Best NFL odds at NJ online sportsbooks

Anyone 21 and older can now bet on the NFL in New Jersey. That means you can bet on the NFL throughout the offseason, preseason, regular season, into the playoffs, and all the way up to and including betting on the Super Bowl.

From moneylines, point spreads, and totals, to parlays and props, retail sportsbooks and NJ sports betting apps truly have the NFL covered. See below for the best online sportsbooks to bet on the NFL in New Jersey, including this week's latest live NFL odds plus Philadelphia Eagles odds, New York Giants odds, and New York Jets odds.

Updated NFL Odds at NJ Online Sportsbooks

See below for this week's point spreads, moneylines and totals odds for every NFL game plus current NFL futures odds on the next Super Bowl winner at the best NJ sports betting apps. Click on any odds to go to the sportsbook and claim your welcome bonus.

NFL odds in New Jersey

To be fair, New Jersey doesn't have an NFL team. However, the New York Jets and New York Giants both play home games at MetLife Stadium inside the Meadowlands Sports Complex in East Rutherford, New Jersey. Plus, the Philadelphia Eagles are practically an NJ team considering the City of Brotherly Love's proximity to the NJ/PA border.

New York Jets odds

The New York Jets compete in the AFC East division. The team has been around since 1959 as an original member of the American Football League and joined the NFL in the AFL-NFL merger in 1970. The Jets have played play home games at MetLife Stadium since 2010.

The team has just one Super Bowl title from Super Bowl III when they shocked the world by beating the 18-point favorite Baltimore Colts by a final score of 16–7. Click here to view Jets odds.

New York Giants odds

The New York Giants compete in the NFC East division. The team has been in the NFL since 1925. The Giants have also played home games at MetLife Stadium since 2010.

The Giants have won four Super Bowl titles, including Super Bowl XXI (1986), Super Bowl XXV (1990), Super Bowl XLII (2007), and Super Bowl XLVI (2011). View updated Giants odds here.

Philadelphia Eagles odds

The Philadelphia Eagles also compete in the NFC East division making the Giants a bitter rival. The team joined the NFL in 1933. The Eagles have played home games at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia since 2003.

The Eagles won their first Super Bowl in franchise history in 2017, defeating the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LII. Click here to view Eagles odds.

How to read NFL betting lines & odds

NFL lines are the different odds you can bet on at sportsbooks. These lines represent the price sportsbooks are offering on a particular bet. Basic NFL lines available in NJ include moneylines, point spreads, and over/unders (or totals).

Check out a typical NJ sports betting app such as FanDuel Sportsbook and you'll see lines on every NFL game that look like this:

  • Point Spread: Giants +7.5 (-110) Cowboys -7.5 (-110)
  • Moneyline: Giants +245 Cowboys -290
  • Totals: (Over /Under): 46.5 (O+100/U-120)

Seeing that plus sign (+) in front of the Giants lines tells you oddsmakers consider New York the underdog in this game. Seeing a plus sign (+) in front of the over also tells you oddsmakers figure this will be a low-scoring affair.

The importance of line shopping

Of course, you might find different lines for the same football game at other betting operators. Since the line is essentially the price you’re getting on a bet, it's always a good idea to shop around for the best price.

This is called line shopping. Just check the line at more than one NJ sports betting app or retail sportsbook before you book a bet and you're line shopping.

Look at the Giants/Cowboys game on DraftKings Sportsbook and you'll see lines that include a Giants +7.5 (-110) point spread, Giants +265 (Cowboys -345) moneyline, and 46.5 (O/U-110) totals line.

As you can see, DraftKings is offering a better price on the Giants moneyline and the under. There is value in line shopping.

What is line movement?

Once you book a bet, you lock in the price. However, these lines are subject to change for a variety of reasons leading up to kickoff. The typical reasons oddsmakers might move a line include:

Injuries and holdouts: NFL teams release injury reports and a key player being out for a game might be enough to move the line. Same goes for contract holdouts that force sportsbooks to move the lines on the game up or down accordingly.

Bad weather: Weather is a factor on NFL games not played in a dome. Late-breaking news about bad weather could have sportsbooks scrambling to move the lines. Totals lines are particularly affected by weather.

Big bets and lots of them: A big bet or increased action on one side or the other will likely move the lines.

Bottom line, when an NFL line moves, you're going to want to identify the reason why.

Fading the public

Weather affecting the totals line and injuries or holdouts turning a moneyline favorite into an underdog are one thing. Line movement due to increased action on one side is another completely different one.

The latter usually tells you what the majority of the betting public is thinking about a game. That gives you the chance to adjust accordingly.

Doing so is known as fading the public. Fading the public is basically waiting for public sentiment to move a line and then taking advantage of that.

Sportsbooks set the opening line on an NFL game as a way to attract action. When the lines move, it often indicates most of the public is betting one side over the other.

Taking advantage of a better price, one that has more to do with betting than the actual game, is fading the public.

NFL betting apps NJ

Legal, single-game sports betting launched in New Jersey in June 2018 when the state’s first retail sportsbook opened its doors. The first NJ sports betting apps went live in August of 2018.

There are now 20+ online sportsbooks in operation in the state, alongside 10+ on-site books. All the following NJ sportsbook operators are now ready, willing, and able to take bets. Some offer NJ sports betting bonuses, too.

NJ online sportsbooks are all either run by retail sportsbook operators or run under a retail sportsbook operator's license. For the most part, that means the NFL lines you'll find at either are similar. Despite that, there are several differences between betting on the NFL online versus at an Atlantic City casino or NJ racetrack.

sports betting appsThe first and most prominent is that apps are significantly more convenient.

You don't have to travel to a casino or racetrack to place a bet on the NFL when you do it using an app. Plus, NJ online sportsbooks are available all across the state, 24 hours a day, wherever you can get access to the internet.

Apps and websites are also a little more user-friendly. There’s no need to wait in line or face the intimidation of having to place bets with sportsbook staff who speak a language it seems only pro sports bettors have a good grasp of.

Most NJ retail sportsbooks also use self-serve betting kiosks to help eliminate these barriers to market entry. However, sports betting apps are even easier to use.

Most online sportsbooks also offer a variety of different sign-up bonuses that their retail counterparts do not. That means you can start this NFL season betting for free if you're doing it online.

Retail sportsbooks might have an edge when it comes to a place to watch games, though. The high-end equipment sportsbooks employ is second to none. Plus, they've got the NFL Sunday Ticket TV package giving you access to every game.

Add in great food and beverage service, and there’s no better place to wager on the NFL and sweat your bets. That said, your couch, TV, and your favorite app can provide the kind of privacy you may value over all of that.

How to bet on football games

There are three basic ways you can bet on NFL games at NJ retail sportsbooks and online betting sites. You can also book futures bets. Here's a brief explanation of how each of these basic betting formats works:

Moneyline

This is a basic NFL bet allowing you to pick the winner of a game. Moneyline bets are booked at the odds posted at the time you place the bet. Favorites feature a negative (-) number telling you how much money you need to lay to win $100. Underdogs have a positive (+) number indicating how much you’ll win for every $100 you bet.

Point spread

This is a basic NFL bet allowing you to pick the winner of a game with a point spread set by oddsmakers factored into the final score. Point spread bets are booked at moneyline odds that differ from book to book and game to game.

Totals (over/under)

This is a basic NFL bet allowing you to pick whether the total points scored in a game will be over or under a total-score line set by oddsmakers. Totals bets are booked at moneyline odds that differ from book to book and game to game.

Futures

Futures allow you to go beyond a basic NFL bet and bet on a team to win the Super Bowl, conference, or division. NFL futures markets open before the season and odds are adjusted as it continues.

Is NFL betting legal?

It is 100% legal to bet on the NFL at licensed sports betting operators. That includes all retail sportsbooks and sportsbook apps licensed by the NJ Division of Gaming Enforcement (NJDGE).

NJ lawmakers have been fighting to make sports betting legal since 2011. In May 2018, the US Supreme Court finally granted the state that right when it struck down the law that governed sports betting across the country (PASPA).

NJ lawmakers quickly passed legislation making it all legal, and the DGE put together regulations to govern sports betting in NJ. This included betting regulations legalizing single-game wagering on NFL games.

The DGE now provides complete oversight on NFL betting in NJ. That means all the bets you see available at New Jersey sportsbooks have been approved by the state regulators.

The state's first retail sportsbook opened in June 2018. The DGE authorized the first NJ sports betting app to go live in August 2018. It's completely legal to bet on the NFL across the Garden State at any one of over a dozen NJ sportsbook apps and retail sportsbooks.

Legal NFL betting sites vs. illegal sites

New Jersey offers legal, safe, regulated NFL betting. Therefore, there's no reason to risk betting on the NFL with an unregulated offshore operation.

In fact, there are several reasons why betting with legal NJ sportsbooks is better than trying it with illegal offshore operators, including:

Safety and security: If you bet with an offshore operator and your money goes missing, good luck getting it back. With legal sportsbooks you can always take any issue you might have to the DGE, which regulates NFL betting in New Jersey.

Mainstream deposit methods: You don’t have to wire money to some mysterious company or individual on an island in the Caribbean when you bet with legal NJ sportsbooks.

Deposit options include legitimate bank transfers (via ACH or bill pay), third-party payment processors such as PayPal, and well-known and respected credit card companies such as Visa or Mastercard. You can even walk cash up to at an Atlantic City casino cage.

Your money will always be a lot safer using these deposit methods rather than the creative ones offshore operators use to skirt around US law.

Responsible gambling measures: Legal sportsbooks make sure no minors use the service and problem gamblers can get some protection from themselves. Go the legal route and you'll find deposit limits, time-outs, and self-exclusion. Plus, legal sportsbooks will help set you up with local charities that can assist with problem gambling issues. Go the offshore route and you're on your own.

Software platform quality: Legal and regulated sportsbooks have partnered with the best casinos, racetracks, and technology partners to put together top-of-the-line products. These partnerships ensure you're using the best software that includes the best features. Most offshore books use out-of-date software that's liable to crash at any time.

Promotions and bonuses: Legal NJ sportsbooks are just starting out in a rather competitive market. That means promotions and bonus offers for you.

Alternative NFL betting markets

NJ books also offer a variety of alternative NFL sports betting markets in addition to the basic NFL bets.

That means you can bet on time-specific markets within a game, including first quarter, first- and second-half bets. It also means a variety of alternative lines, including totals and point spreads, available at adjusted odds.

It sounds more complicated than it is. These markets simply offer variations on basic NFL bets for specific time periods within a game, or alternative lines with adjusted odds.

What is live betting or in-game NFL betting?

Most basic bets are placed before kickoff, but most New Jersey sportsbooks also offer what's known as live, in-play, or in-game betting.

Just like it sounds, this is live wagering on an NFL game while it’s in progress. Sportsbooks adjust the odds on basic in-game bets throughout and you can bet on them at any time during the game.

The odds are generally based on proprietary algorithms employed by the sportsbooks. But certain props and alternative bets are also available live.

You can't exactly line up at a betting window to do this kind of wagering. Things change too fast. So, the best way to get in the in-play wagering game is with an NJ sportsbook app.

Things happen fast and players need to focus on the game and the changing odds to get in on bets that may only be available for a few seconds at a time. Since the odds change after almost every play it can add a level of excitement to watching any NFL game, even a blowout.

NFL pre-season, regular season and playoffs

When it comes to betting on the NFL, there are some major differences between the preseason, regular season and playoffs.

Preseason

NFL preseason games are like scrimmages coaches use to evaluate the roster. Most are not trying to win. Starters rarely play more than a quarter. NJ sportsbooks will offer lines on the games, but these are either guesses or standard lines used for almost every game.

The teams aren’t truly competing to win, and the best players spend more time on the sideline than anywhere else, makes it equally difficult to set lines and pick winners.

Regular season

When it comes to the regular season, NFL teams do their best to try to win every game. After all, a team's regular-season win-loss record determines if they make the playoffs and compete for a championship.

Each team of the NFL's 32 teams are divided into two 16-team conferences, the AFC and NFC. Each conference features four divisions of four teams each.

Each team plays 17 regular-season games during an 18-week period (allowing for one bye week). After that, the team with the top regular-season record in each division qualifies for the playoffs. They are seeded 1 through 4.

Plus, the three teams with the best records of the remaining teams in each conference also qualify as wild card teams and are seeded 5, 6 and 7.

NFL Playoffs

It's win or go home in the NFL Playoffs. In other words, it's a single-elimination tournament to decide who goes to the NFL Championship game (aka the Super Bowl).

The playoffs begin with the wild card round. The top seed in each conference gets a "bye.” The second-seeded team hosts the seventh-seeded wild card team, third hosts the sixth, and the fourth seed hosts the fifth.

Winners move on to the divisional playoffs. The top seed always faces the lowest-remaining seed, and the two other winners from the wild card round face each other. Winners of these games meet in the AFC and NFC Conference Championship games.

The Super Bowl

In the end, the AFC and NFC Conference Champions face off in the Super Bowl. To get your bets in, check our Super Bowl odds page or Super Bowl prop bets page.

Biggest upsets in Jets, Giants, and Eagles Super Bowl history

Super Bowl III

The New York Jets entered Super Bowl III as 18-point underdogs to the vaunted Baltimore Colts.

However, three days before the game, Jets quarterback Joe Namath guaranteed victory and backed it up on the field, pacing the Jets to a 16–0 lead. They went on to win 16–7.

Namath was named Super Bowl MVP and went on to fame and fortune. He was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1985 largely due to his Super Bowl III performance and the hype surrounding his guarantee.

Super Bowl LII

The Eagles beat the defending Super Bowl LI champion Patriots 41–33, to win their first Super Bowl in this game.

It marked the eighth time, and third in four years, that coach Bill Belichick and quarterback Tom Brady had taken New England to the Super Bowl.

In contrast, Philadelphia was led by backup quarterback Nick Foles. As a result, New England was favored, and no one gave Foles and the Eagles much of a chance. Foles went on to be named the first Super Bowl MVP in the Eagles victory.

Super Bowl XXV

Super Bowl XXV was the closest Super Bowl ever as the New York Giants defeated the Buffalo Bills 20–19 to book the win.

It was the Bills' high-powered no-huddle offense versus the Giants' smash-mouth offense and league-best defense.

Most remember that Bills kicker Scott Norwood missed a last-second field goal, starting a four-game losing streak in the Super Bowl for Buffalo. Many forget that the Bills were also seven-point favorites.

The Giants controlled possession of the ball to overcome an eight-point second-quarter deficit behind the play of running back Ottis Anderson. Anderson carried the ball 21 times for 102 yards and a touchdown, keeping the ball out of the hands of the potent Bills offense on the way to winning the title and Super Bowl MVP honors.

NFL betting FAQ

 

NFL point spreads are a handicapping system employed by sportsbooks. It is essentially a way to encourage betting. You bet with or against the spread by picking the winner of a game with a point spread set by oddsmakers factored in. Point spread bets are booked at moneyline odds.

You pick either the point spread favorite, giving away the points, or underdog, taking the points.

 

Home field advantage refers to the inherent advantage NFL teams enjoy playing at home in front of a favorable crowd. Most of the time, oddsmakers will give the home team a three-point home field advantage when setting the point spread.

 

In the NFL, the underdog is the team not favored to win a particular game. This is the team that'll be taking points on the spread and paying out positive odds on the moneyline if they can defy the odds and win.

 

All 32 NFL teams play a 17-game schedule over 18 weeks. The teams are divided into two 16-team conferences, the AFC and NFC. Each conference is divided into four divisions of four teams each. Each team plays each division rival twice.

At the end of the 17-game schedule, the teams with the best win and loss records in each division move on to the playoffs. The two best non-division winning teams also join them there.

 

The 2023 NFL Draft is taking place in Kansas City from April 27 - 29, 2023. The top three picks from the 2022 NFL Draft were:

#1: Jacksonville Jaguars - Travon Walker, DE Georgia
#2: Detroit Lions - Aidan Hutchinson, DE Michigan
#3: Houston Texans - Derek Stingley Jr., DB LSU

 

There are 32 NFL teams.

 

NFL teams can keep 53 players on the rosters. With 32 teams that makes a total of 1,696 NFL players in the league.

 

According to most records, the NFL split up $18 billion in revenue among its 32 teams for the 2021-2022 season. The league is looking to raise annual revenue to $25 billion by 2027.

 

The NFL Playoffs start with Wild Card Weekend on Saturday, January 14, 2023.

The Super Bowl LVII will be on Sunday, February 12, 2023, at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, AZ.

 

There are 26 states that don't have an NFL team. The Jets and Giants both play in New Jersey despite being called New York teams. Also, the Washington Commanders play in Maryland and have team facilities in Virginia.

Considering all that, here are the 26 states with no NFL franchise:

  • Alabama
  • Alaska
  • Arkansas
  • Connecticut
  • Delaware
  • Hawaii
  • Idaho
  • Iowa
  • Kansas
  • Kentucky
  • Maine
  • Mississippi
  • Montana
  • Nebraska
  • New Hampshire
  • New Mexico
  • North Dakota
  • Oklahoma
  • Oregon
  • Rhode Island
  • South Carolina
  • South Dakota
  • Utah
  • Vermont
  • West Virginia
  • Wyoming

 

The Dallas Cowboys have long been "America's Team” and the most-watched. However, the New England Patriots dominance over the past decade has them a close second.

 

The Detroit Lions and the New York Giants played to a 0-0 tie on Nov. 7, 1963, marking the only scoreless game and lowest-scoring game in NFL history.

 

The Washington Redskins beat the New York Giants, 72-41, on Nov. 27, 1966. The 113 total points remains the most ever scored in an NFL game. In fact, the 100-point mark has only been eclipsed five times in NFL history.