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Home›Blog›Vig (Juice) Explained

What Is the Vig (Juice) in Sports Betting?

6 MAR 2026 · EDUCATION · 10 MIN · UPDATED: MAR 2026 · REVIEWED BY OdinPicks Team
Quick answer: The vig (also called juice, margin, or overround) is the built-in fee bookmakers charge on every bet. It's the difference between true odds and the odds you actually receive. On a standard -110/-110 line, the vig is 4.55%. Over 1,000 bets at $100 each, a 4% vig costs you $4,000 in hidden fees — regardless of your win rate.

Vig Definition: The Bookmaker's Built-In Edge

Every sportsbook operates as a business. The vig is how they guarantee profit. Instead of offering true odds on a 50/50 event (2.00 / 2.00), they offer something like 1.91 / 1.91. That gap between the true price and the offered price is the vig — and it's taken from every single bet, win or lose.

Think of it like a stock exchange's spread. The buyer pays slightly more than the seller receives. The exchange keeps the difference. In sports betting, the bookmaker is the exchange, and the vig is the spread.

The vig goes by many names depending on the region: juice (US), margin (Europe), overround (Australia/UK), vigorish (full term). They all refer to the same concept: the bookmaker's mathematical edge built into the odds.

How to Calculate the Vig

The formula for calculating bookmaker margin on a two-way market is straightforward:

Margin = (1/Odds_A + 1/Odds_B) - 1

Each fraction (1/Odds) converts decimal odds to implied probability. If the sum of implied probabilities exceeds 100%, the excess is the margin.

Example 1: Standard US Spread

Odds: Team A -110 (1.91) / Team B -110 (1.91)

Margin = (1/1.91 + 1/1.91) - 1 = (0.5236 + 0.5236) - 1 = 0.0472 = 4.72%

The bookmaker keeps 4.72% of every dollar wagered on this market, on average.

Example 2: Pinnacle Low-Margin Line

Odds: Team A 1.952 / Team B 1.980

Margin = (1/1.952 + 1/1.980) - 1 = (0.5123 + 0.5051) - 1 = 0.0174 = 1.74%

The same market at Pinnacle costs you less than half the vig. Over thousands of bets, this difference is enormous.

Example 3: High-Margin Retail Book

Odds: Team A 1.80 / Team B 1.95

Margin = (1/1.80 + 1/1.95) - 1 = (0.5556 + 0.5128) - 1 = 0.0684 = 6.84%

Nearly 7% margin. This is common on smaller markets at retail sportsbooks. You need a significant edge just to break even against this level of vig.

Vig by Bookmaker: A Comparison

Not all bookmakers charge the same vig. The differences are substantial and directly impact your bottom line:

BookmakerTypical Margin (Main Markets)Type
Pinnacle1.5–3%Sharp
CRIS / Bookmaker.eu2–4%Sharp
Bet3655–6%Soft
William Hill5–7%Soft
Betway5–7%Soft
DraftKings4–6%Soft
FanDuel4–6%Soft
Regional/smaller books6–10%Soft

The gap between Pinnacle's 2% and a regional book's 8% means you're paying four times more in hidden fees on every bet. This is the single biggest factor most recreational bettors ignore.

How the Vig Destroys Your Profits

The vig's impact compounds over volume. Let's model a bettor placing 1,000 bets at $100 each with zero edge (50% true probability on every bet):

MarginExpected Loss (1,000 bets x $100)Effective Tax Rate
2% (Pinnacle)−$1,0001%
4% (mid-range)−$2,0002%
6% (Bet365-level)−$3,0003%
8% (high-margin)−$4,0004%

A bettor wagering $100 per bet across 1,000 bets at a book with 8% margin loses $4,000 purely to vig — before their own skill or lack thereof even enters the equation. This is money extracted by the house simply for facilitating the bet.

Now consider that most recreational bettors also have negative edge from poor selection. They're fighting the vig AND making bad picks. The combination is devastating.

The Real Cost: Vig as a Hurdle Rate

Think of the vig as a hurdle rate you must clear before you can profit. At a book with 6% margin, you need to be at least 3% better than a coin flip just to break even. Most bettors don't realize they're running uphill.

Required Edge to Break Even = Margin / 2

At 2% margin: you need +1% edge. At 6% margin: you need +3% edge. At 8% margin: you need +4% edge. The lower the vig, the easier it is to be profitable.

4 Strategies to Beat the Vig

1. Line Shop Across Multiple Books

The single most impactful action any bettor can take. If Bet365 offers 1.85 on a team but DraftKings offers 1.91 on the same outcome, taking 1.91 gives you 3.2% more return on every winning bet. Over hundreds of bets, line shopping alone can turn a losing bettor into a breakeven one.

You should have accounts at a minimum of 4-5 sportsbooks and always check odds before placing any bet. Use our odds converter to compare across formats.

2. Use Sharp Books as Your Probability Benchmark

Pinnacle's no-vig odds are the best publicly available estimate of true probability. Before betting at any soft book, check what Pinnacle's de-vigged price says. If the soft book's price exceeds Pinnacle's no-vig price, you likely have value. If it doesn't, the vig is eating any perceived edge.

Our no-vig calculator strips the margin from any two-way or three-way market instantly, so you can see the true probability hidden behind the odds.

3. Only Bet When Your Edge Exceeds the No-Vig Price

This is the core principle of expected value betting. A bet is only worth placing if the odds you're getting imply a lower probability than the true probability. The no-vig line is your best estimate of truth. If the soft book's price doesn't clear that hurdle by a meaningful margin — at least +3% EV — it's not worth the risk.

4. Use a Data-Driven EV Threshold

OdinPicks requires a minimum of +3% EV over the Pinnacle no-vig line before publishing any pick. This threshold exists specifically to ensure the edge is large enough to survive vig, line movement, and execution slippage. Setting a concrete threshold prevents you from chasing marginal edges that get destroyed by the juice.

Vig on Parlays: The Compounding Problem

Parlays (accumulators) are the bookmaker's best friend because the vig compounds across legs. On a single bet with 5% margin, the bookmaker's edge is 2.5%. On a 4-leg parlay, the effective margin balloons:

Parlay Margin = (1 + Single Margin)^n - 1
4-Leg Parlay Margin = (1.05)^4 - 1 = 21.6%

That's a 21.6% overround on a 4-leg parlay at a book with 5% single-game margin. You need an extraordinary edge on every leg to overcome this. This is why sharp bettors almost never bet parlays and bookmakers aggressively promote them.

Vig on Different Market Types

Not all markets within the same bookmaker carry equal vig:

Main moneylines / spreads: Lowest vig (most competitive, highest volume)

Totals (over/under): Slightly higher vig — typically 0.5-1% more than the corresponding moneyline

Player props: Highest vig — margins of 8-15% are common. The bookmaker compensates for lower liquidity and higher model uncertainty by widening the margin.

Live/in-play: Margins expand significantly during live betting (often 8-12%) because the bookmaker faces greater risk from fast-reacting bettors.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the vig in sports betting?

The vig (short for vigorish, also called juice or margin) is the fee built into every sportsbook's odds. It's the difference between true fair odds and the odds you actually receive. For example, on a true 50/50 event, fair odds are 2.00 on each side, but a bookmaker might offer 1.91/1.91 — the missing value is the vig, which in this case is 4.72%.

How do I calculate the vig on a bet?

For a two-way market, use: Margin = (1/Odds_A + 1/Odds_B) - 1. Convert each side's decimal odds to implied probability (1 divided by the odds), add them together, and subtract 1. The result is the bookmaker's margin as a percentage. You can also use our no-vig calculator to do this instantly.

Why does the vig matter for long-term profits?

The vig acts as a constant tax on every bet you place. Over 1,000 bets at $100 per bet, a 6% margin costs you approximately $3,000 in extracted value — regardless of whether you win or lose individual bets. To be profitable, your edge must exceed half the margin. Lower vig means a lower hurdle to profitability.

Which sportsbook has the lowest vig?

Pinnacle consistently offers the lowest margins in the industry — typically 1.5-3% on major markets like NBA moneylines, football match odds, and tennis. This is because Pinnacle's business model is volume-based: they accept sharp bettors, keep margins thin, and profit from turnover rather than bettor losses.

Can I avoid the vig entirely?

Not completely — every bookmaker charges some margin. But you can minimize it by line shopping across 4-5 sportsbooks for the best price on each bet, focusing on main markets where margins are lowest, and using Pinnacle's no-vig line as your benchmark to ensure you're only betting when the edge exceeds the cost.

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