Value betting is the key to long-term success in sports betting. This guide explains what a value bet is, how to calculate expected value, and why consistently betting with an edge leads to profit.
With clear examples and simple math, you'll understand exactly how value betting works and how to apply it using Fair Odds Terminal.
What is a Value Bet?
A value bet occurs when the odds offered by a bookmaker are higher than the true probability of the outcome.
In other words:
You're getting paid more than you should for the risk you're taking.
This is the fundamental concept that separates professional bettors from recreational gamblers.
Bookmaker offers
2.10
~47.6% implied
>
True fair odds
2.00
50% true probability
Value Bet: +5% EV — bookmaker is paying more than the true risk
The Math Behind Value Betting
Implied Probability
Every set of odds implies a probability. The formula is:
Implied Probability = 1 / Decimal Odds × 100
Examples:
Odds 2.00 → 1/2.00 = 50%
Odds 1.50 → 1/1.50 = 66.7%
Odds 3.00 → 1/3.00 = 33.3%
Expected Value (EV)
Expected Value tells you how much you'll win or lose on average per bet.
This means for every $100 bet, you expect to profit $5 on average.
EV Calculation — Worked Example
True probability50% → fair odds 2.00
Bookmaker offers2.10
EV% = (2.10 / 2.00 − 1) × 100= +5.0%
Per $100 staked, expected long-run profit$5
Why Value Betting Works
The Casino Analogy
Casinos don't win every hand of blackjack. But they have a small edge on every bet. Over millions of hands, that edge compounds into guaranteed profit.
Value betting is the same concept, but in reverse:
You have the edge
The bookmaker is at a disadvantage
Over time, your edge compounds into profit
The Law of Large Numbers
Individual bets are unpredictable. But over hundreds or thousands of bets, results converge toward expected value.
Number of Bets
Variance
Results
10
Very high
Anything can happen
100
High
Patterns emerge
1,000
Moderate
Close to expected
10,000
Low
Reliable profit
Result reliability improves with bet count
10 bets
very high variance
100 bets
high variance
1,000 bets
moderate variance
10,000 bets
reliable profit
How to Find Value Bets
Method 1: Sharp Bookmaker Comparison
The most reliable method is comparing odds to sharp bookmakers like Pinnacle.
Why Pinnacle?
Accepts sharp action (winning bettors)
Lowest margins in the industry
Odds reflect true market probability
The process:
Pinnacle's odds move based on sharp money
Calculate the No Vig Price (NVP) from Pinnacle
Compare NVP to soft bookmaker odds
If soft odds > NVP → Value bet
Sharp (Pinnacle)
Soft Book
Margin
~2%
5–10%
Accepts winners
Yes
No — restricts
Odds reflect
True market
Public money
Your role
Price benchmark
Bet here
Method 2: Dropping Odds Strategy
When Pinnacle's odds drop rapidly, it signals sharp money entering the market.
Soft bookmakers don't react immediately, creating a window where their odds are too high.
This is exactly what Fair Odds Terminal monitors for you.
The No Vig Price (NVP)
What is Vig?
"Vig" (or vigorish) is the bookmaker's margin built into the odds.
Example:
Fair odds for a coin flip: 2.00 / 2.00
Bookmaker's odds: 1.91 / 1.91
The difference is the vig (~5%)
Calculating NVP
The No Vig Price removes the bookmaker's margin to show the "true" odds.
Fair Odds Terminal calculates this automatically using Pinnacle's odds.
Example:
Pinnacle odds: 1.85 / 2.05
After removing vig → NVP: 1.92 / 2.08
These are the prices you need to beat
Value Bet Example
The Setup
Match: Team A vs Team B
Market: Moneyline — Team A
Browse all events — View any Pinnacle event and open charts (☰ ALL tab)
Calculates NVP — Removes the vig automatically using Power Method
Odds history charts — Click any row to see full price history
Sound alerts — Optional audio notification when new drops appear
Your job is to:
Configure your filters
Verify the value still exists
Execute the bet
Track your results
Your workflow with FairOdds Terminal
1Configure filters — set minimum drop %, time before start, odds range
2Alert fires — a Pinnacle odds drop triggers a notification
3Verify value — check soft book offers higher than NVP
4Execute quickly — soft books correct within minutes
5Track results — log every bet, review ROI weekly
Getting Started
1. Set Realistic Expectations
Expect variance (winning and losing streaks)
Think in terms of hundreds of bets, not individual results
Typical ROI: 2-5% on turnover
2. Start Small
Use small stakes while learning
Scale up as you gain confidence and verify results
3. Track Everything
Log every bet in Bet Tracker
Review results weekly/monthly
Adjust strategy based on data
4. Stay Disciplined
Only bet when EV is positive
Don't chase losses
Don't deviate from your strategy
Summary
Value betting is:
Betting when odds are higher than true probability
A mathematical edge, not gambling
Profitable over the long term
To find value bets:
Use sharp bookmaker odds as your benchmark
Calculate the No Vig Price (NVP)
Bet when soft bookmakers offer odds above NVP
Track results and stay disciplined
Fair Odds Terminal helps by:
• Monitoring Pinnacle odds drops in real-time (↓ DROPS tab)
• Browsing all Pinnacle events and opening charts (☰ ALL tab)
• Calculating NVP automatically using Power Method
• Showing full odds history charts for each selection
• Optional sound alerts when new drops appear