If your risk-free bet loses and you get a free bet as a result, you can hedge it to ensure a profit. You do this by using the free bet on one side of a two-way market and making a cash bet on the other side. The amount you need to hedge depends on the free bet amount and the odds on either side of the market.
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How much profit can I make? For each matched bet, you can typically expect to extract 50-80% of the free bet amount as profit. This is because betting exchanges usually charge a commission on winnings. You may also make a small loss on the qualifying bet due to the minor difference in odds on each website.
What are the easiest bets to win?
Online sports betting sites offer free bets to encourage new customers to open an account with them. This is part of their marketing strategy and they ultimately hope you'll stick with them and deposit money to make further bets. Of course, you don't have to if you only want to use the sign-up offer.
A risk-free bet is an offer where you're refunded for your initial wager if it loses. This is capped at a certain number, often ranging between $200 and $1,000. For example, let's say you're joining a site with a risk-free bet up to $500. You wager on the Brooklyn Nets moneyline (+100), but they lose the game.
Free bets, as listed above, are the most straightforward bonus. You usually get a set amount of money to bet when you deposit and that money can't be redeemable for cash. For example, if you bet the free $5 and lose, that money is gone. If you bet $5 and profit another $5, you'll be up $5 in real money.
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Free bets, as listed above, are the most straightforward bonus. You usually get a set amount of money to bet when you deposit and that money can't be redeemable for cash. For example, if you bet the free $5 and lose, that money is gone. If you bet $5 and profit another $5, you'll be up $5 in real money.
When you see a plus sign in front of a number (like +150 for example) it tells you which team is the underdog. You get a higher payout betting on the underdog since they're less likely to win. The team with the plus sign (like +150) is the underdog. If the number is +150, a $100 bet will win you $150 in profit.
What do +600 odds mean: These are Moneyline odds for a heavy underdog that payout $600 on a winning $100 wager. What does +1200 mean in betting: This is another example of Moneyline odds for a massive underdog. A $100 bet on a team at +1200 means a payout of $1,200 if successful.
Odds expressed in terms of money, with $100 being the standard. If the odds are minus (–), then that amount of money must be wagered to win $100. (e.g. –150 means you must bet $150 to win $100.) If the odds are plus (+), that amount of money would be earned on a successful $100 wager.
This also means that your wager won't profit as much as it would if it was a positive number although you're more likely to win the bet. For instance, a $100 wager on +220 odds would return a profit of $220. However, a team with -220 odds would require a $220 bet to return a profit of $100.
An event with a probability of zero [P(E) = 0] will never occur (an impossible event). An event with a probability of one [P(E) = 1] means the event must occur (a certain event). An event with a probability of 0.5 [P(E) = 0.5] is sometimes called a fifty-fifty chance event or an even chance event.