No-Vig Calculator
Enter both sides of a betting line to strip the bookmaker's juice and see the true implied probabilities underneath.
Common Lines & Vig Reference
What is Vig (Juice)?
When a bookmaker posts odds like -110 / -110, they're not showing you the true mathematical probability of an event. Instead, they're building in a profit margin called the vig (or juice). This margin is the difference between the true odds and the odds you're actually getting paid.
On a -110/-110 line, both sides of a two-way bet have a combined implied probability greater than 100% — typically around 104.76%. That extra 4.76% is the bookmaker's cut. They don't care which side wins; they collect from the losing side's stakes while paying the winners slightly less than fair value.
How the No-Vig Calculation Works
The no-vig calculator strips out the bookmaker's profit margin and reveals the true implied probabilities underneath the line.
Here's the step-by-step process using a -110/-110 example:
- Convert odds to decimals: -110 becomes 1.909 in decimal form.
- Calculate implied probability: 1 / 1.909 = 0.524 or 52.4%.
- Do the same for Side B: Also 52.4%.
- Add them together: 52.4% + 52.4% = 104.8% (the overround, or vig).
- Normalize to 100%: Divide each probability by 1.048 to get the true odds: 50% and 50%.
- Convert back to American: True fair odds are -100 / -100.
The difference between -110 (what you're paying) and -100 (fair value) is the vig you're giving up.
Why It Matters for Bettors
Sharp bettors and professional line shoppers use the no-vig calculator for three key reasons:
- Finding Value: By knowing the true implied probability, you can spot when a line is offering better or worse odds than fair value. If you believe an event is more likely than the true odds suggest, you've found a +EV opportunity.
- Comparing Lines Across Books: Different sportsbooks post slightly different vig. One book might offer -110/-110 while another posts -115/-105. The no-vig calculator shows you which book is actually giving you the better deal.
- Identifying Sharp Lines: Professional syndicates move quickly and efficiently. Lines with lower vig (closer to fair) are often a signal that sharp money is already on the board and the market is pricing things accurately.
Who Uses This Tool
- Sharp Bettors: Professional and semi-professional bettors who hunt for edges and track expected value over hundreds of bets.
- Line Shoppers: Bettors who compare odds across multiple sportsbooks to find the best available prices.
- Arbitrage Traders: Sharp traders who exploit momentary discrepancies between books to lock in risk-free profit (when the no-vig true odds for both sides sum to less than 100%).
- Market Researchers: Analysts who want to understand where smart money is positioning itself and how the market is pricing uncertainty.
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