Odds Formats

The three standard notations for displaying odds: Decimal, Fractional, and American (Moneyline), each encoding identical probability and payout data.

Odds formats are the notation systems used to encode the probability of an outcome and the corresponding payout ratio of a wager. Three formats dominate the market: Decimal, Fractional, and American. Each carries the same two data points — the implied probability and the return per unit staked — but renders them differently. Reading and converting between the three is a baseline competency for any bettor working with prices.

Decimal odds are the standard across Europe, Australia, and Canada. The figure represents the total return per unit staked, stake included. A value of 2.50 means a $1 wager returns $2.50 gross ($1.50 profit plus the $1 stake).

Fractional odds remain conventional in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Written as a fraction such as 3/2, they express profit relative to stake. A $2 wager at 3/2 returns $3 profit plus the $2 stake.

American odds are the U.S. standard. Positive figures (such as +150) quantify the profit on a $100 stake. Negative figures (such as -200) quantify the stake required to net $100 in profit.

Example

Take an outcome carrying an implied probability of 40%. Across the three formats, the price is approximately:

  • Decimal: 2.50 — A $100 wager returns $250 gross ($150 profit).
  • Fractional: 3/2 — A $100 wager returns $150 profit.
  • American: +150 — A $100 wager returns $150 profit.

All three notations encode the identical payout. The conversions are mechanical: Decimal = (Fractional numerator / denominator) + 1, and positive American odds divided by 100 yields the fractional value.

Key Points

  • Identical data, distinct notation: No format is objectively superior. Each encodes the same payout and probability information in a different syntax.
  • Decimal computes returns fastest: Multiplying stake by the decimal value yields the gross payout directly, which makes it the most efficient format for quick calculation.
  • American odds flag favorites and underdogs instantly: Negative values mark favorites, positive values mark underdogs, signaling the market’s lean at a glance.
  • Format is user-selectable: Nearly every online book lets you toggle the display format in account settings, so you can default to whichever notation reads most cleanly.