How Betting Odds Work: Decimal vs Fractional and the Bookmaker’s Margin

Odds 101

How Betting Odds Work

Decimal, fractional, American. They all describe the same thing. Here is what odds actually mean, why bookmakers always pay less than the true probability, and how to spot value.

Odds are the language of betting. Every market on every sportsbook is a number that tells you two things at once: what the bookmaker thinks will happen, and how much you will be paid if it does. Once you can translate odds into probability and back, you can compare bets like for like.

This guide covers the three odds formats you will see, how to convert any odds into implied probability, what the over-round (the bookmaker’s margin) actually costs you, and how to spot a value bet in the wild.

The three odds formats

Decimal odds (the SA default)

Used at every SA sportsbook. The number tells you the total return per R1 stake, including the stake itself. So 2.50 odds means R1 returns R2.50 (R1.50 profit + R1 stake back). Easy to use because the calculation is just stake times odds.

Fractional odds

Mostly seen at UK bookmakers and on horse racing forms in SA. 5/2 means for every R2 you stake, you win R5 in profit (plus your R2 back). To convert to decimal, divide and add 1: 5/2 becomes 5÷2 + 1 = 3.50.

American odds

Mostly US sportsbooks. +250 means R100 returns R250 profit. -150 means you must bet R150 to win R100. Rare in SA, you can ignore this format unless you are using American sites.

From odds to implied probability

The most useful skill in betting is converting any odds into a percentage probability. The formula for decimal odds is:

Implied probability % = 1 / decimal odds × 100

Decimal oddsImplied probabilityReal-world example
1.1091%Heavy favourite, certain outcome priced
1.5067%Strong favourite
2.0050%Coin flip / even money
3.0033%Underdog
5.0020%Long shot
10.0010%Outsider
50.002%Lottery odds territory

Once you know the implied probability, you can ask the only question that matters: do I think this event is more or less likely than the odds suggest? If you think Manchester City beats Arsenal 70% of the time, and the odds are 2.00 (50% implied), the bookmaker is offering you value. If your estimate is 40% and they are at 2.00, they are not.

The over-round (or “the margin”)

If you add up the implied probabilities of every outcome in a market, you do not get exactly 100%. You get more. The amount over 100% is called the over-round, and it is how the bookmaker makes money.

Example: a 1X2 (home/draw/away) market priced at:

  • Home 2.20 (45.5%)
  • Draw 3.40 (29.4%)
  • Away 3.30 (30.3%)

Total: 105.2%. The 5.2% over-round is the bookmaker’s expected margin on the market. If they took balanced action on all three outcomes, they would keep 5.2% of total stakes regardless of the result.

Why this matters. Even if you bet “the right side” 55% of the time, if your average over-round is 6%, you are still losing money. To beat the bookmaker, you need to be both right more often AND on lower margin markets.

Typical over-rounds in South Africa

Margins vary by sport, market and operator. The general pattern at SA sportsbooks:

MarketTypical over-roundWhy
Top European football 1X24 to 6%High volume, competitive market
Top European football BTTS6 to 8%Lower volume sub-market
SA Premiership 1X26 to 9%Local market, less competitive pricing
Lower league football10 to 15%Trader uncertainty, low volume
Player props10 to 20%High variance, hard to price
Lucky Numbers (1 from 49)20 to 30%Lottery-style product
Slot RTP equivalent3 to 8%Casino games are tighter

The implication: if you want a fair shot, stick to high volume markets where the margin is small. Avoid low volume props and lottery-style products unless you are doing it for fun, not for profit.

How to spot value

A value bet is one where your honest estimate of the probability is higher than the implied probability of the odds. Three approaches:

1. Line shopping

The same match is priced differently across different sportsbooks. If Hollywoodbets has Manchester City at 1.80 but Gbets has them at 1.95, the second is the better bet for the same outcome. Over a season, the difference between best price and worst price is often 5 to 10%, more than the margin itself.

2. Closing line value (CLV)

Compare the odds you took with the closing odds (the final price right before kickoff). If you regularly bet at higher odds than the closing line, you are likely a profitable bettor in the long run, even on bets that lose. The closing line is the sharpest estimate of true probability.

3. Specific knowledge

If you genuinely know more than the average punter about a niche league or a specific team’s form, you can find value the bookmaker has not priced. Most casual bettors do not have this edge in the markets they bet on. Honest about that beats fooling yourself.

Bankroll basics

Even good bettors lose 40% of the time. To survive variance, never stake more than 1 to 3% of your bankroll on a single bet. A R10,000 bankroll means R100 to R300 max per bet. This is boring advice but it is what separates people who quit after a bad weekend from people who can play long term.

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