promotion and the winners markets.
Bookmakers offer dedicated markets for 2025/26 Championship relegation betting throughout the season and this page will provide live Championship relegation odds every step of the way.
We use the latest live Championship relegation betting odds from the best football betting sites in the UK to help readers find the best prices throughout the season.
Punters will find top value on Championship relegation odds on this page, with any changes to markets made by betting sites immediately reflected by our odds comparison tool.
All EFL Championship relegation odds come from recommended bookmakers, and all of these are licensed by the UK Gambling Commission.
Championship Relegation Odds
The Championship relegation market works by bettors wagering on which teams will finish in the bottom three of the table at the end of the season.
Championship relegation odds shift weekly based on form, injuries, results and manager changes.
In terms of typical relegation betting strategies, many bettors will choose to back newly promoted sides, clubs in financial trouble, any clubs that have lost key players or teams with poor defensive records.
Note that some bookmakers also offer markets on who will finish bottom (24th) in the Championship as an alternative relegation market.
Championship Relegation Odds Explained
The concept of relegation is a straightforward one. Simply put, the teams with the fewest points at the end of the season go down.
As well as points, goal difference can have an important role in deciding which teams go down. If teams are level on points, the club with the better goal difference will be positioned above them in the table.
For example, Luton were relegated on goal difference in 2024/25 and Blackburn went down the same way in 2016/17.
Most gambling sites allow bets on one or more teams to be relegated and relegation multiples are popular with some football punters.
Multiples are simply bets with more than one selection, and in this case a relegation multiple would be a wager on one, two or three teams to get relegated.
Returns on multiples are calculated differently to placing two separate singles. For example, two £1 singles at 4/1 and 7/1 would return £5 and £8 respectively, including stakes – a total of £13.
However, if you combine the two selections in a £1 double, the odds are multiplied, not added. So, 4/1 becomes 5.00 and 7/1 becomes 8.00 in decimal format. The combined odds would be:
5.00 x 8.00 = 40.00, meaning a £1 double would return £40 including stake – a much higher return than the two singles combined.
The average number of points needed to stay up has increased in the last three years, going from 47 to an average of 50.
The table below shows the teams to have been relegated from the Championship as well as their points totals for the last five seasons.
Responsible Gambling
Online sports betting can be enjoyable, but it's important to stay in control and gamble responsibly.
The same applies whether you're using high street bookmakers, slot sites, casino sites, casino apps, betting apps, or any other gambling medium.
All licensed gambling sites in the UK are required to provide tools such as deposit limits, time-outs, self-exclusion and self-assessment questionnaires.
These are designed to help you manage your activity and protect your well-being.
Many operators, including online bookmakers and new casino sites, will offer free bets or a casino bonus. While these can be tempting, it is vital to read the terms and conditions of any offer before taking part.
If you are concerned about your gambling behaviour, support is available from:
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She's amazing – Chloe Kelly thanks Sarina Wiegman for ‘giving her hope'
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She's amazing – Chloe Kelly thanks Sarina Wiegman for ‘giving her hope'

The Lionesses, defending the crown they won three summers ago in the Wembley final, made it a hat-trick of knockout-round comebacks on Sunday night after Alessia Russo cancelled out Arsenal team-mate Mariona Caldentey's opener to ultimately force a shootout. Substitute Kelly – who netted the extra-time winner in the Euro 2022 final – cooly converted after Hannah Hampton made two spectacular saves and Salma Paralluelo missed, writing more personal history and a satisfying ending to a fairy-tale 2025, one that began with the 27-year-old doubting if she would even make this squad. Made for the big moments ✨ — Lionesses (@Lionesses) July 27, 2025 'She's amazing,' said Kelly, asked about a coach who has now led teams to three consecutive European trophies. 'She is an incredible woman. What she's done for this country, we should all be so grateful. What she has done for me individually, she gave me hope when I probably didn't have any, and she gave me an opportunity to represent my country again.' At the beginning of this year, Kelly was still at Manchester City, lacking playing time, and so unhappy that she took to social media to express her wish to leave the club and a situation she shared at the time had 'a huge impact on not only my career but my mental wellbeing', even considering whether or not she wanted to stay in the game. Kelly was left out of Sarina Wiegman's first squad due to a lack of minutes after securing a deadline-day loan move to Arsenal but was called up as an injury replacement in February and has enjoyed revelatory tournament, cementing herself as the most superlative of English super-subs. 'There were a lot of tears at full time,' said Kelly, 'Especially when I saw my family, because they are the people that got me through those dark moments and I am so grateful to be out the back end. If that's a story to tell someone who might be experiencing the same, then tough times don't last. 'Right around the corner was the Champions League final, I won that, and now a Euros final. 'So thank you to everyone who wrote me off. I'm grateful.' Kelly was rewarded with a permanent deal at Arsenal after her impressive loan spell. She added: 'I knew that I had to get game time, and representing England is never a given,' said Kelly. 'But what (Sarina) has done for the women's game, not just in England, but in the Netherlands, the whole women's game, she's taken it to another level.' It was Kelly's cross that teed up Russo for the 57th-minute equaliser on Sunday, and it was her deliveries that allowed Lucy Bronze and Michelle Agyemang to level late in their quarter-final with Sweden, ultimately setting up their first dramatic shootout. Kelly's composed spot-kick was an anomaly in that error-strewn afair, and – though she revealed after Sunday's trophy lift that she had missed three penalties in training – she stepped up and fired home with the same remarkable composure again in the final, once again bearing the weight of England's expectations. Asked if Kelly's coolness was even coachable, Wiegman said: 'I think it's a little bit of both. It says something about the team environment and it says a lot about her character. Everyone brings something different, and she brings this.' Wiegman added: 'Every player has their own story, and I think every story is incredible on its own, but for her most of the stories are out in the open. 'I'm so happy for her. She has been fighting to come back and be at her highest level. She just wanted to take that penalty and celebrate and dance, but to be able to score that penalty under that pressure is very impressive.'

Chloe Kelly sends pointed message to her doubters after England's Euro 2025 win
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