Teaser
A parlay where you bend the spread or total in your favor across every leg -- and pay for that cushion with a slimmer payout.
A teaser is a parlay with a twist: it lets you nudge the point spread or total (over/under) a set number of points in your direction on each leg. The price for that friendlier line is a smaller payout than a standard parlay at the original odds. Teasers live mostly in NFL and NBA betting, where point-based scoring makes those line moves genuinely matter.
Like any parlay, a teaser needs every leg to win – no exceptions. What sets it apart is the baked-in cushion of adjusted lines. Most books serve up standard teaser tiers of 6, 6.5, or 7 points in football, and 4, 4.5, or 5 points in basketball. Pile on more points and the payout shrinks, because every extra point of adjustment lifts the odds of each leg cashing.
Example
Say you fire a two-team, 6-point NFL teaser with a $50 stake:
- Original line: Philadelphia Eagles -7.5 becomes Eagles -1.5 after the 6-point teaser bump.
- Original line: Under 48.5 in the Rams vs. 49ers game becomes Under 54.5 after the adjustment.
A standard two-team, 6-point teaser usually prices around -110. If both adjusted legs win, your $50 returns roughly $95.45 ($45.45 profit). As a straight parlay at the original odds, those same picks could pay a lot more – but the teaser hands you a far better shot at winning by sliding each line 6 points your way.
Key Points
- Points move in the bettor’s favor: The whole point of a teaser is shifting spreads and totals to make each leg easier to hit.
- Reduced payouts compared to standard parlays: Friendlier lines come at a cost – a lower payout. The more points you tease, the less it pays.
- All legs must win: Same as a regular parlay: every selection has to land. One miss sinks the whole teaser.
- Most effective with key numbers in football: Sharp bettors love teasing through key NFL numbers (like 3 and 7), since so many games are decided by those margins, making the move especially potent.
- Push rules vary by sportsbook: Some books grade a leg push as a full teaser loss; others drop the leg and recalculate. Always check house rules before you commit.