Latest Premier League Relegation Betting Odds & Tips

Written By Gareth Hinton | Published at April 28, 2026
Oct 12, 2025; Tottenham, United Kingdom; The Golden Cockerel at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium during an NFL International Series game. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Tottenham Hotspur are in a relegation dogfight, with most bookies making them favourites to join Wolverhampton Wanderers and Burnley in next season’s EFL Championship. Check out the latest Premier League relegation odds.

Latest Premier League Relegation Odds

With Wolves and Burnley already dropping out of England’s top tier, just one more relegation place remains. Spurs are still in the drop zone despite winning their first league game in 2026 last time out.

Tottenham are currently favourites for relegation in the latest Premier League odds, with 10Bet offering just 8/11. Fellow Londoners, West Ham United, who have picked up of late, are next up at 7/5. Realistically, the fight for survival could be between those two London clubs.

Nottingham Forest and Leeds United have probably done enough. United are six points above Spurs, while Forest are a point behind Leeds in 16th. In the latest EPL relegation odds, Leeds are 25/1, and Forest are 20/1.

Our Premier League Relegation Tips

Tottenham finished in 17th last term, collecting a mere 38 points from 38 games. They were well clear of the drop zone in terms of points, as 18th-place Leicester City ended their campaign on 25.

The unthinkable could happen, as Roberto De Zerbi’s men head into Sunday’s crunch match at Aston Villa two points behind London rivals West Ham, who travel to Brentford on Saturday.

Despite their woeful form last year, not many punters would have predicted Tottenham’s demise this season, but the Lilywhites have endured another miserable Premier League campaign.

Last weekend’s win at Wolves has kept their survival hopes alive, but have Tottenham got more victories in them? The relegation scrap will go to the wire, but we are backing Spurs at 8/11 with 10Bet to drop down to the second tier of English football for the first time in almost 50 years.