Calculateur Forecast - Paris Couplé Courses Hippiques

Calculateur forecast gratuit. Calculez les gains pour paris couplé ordre et désordre dans les courses hippiques.

Veuillez saisir une cote valide
Veuillez saisir une cote valide
Veuillez saisir un montant de mise valide
Résultats
Nombre de paris --
Mise totale --
Cote combinée --
Retour total --
Bénéfice --

Comment utiliser ce calculateur

  1. Choisissez le type de forecast — direct (un ordre 1-2 spécifique) ou inverse (les deux ordres)
  2. Saisissez les cotes du cheval que vous avez choisi pour la 1re place
  3. Saisissez les cotes du cheval que vous avez choisi pour la 2e place
  4. Saisissez votre mise unitaire
  5. Visualisez la mise totale, les cotes combinées, le retour et le bénéfice

Formule

Cotes combinées = Cotes₁ × Cotes₂

Forecast direct : 1 pari, mise totale = mise unitaire.

Forecast inverse : 2 paris (les deux ordres), mise totale = 2 × mise unitaire. Seul l’ordre correct gagne ; paiement = mise unitaire × cotes combinées.

Questions fréquentes

What is a forecast bet?

A forecast (also called exacta in the US) is a bet on which two horses will finish 1st and 2nd in a race. A straight forecast requires the exact order; a reverse forecast covers both orders for double the stake.

How is forecast different from each-way?

Each-way is two independent bets (one to win, one to place) on a single horse. A forecast is a single bet specifying the relationship between two horses’ finishing positions. Forecasts pay much more but have lower probability of winning.

Should I use straight or reverse forecast?

Use straight if you have a strong opinion on which horse wins. Use reverse if you think two horses will fill 1st and 2nd but you’re unsure of the order — you double your stake but cover both possibilities.

Are forecast odds the same as the multiplied book odds?

Most UK bookmakers use Computer Straight Forecast (CSF) dividends declared by Tote/SP, not pure multiplied odds. Multiplied odds are a useful approximation but actual payouts can differ by ±10-20% depending on the field strength formula used.