Remove a margem da casa (vig/juice) de qualquer conjunto de odds para revelar as probabilidades implícitas reais e as odds justas.
Every bookmaker builds a profit margin into their odds, commonly called the "vig" (short for vigorish), "juice," or "overround." This margin ensures the bookmaker profits regardless of the outcome. When you see odds of 1.90 / 1.90 on a coin-flip event, the implied probabilities add up to 105.26% instead of the fair 100%. That extra 5.26% is the bookmaker's edge — money they extract from bettors on every market.
"De-vigging" or calculating "no-vig odds" means mathematically removing this margin to reveal what the bookmaker actually believes the true probabilities are. This is one of the most important skills in professional sports betting because it transforms bookmaker odds into a probability model you can work with. If a bookmaker prices a match at 1.90 / 2.05, the no-vig probabilities tell you what they think the real chances are — stripped of their profit layer.
The most common de-vig method, and the one used in this calculator, is the proportional method (also called the multiplicative or normalization method). It works by dividing each implied probability by the total overround. This distributes the margin proportionally across all outcomes based on their implied probabilities. It assumes the bookmaker has applied roughly the same proportional margin to each outcome.
For example, with odds of 1.90 (implied 52.63%) and 2.05 (implied 48.78%), the total is 101.41%. Dividing each by 1.0141 gives fair probabilities of 51.90% and 48.10%, which sum to exactly 100%. The corresponding fair odds are 1.927 and 2.079. These are the prices a zero-margin bookmaker would offer.
Not all bookmaker odds are created equal. Pinnacle Sports operates with margins of just 1-3%, compared to 5-10%+ at recreational bookmakers. Their lines are shaped by the sharpest bettors in the world — they accept high-volume professional action and do not limit winning players. This makes Pinnacle's no-vig odds the closest publicly available approximation to true market probabilities. Academic research consistently confirms that Pinnacle closing lines are the most efficient benchmark for sports betting.
When you de-vig Pinnacle's lines, you get probabilities that professional bettors treat as "true odds." At OdinPicks, every pick is evaluated against Pinnacle no-vig odds. If our model estimates a 55% probability for an outcome and Pinnacle's no-vig implies 52%, we have identified a potential +EV opportunity. This is the foundation of systematic, data-driven betting.
Once you have the fair (no-vig) odds, you can use them in several ways. First, compare them against the odds available at other bookmakers: if a recreational book offers 2.10 on an outcome whose fair odds are 2.08, there is positive expected value. Second, use the fair probabilities as inputs for your EV calculator — they serve as a solid baseline for the "true probability" field. Third, track how often your bets beat the no-vig line at closing; this Closing Line Value (CLV) is the strongest predictor of long-term profitability.
Understanding the vig is what separates recreational bettors from sharp ones. Recreational bettors look at odds and think about payouts. Sharp bettors look at odds and think about implied probabilities, margin, and whether the true probability creates an edge. This calculator gives you the same starting point used by professional bettors and quantitative models worldwide: the ability to see through the bookmaker's margin to the real numbers underneath.