Tottenham Hotspur Relegation Odds: The trapdoor looms larger than ever…

After a humiliating 3-0 home defeat to Nottingham Forest on Sunday, Tottenham Hotspur are now just one point and one place adrift of safety in the Premier League, signalling the seriousness of the situation the club finds itself in.
Spurs are the only side without a league win so far in 2026, losing eight of their 13 matches this calendar year, which begs the question - surely they won't go down, will they? Below we've taken a look at the Tottenham Hotspur relegation odds.
Tottenham Hotspur Relegation Odds
*odds correct at time of publication
Tottenham Hotspur Relegation Odds
Do we now start to consider the actual possibility that Spurs could be playing Championship football next season? Before the season started, they were 66/1 to be relegated. Now? Just 6/4.
You may remember Spurs flirting with relegation last term, eventually finishing 17th, but they were never really in any actual danger of going down, mainly due to the severely poor form of Leicester City and Ipswich Town.
However, after Sunday's defeat to Forest, Tottenham now find themselves just one point and one place clear of the relegation zone, mainly due to West Ham United's defeat at Aston Villa, otherwise the Lilywhites could have found themselves in the bottom three heading into the international break.
That defeat, coming after two respectable efforts against Liverpool and Atletico Madrid, makes Igor Tudor's interim position look increasingly untenable. Things seem to have gone from bad to worse since the Croatian stepped into the dugout on February 14, winning the fewest points of any Premier League club across his five-game tenure. In addition, only three teams in Premier League history have endured longer winless starts to a calendar year - and all three were relegated.
Tudor oversaw instant improvement at Udinese, Lazio and Juventus in Serie A, but Spurs look bereft of confidence and a new manager bounce definitely hasn't kicked in.
Attention now turns to a trip to the Stadium of Light after the international break, to face a Sunderland side buoyed by a derby day win against Newcastle United at St. James' Park on Sunday.
Odds correct at time of publishing.
Is it all doom and gloom? Can Spurs survive? Of course, they can. Even as I write this, there's still part of me that thinks the possibility of Spurs being relegated is outlandish. Tudor's side could return from the international break, win their next two fixtures and all this relegation talk is immediately quashed.
There's 21 points left to play for, although I must say that a fixture list of Sunderland (A), Brighton & Hove Albion (H), Wolves (A), Villa (A), Leeds United (H), Chelsea (A) and Everton (H) to conclude this campaign doesn't make for pleasant reading if I was a Spurs supporter.
It goes without saying that the six-pointers with Wolves and Leeds will be pivotal in Spurs' survival bid, and the former's hopes of a sensational fightback are boosted by their remaining matches - four of their last seven outings will be against fellow bottom-six sides, meaning that Spurs don't really have any margin for any further slip-ups.
It's also worth noting that two of the bottom four sides are in decent form - West Ham have earned the 12th-most points in the division since the turn of the year, while Wolves are in 13th spot in the form table for that same run.
In fairness to Tottenham, they've been decimated by injuries for the majority of the campaign - the likes of Yves Bissouma, Dejan Kulusevski, James Maddison, Rodrigo Bentancur, Joao Palhinha and Ben Davies have all missed significant time on the pitch this season.
Even allowing for injuries, Spurs' performances so far under Tudor haven't suggested that this is a side ready to dig in and grind out results in a relegation battle. I don't think the magic number of 40 points will be needed to survive this season, but if we use that number as a benchmark, Tottenham are still 10 points short of that tally with seven games to play.
At the time of writing, as mentioned above, Spurs are 6/4 to go down, behind 1/100 Burnley and Wolves, and West Ham are a slightly shorter price than the Lilywhites at 6/5. Leeds are Forest are next in the betting at 5/1, followed by Crystal Palace (100/1) and Sunderland (150/1).
If you're a Spurs fan reading this, strap yourselves in as this could be a bumpy ride...
Odds correct at time of publishing.
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