Anthony Joshua is a major betting favorite for his July 25 heavyweight bout with Kristian Prenga, and the line has given bettors little reason to doubt how sportsbooks see this one. Early reported U.S. odds opened with Joshua at -2500 and Prenga at +1100, a number that immediately framed the fight as a tune-up rather than a true 50-50 matchup. The fight itself is going down on July 25 in Saudi Arabia. Joshua returns to the ring after the stoppage loss to Daniel Dubois, then the knockout win over Jake Paul, and ahead of his contest at a later 2026 date with Tyson Fury.
Anthony Joshua vs Kristian Prenga odds
The clearest market read is that backing Joshua straight is expensive, so most boxing betting site attention has shifted to method-of-victory props. Available betting boards show Joshua by KO, TKO or DQ as the shortest method price on the board, while Joshua by decision sits much longer. In decimal form, several listed books have shown Joshua by stoppage around 1.11 to 1.12, while Joshua by decision has sat around 7.25 to 7.50. Converted to U.S. odds, that puts Joshua by stoppage at roughly -900 to -833, while Joshua by decision lands around +625 to +650.
Joshua winning on points is available, but the odds suggest bettors are pricing this as a fight that ends before the final bell. The distance market backs that up, with “No” on the fight going the distance listed around 1.09 to 1.12, which converts to roughly -1111 to -833 in U.S. format. By contrast, “Yes” on the full distance has been posted around 5.75 to 6.50, or about +475 to +550.
Round betting points to an early Joshua finish as the most likely scenario. One market has Joshua in Round 1 at 4.25 and Round 2 at 4.50, while another lists him at 4.00 in Round 1 and 4.35 in Round 2. In U.S. odds, that translates to about +325 for Round 1 and between +335 and +350 for Round 2. Joshua in Rounds 1-2 has also been listed at 2.25, which is about +125, while Joshua in Rounds 3-4 has been posted at 3.70, or about +270. That tells you the market leans toward an early stoppage, with the first four rounds carrying most of the betting weight.
As for line movement, the clearest confirmed shift is at the opening stage of the market rather than in a long public drift. The earliest widely surfaced U.S. line had Joshua at -2500 and Prenga at +1100. Later boards from non-U.S. books still showed Joshua near even shorter implied territory, with straight prices of 1.02 to 1.03 for Joshua and 10.50 to 18.00 for Prenga, which convert to about -5000 to -3333 on Joshua and +950 to +1700 on Prenga.
Joshua needs a win, and more than that, he needs a clean and convincing win before the scheduled Fury showdown later this year. For bettors, that explains why the outright winner market offers little value on its own and why the action has centered on stoppage, round, and distance props instead. The betting picture is simple: Joshua is expected to win, the market prefers a stoppage, and the earliest rounds remain the most heavily implied finish window.



