Moneyline
A bet on who wins outright — no point spread, no margin to sweat, just the result.
The moneyline is wagering stripped to its core. Forget spreads and totals — you’re simply picking which team or player wins. Get it right, your bet pays. Get it wrong, you lose your stake. The margin of victory is irrelevant; the only thing that counts is who comes out on top.
The odds change shape depending on whether you’re backing a favorite or an underdog. In American format, a favorite shows a negative number (like -150), telling you how much you must risk to win $100. An underdog shows a positive number (like +130), telling you the profit a $100 bet returns. Decimal and fractional formats follow the same rule: lower numbers mean favorites, higher numbers mean underdogs.
Example
Say the New York Yankees are listed at -160 and the Boston Red Sox at +140 in a baseball game. Bet $160 on the Yankees and they win, you pocket $100 in profit plus your $160 stake back. Bet $100 on the Red Sox at +140 and they pull the upset, you collect $140 in profit plus your original $100 stake.
The payout gap between the two sides reflects the bookmaker’s read on each team’s chances, plus the built-in commission known as the vig or juice.
Key Points
- Simplicity: A moneyline bet asks one thing — pick the winner. No spreads, no totals, just the outright result.
- Payouts vary by probability: Favorites pay less relative to the stake because they’re more likely to win. Underdogs pay more because they’re less likely.
- Common in all major sports: Moneyline betting runs across baseball, hockey, soccer, basketball, football, tennis, and virtually every sport with a clear winner.
- No ties in most markets: Many moneyline markets rule out the draw. Where ties happen (like soccer), a three-way moneyline adds the draw as its own outcome.
- Foundation for parlays: Moneyline picks are a staple of parlays, where every leg must hit for the ticket to cash.