Value & Strategy Calculators
Arbitrage Bet Calculator
Find guaranteed profits by betting on all outcomes across different bookmakers. Enter odds from multiple bookies to calculate stake distribution for risk-free returns.
Closing Line Value Calculator
Measure your betting edge by comparing your odds to the closing line. CLV is the best predictor of long-term betting profitability.
Dutching Calculator
Calculate optimal stakes for dutching multiple selections in the same market. Distribute your total stake to get equal returns regardless of which selection wins.
Expected Value Calculator
Determine if a bet has positive expected value (+EV). Enter odds and your estimated true probability to see if the bet is profitable long-term.
Half Point Calculator
Calculate the cost and value of buying half points on point spreads. Determine if paying extra juice to move off a key number is worth it.
Hold Calculator
Calculate the bookmaker's margin (vig/juice) on any two-way market. See implied probabilities, fair odds without the vig, and identify which bookmakers offer the best value.
Kelly Criterion Calculator
Calculate the mathematically optimal bet size based on your edge and bankroll. Maximize long-term growth while managing risk.
Strike Rate Calculator
Track your betting win percentage and compare it to the break-even rate for your average odds. Calculate ROI, edge, and average profit per bet to evaluate your performance.
Surebet Calculator
Calculate guaranteed profits from surebet opportunities. Enter odds from different bookmakers to find risk-free betting opportunities across 2-way and 3-way markets.
Win/Loss Calculator
Track your betting performance with win rate, ROI, and profit per bet. Enter your betting record to analyze your long-term results.
Use these calculators to evaluate bet value, optimize your staking strategy, and identify profitable opportunities. These are the tools that separate recreational bettors from those who approach betting with a strategic edge.
Why Strategy Matters in Betting
Most bettors lose money because they bet based on intuition, loyalty, or gut feeling. Strategic bettors use mathematics to identify when the odds are in their favor and size their bets accordingly. The tools in this section help you answer two critical questions: Is this bet worth placing? and How much should I stake?
Key Concepts
Expected Value (EV)
Every bet has an expected value — the average profit or loss you can expect if you placed the same bet thousands of times. A bet with positive expected value (+EV) will be profitable over time; a negative EV bet will lose money. Our EV calculator helps you determine whether a bet crosses this critical threshold.
The Kelly Criterion
Once you have identified a +EV bet, the Kelly Criterion tells you the mathematically optimal stake size. Bet too little and you leave profit on the table. Bet too much and you risk large drawdowns that could wipe out your bankroll. The Kelly formula balances these extremes, and our calculator makes it easy to apply with different confidence levels.
Bookmaker Margins
Every market has a built-in margin (hold/vig) that favors the bookmaker. Understanding the size of this margin is essential — it tells you how much edge you need to overcome before your bets become profitable. Markets with lower margins (tight lines) are easier to beat because you need a smaller edge.
Arbitrage Opportunities
When different bookmakers disagree significantly on odds, it is sometimes possible to bet on all outcomes and guarantee a profit. Our arbitrage calculator helps you identify these situations and calculate the exact stakes needed for each outcome.
How to Use These Tools Together
A typical strategic betting workflow looks like this:
- Assess the margin — Use the Hold/Vig Calculator to check how competitive the market’s odds are
- Evaluate value — Use the Expected Value Calculator to check if a bet is +EV based on your probability estimate
- Size your bet — Use the Kelly Criterion Calculator to determine the optimal stake
- Track performance — Use the Strike Rate and ROI calculators to monitor your results over time
This disciplined approach removes emotion from the process and gives you the best chance of long-term profitability.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is value betting?
Value betting means placing bets where the probability of an outcome is higher than what the bookmaker’s odds imply. If you estimate a team has a 50% chance of winning but the odds imply only a 40% chance, that is a value bet. Over time, consistently finding and betting on value leads to long-term profit, regardless of individual wins or losses.
What is expected value (EV) in betting?
Expected value is the average amount you can expect to win or lose per bet over time. It is calculated as: EV = (Probability of Winning × Profit) − (Probability of Losing × Stake). A positive EV (+EV) bet is profitable long term, while a negative EV (−EV) bet will lose money over time. Professional bettors focus exclusively on placing +EV bets.
What is the Kelly Criterion?
The Kelly Criterion is a mathematical formula for calculating the optimal bet size based on your edge (the difference between true probability and implied probability). The formula is: Kelly Stake % = (bp − q) / b, where b is the decimal odds minus 1, p is your estimated true probability, and q is 1 − p. It maximizes long-term growth while minimizing the risk of ruin. Many bettors use a fractional Kelly (e.g. 25-50% of the full Kelly stake) for added safety.
What is the bookmaker's hold (vig)?
The hold, also called vig (vigorish), juice, or overround, is the bookmaker’s built-in profit margin. It is the difference between the true probabilities and the implied probabilities from the odds. For example, if a fair 50/50 market is priced at 1.91/1.91 instead of 2.00/2.00, the hold is approximately 4.8%. Lower hold markets offer better value for bettors.
What is arbitrage betting?
Arbitrage betting (arbing) involves placing bets on all possible outcomes of an event across different bookmakers at odds that guarantee a profit regardless of the result. This is possible when bookmakers disagree on the probabilities, creating a combined implied probability below 100%. Arbs are rare and typically small (1-5% profit), and bookmakers may limit accounts that consistently exploit them.
How do I calculate my required strike rate?
Your required strike rate is the minimum win percentage needed to break even at given odds. The formula is: Required Strike Rate = 1 / Decimal Odds × 100%. At odds of 2.00, you need to win 50% of bets to break even. At 3.00, you need 33.3%. If your actual strike rate exceeds the required rate, you are betting profitably. Our calculators help you track this across different odds levels.
How do I calculate my betting ROI?
ROI (Return on Investment) measures your overall profitability as a percentage. The formula is: ROI = (Total Profit / Total Staked) × 100%. For example, if you have staked $10,000 total and your profit is $500, your ROI is 5%. Professional bettors typically achieve ROI between 2% and 10% — anything above that consistently is exceptional.
Is value betting better than arbitrage betting?
Both are valid strategies. Arbitrage offers guaranteed profit per event but smaller margins, requires accounts at many bookmakers, and carries high risk of account restrictions. Value betting offers larger long-term profits but involves variance — you will have losing streaks even while making +EV bets. Value betting is generally more sustainable because it looks like normal betting to bookmakers and is harder to detect.