Why Are Bettors Drawn to the Super Bowl Coin Toss?

One of the most popular novelty prop markets for the Super Bowl is the result of the coin toss. Jason Ence digs into why it's such a highly-trafficked wager ahead of Super Bowl 59.

Jason Ence - Betting Analyst at Covers.com
Jason Ence • Betting Analyst
Jan 30, 2025 • 10:48 ET • 4 min read
Fred Warner Patrick Mahomes Coin Toss Super Bowl
Photo By - Imagn Images. The 49ers' Fred Warner and the Chiefs' Patrick Mahomes await the result of the coin toss at Super Bowl 58.

The Super Bowl is the biggest annual sporting event in the United States, both for fans as well as sportsbooks. Over $185 million was wagered on Super Bowl 58 last year in Nevada sportsbooks alone, while estimates nationwide were set at over $23 billion. 

And while regular gamblers will be locked in on the spread, total, and player props, some markets play to the more casual bettor. Coin toss odds are a prime example, and despite having no ability to handicap the outcome, it continues to be one of the most popular markets each year. 

But why do so many people wager on something that, in the end, is the equivalent of absolute dumb luck? Join us as we try to make heads or tails of the psychology and mathematics behind one of the oddest bets in all of sports ahead of Super Bowl 59.

Super Bowl 59 coin toss odds

Result True Odds Caesars FanDuel DraftKings bet365
Heads +100 -105 -104 +100 +100
Tails +100 -105 -104 +100 +100

Odds as of January 30, 2025.

Simplicity and accessibility

It’s hard to think of anything in sports betting that gives you a quicker outcome than betting on the coin toss at the Super Bowl. After all, we are talking about something that takes about three seconds from when the coin leaves the hand to when the side facing up is announced.

And it’s a 50/50 proposition. It’s either going to land heads or tails. Betting on it requires no knowledge of the game. There’s no way you can take a "bad beat" and lose. That means anybody can bet on it, whether it’s a die-hard fan or someone who only watches the game to see the commercials.

That’s why, unlike most bets placed in a two-sided market, there’s little to no juice. In fact, bet365 and DraftKings currently have both heads and tails priced at +100. That means they’re not taking a single penny from any of the winning bets. 

Though widely available, some areas don't offer this market. In America, it's only in 20 states and Washington, DC. However, it’s offered nearly everywhere in Canada. 

So, with no juice and limited audiences, why offer it at all? Mainly because it gets people into the action. And when you’re betting on the coin flip, you’re more likely to hang around and bet on other Super Bowl props. And those other wagers are where books make their money.

The thrill of the unknown

Want to bet on trends? Good luck. Since Super Bowl 51, where tails won for a fourth straight year, there’s been no real trend to go by. Heads has won four of the last seven times, with neither side coming up more than two years in a row. 

You could go by heads having hit three of the last four years, but doing so would ignore the fact that tails has been the winning side in seven of the last 11 Super Bowls. Then again, 28 of the 58 coin flips have come up heads, with tails being the correct selection the other 30 times. 

And that’s not even addressing the fact that winning the coin toss has little to no bearing on who wins the game itself. While the Kansas City Chiefs have won both the coin toss and the game over each of the last two seasons — heads — the previous eight Super Bowl champions lost the coin flip. 

Furthermore, only 26 of the 58 Super Bowl champions won the toss. That’s not to mention the AFC has won nine of the last 13 tosses. Want another fun stat? You have to go back to the Green Bay Packers in Super Bowl 45 to find the last team from the NFC to win both the coin toss and the game itself.

Influence of prop-betting culture

Caesars Sportsbook reported last year that a bettor placed a $100,000 wager on the result of the coin flip, going with the “Tails never fails” mantra. He lost that wager.

But the fact that someone would stake that kind of money on something nobody controls shows just how popular Super Bowl props are. After all, there’s not a sporting event in the entire world that offers more unique props. 

Want to bet on the length of the national anthem or America The Beautiful? You can! Do you think you know which song Kendrick Lamar will perform to open the halftime show? Take a shot. But even then, nearly all of these bets can be placed with some handicapping, even if it’s limited, as you can evaluate things such as how the anthem performer has sung the song in the past. The coin toss is chaos.

The psychological appeal

A 2014 study published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology stated that there’s an overwhelming bias when random individuals are asked to select the outcome of a coin toss. They’re 80% likely to pick whichever option they hear first — whether it’s “heads” or “tails” — or even a color on either side of a coin.

Yet bettors of the coin toss don’t follow that psychology. Books have reported in recent years that tails is often the preferred choice, ranging between 51% and 56% of both the bets placed and the actual handle amount.

The trap many bettors fall into is looking at those aforementioned trends, and allowing them to invoke a bias. Sure, the odds of heads hitting for the fourth time in five years is low—but the outcomes of those tosses have zero bearing on this one. 

The Athletic did an experiment in 2022, using three exact replicas of the Super Bowl coin, and had three staffers each flip one of them 500 or more times. Tails came up 50.4% of the time throughout 1,751 flips. And while one participant had 23 straight flips resulting in a "tails," the conclusion from everyone involved was the outcome was genuinely random.

Another scientific study showed the result of the coin toss tended to be the same as the side facing up when the coin was flipped into the air. But it’s not like you’re going to have any inclination of that information before placing your bet. 

We live in a society where many are chasing every bit of dopamine our brains can find, and winning any bet gives you that feeling. While I’d never recommend betting real money on the outcome of a coin flip, plenty of people will — and hopefully now you have a bit of an understanding as to why.

All-time coin toss results

Here is a full breakdown of every Super Bowl coin toss:

Super Bowl Heads/Tails Coin toss winner Coin toss winner wins game
1 Heads Packers Yes
2 Tails Raiders No
3 Heads Jets Yes
4 Tails Vikings No
5 Tails Cowboys No
6 Heads Dolphins No
7 Heads Dolphins Yes
8 Heads Dolphins Yes
9 Tails Steelers Yes
10 Heads Cowboys No
11 Tails Raiders Yes
12 Heads Cowboys Yes
13 Heads Cowboys No
14 Heads Rams No
15 Tails Eagles No
16 Tails 49ers Yes
17 Tails Dolphins No
18 Heads Raiders Yes
19 Tails 49ers Yes
20 Tails Bears Yes
21 Tails Broncos No
22 Heads Redskins Yes
23 Tails 49ers Yes
24 Heads Broncos No
25 Heads Bills No
26 Heads Redskins Yes
27 Heads Bills No
28 Tails Cowboys Yes
29 Heads 49ers Yes
30 Tails Cowboys Yes
31 Heads Patriots No
32 Tails Packers No
33 Tails Falcons No
34 Tails Rams Yes
35 Tails Giants No
36 Heads Rams No
37 Tails Buccaneers Yes
38 Tails Panthers No
39 Tails Eagles No
40 Tails Seahawks No
41 Heads Bears No
42 Tails Giants Yes
43 Heads Cardinals No
44 Heads Saints Yes
45 Heads Packers Yes
46 Heads Patriots No
47 Heads Ravens Yes
48 Tails Seahawks Yes
49 Tails Seahawks No
50 Tails Panthers No
51 Tails Falcons No
52 Heads Patriots No
53 Tails Rams No
54 Tails 49ers No
55 Heads Chiefs No
56 Heads Bengals No
57 Tails Chiefs Yes
58 Heads Chiefs Yes

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Jason Ence - Covers
Betting Analyst

Jason has been hooked on soccer since watching Real Madrid and Manchester United in the 2003 Champions League, and has been betting on the sport for nearly 15 years. He has given soccer gambling and fantasy advice for nearly a decade, writing for sites including Rotowire, SB Nation, and The TwinSpires Edge.

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