Learn the fundamentals of smart betting — strategies, tools, and concepts explained.
Strategy
What is Arbitrage Betting? Complete Guide 2025
Arbitrage betting (or "arbing") is one of the few strategies that can guarantee a profit regardless of the outcome. Here's everything you need to know.
8 min read · Updated March 2025
Tools
Why Every Bettor Needs a Bet Tracker
Most bettors lose money not because they pick bad bets — but because they don't know their own performance. A bet tracker changes everything.
6 min read · Updated March 2025
Basics
Accumulator Betting Explained: How Odds Multiply
Accas are the most popular bet type worldwide — and the most misunderstood. Learn how combined odds work and when accumulators make sense.
7 min read · Updated March 2025
Strategy
What is Arbitrage Betting? Complete Guide 2025
8 min read · Updated March 2025
Arbitrage betting — often called "arbing" or "sure betting" — is a strategy where you place bets on all possible outcomes of an event across different bookmakers, guaranteeing a profit regardless of the result. It works because different bookmakers set odds independently, and sometimes their combined implied probabilities add up to less than 100%.
How Does It Work?
Every set of odds implies a probability. A bookmaker offering 2.10 on Team A winning implies a 47.6% chance (1/2.10). If another bookmaker offers 2.10 on Team B winning, the combined implied probability is 95.2% — leaving a 4.8% margin. That gap is your guaranteed profit.
The formula is simple: divide your total stake across both outcomes proportionally so that your return is identical regardless of which side wins.
A Real Example
Bookmaker A offers 2.10 on Arsenal to win. Bookmaker B offers 2.15 on Manchester City to win (assuming no draw market). Total implied probability: (1/2.10) + (1/2.15) = 47.6% + 46.5% = 94.1%. The arb margin is 5.9%.
On a $1,000 total stake: place $506 on Arsenal at 2.10 (returns $1,063) and $494 on City at 2.15 (returns $1,062). You're guaranteed roughly $62 profit no matter the outcome.
How to Find Arb Opportunities
Arb opportunities appear when bookmakers disagree on the likelihood of outcomes — usually shortly after odds open, or when one bookmaker is slow to adjust to market movements. The window is often short: 5 to 30 minutes before odds converge.
Manual search: compare odds across 3–5 bookmakers for the same event and plug them into our Arb Finder above. It calculates the margin instantly and tells you exactly how much to stake on each outcome.
Risks and Limitations
Arbing is legal but bookmakers don't like it. Accounts of successful arbers are often restricted or closed. Best practice: keep stakes reasonable, vary your betting patterns, and use multiple bookmaker accounts. Start with larger, liquid markets (major football, tennis) where odds are more competitive and arbs more frequent.
Start Arbing Now
Use our free Arb Calculator above — enter odds from two bookmakers and it instantly shows whether an opportunity exists and exactly how to split your stake.
Tools
Why Every Bettor Needs a Bet Tracker
6 min read · Updated March 2025
Studies consistently show that bettors overestimate their win rate by 10–20%. Without systematic tracking, you rely on memory — which is selective, optimistic, and unreliable. A bet tracker forces objectivity.
What a Tracker Reveals
Your ROI (return on investment) is the single most important metric. A bettor with a 55% win rate but average odds of 1.80 is losing money. A bettor with a 45% win rate at average odds of 2.30 is profitable. Win rate alone tells you nothing — ROI tells you everything.
Strike rate by market shows where you actually have an edge. You might be profitable in football but losing on tennis without realising it. Tracking by market helps you allocate your bankroll to where you perform best.
P&L over time reveals variance versus skill. A 3-month losing streak might be bad luck — or it might signal that your edge has disappeared. You can't know without data.
What to Track
At minimum: the event, market, stake, odds, and result. Our tracker adds automatic P&L calculation, running ROI, and strike rate. The data compounds — after 100+ bets you'll have a clear picture of your actual performance.
The Psychology Benefit
Tracking changes your relationship with betting. When every bet is recorded, you naturally become more selective. You stop making impulsive bets because you know they'll appear in your stats. The tracker acts as a discipline mechanism, not just a record.
Start Tracking Today
Our Bet Tracker is free, requires no sign-up, and stores your data locally in your browser. Add your first bet above and start building your performance record.
Basics
Accumulator Betting Explained: How Odds Multiply
7 min read · Updated March 2025
An accumulator (or "acca") combines multiple selections into one bet. To win, all selections must be correct. In return for this higher risk, the odds multiply — turning small stakes into potentially large returns.
How Odds Multiply
With individual bets, you calculate each return separately. With an accumulator, you multiply all the odds together. Four selections at 1.90, 2.10, 1.75, and 2.00 give a combined odds of 1.90 × 2.10 × 1.75 × 2.00 = 13.94. A $10 stake returns $139.40.
This multiplication effect is both the appeal and the danger. Each additional selection dramatically reduces your probability of winning — but increases potential returns proportionally.
The Mathematics of Accas
If each selection has a 50% chance of winning, a 4-fold accumulator wins only 6.25% of the time (0.5⁴). But most bettors use selections with higher implied probabilities — a selection at odds of 1.80 implies a 55.6% win probability. Four such selections win 9.6% of the time, but at odds of 10.50.
The key insight: bookmaker margins compound in accumulators. On a single bet the margin might be 5%. On a 5-fold accumulator, that margin compounds to over 20%. This is why bookmakers love accas — and why sharp bettors treat them with caution.
When Accas Make Sense
Accumulators make sense when you have genuine conviction on multiple outcomes and want to convert a small stake into significant returns. They don't make sense as a regular strategy — the maths work against you over time.
The smartest use of accas: limit them to 3–4 selections maximum, use selections you'd back individually, and never stake more than you're comfortable losing outright.
Calculate Your Acca
Use our Accumulator Calculator above — add your selections, enter the odds, and see your combined odds and potential return instantly.