Understanding Betting Odds UK — Fractional, Decimal & American Explained
Three formats. All saying the same thing. UK betting has traditionally used fractional odds — the system you see chalked on a board in a Ladbrokes window or shouted out at a racecourse. Online platforms increasingly default to decimal, which is simpler to calculate. American odds (moneyline) appear occasionally on US-facing content that’s crept into UK platforms. You don’t need all three — but knowing how to read fractional and convert to decimal will serve you in every market you’ll encounter.
Fractional Odds
Fractional odds express profit relative to stake. The left number is what you win; the right number is what you stake.
5/1 (five to one): £5 profit per £1 staked, plus stake returned. A £10 bet at 5/1 returns £60: £50 profit plus your £10.
1/2 (one to two, or “odds on”): £1 profit per £2 staked. A £10 bet at 1/2 returns £15: £5 profit plus your £10. Odds-on means the bookmaker considers this outcome the more likely one.
Common fractions you’ll encounter: 10/1, 7/2, 5/2, 6/4, Evens (1/1). “Six to four” (6/4) is often shortened to “sixes to four” in betting shop parlance. Evens means equal profit to stake — £10 at Evens returns £20.
Decimal Odds
Decimal odds include the stake in the return figure. Simpler arithmetic. 5/1 fractional is 6.0 decimal (5 profit + 1 stake = 6). 1/2 is 1.5 (0.5 profit + 1 stake). Evens is 2.0.
The calculation: stake × decimal = total return. £10 at 3.5 = £35 total return (£25 profit + £10 stake). That’s all there is to it. Betting exchanges like Betfair run on decimal by default; most UK bookmakers let you switch in account settings.
How to Convert Between Formats
| Fractional | Decimal | Implied Probability | £10 bet returns |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1/2 | 1.50 | 66.7% | £15.00 |
| Evens | 2.00 | 50.0% | £20.00 |
| 2/1 | 3.00 | 33.3% | £30.00 |
| 5/1 | 6.00 | 16.7% | £60.00 |
| 10/1 | 11.00 | 9.1% | £110.00 |
| 33/1 | 34.00 | 2.9% | £340.00 |
To convert fractional to decimal: divide the top number by the bottom, then add 1. 5/1 = (5÷1)+1 = 6.0. 7/2 = (7÷2)+1 = 4.5.
Understanding Implied Probability
Every set of odds implies a probability. If a bookmaker offers 2/1, they’re implying a 33% chance. The formula: 1 ÷ decimal × 100. At 3.0 decimal: 1/3 × 100 = 33.3%.
If you genuinely believe the true probability is higher than the bookmaker’s implied figure, you have a value bet. That’s the entire basis of profitable sports betting over the long run — finding occasions where the bookmaker’s implied probability understates the real likelihood of an outcome.
The overround is why you can’t just back every selection in a market and profit. Add up all the implied probabilities in a match winner market and you’ll get a figure above 100% — typically 105 to 110% on major events. That surplus is the bookmaker’s built-in margin. A fair market would sum to exactly 100%. The difference is what you’re paying for access to the market.
Reading Odds on Darts
PDC World Championship outrights typically price the favourite between 3/1 and 5/1 in a strong field — implied probability of 17 to 25%. With 96 players in the draw and a genuinely open top 10, that’s a realistic range for the likeliest winner. The each-way market at 16/1 to 33/1 for semi-final regulars is where most darts punters find their best value.
In match betting, a heavy favourite (1/4 or 1/5 fractional) implies 80–83% probability. Correct a decent amount of the time — but back enough of them and a single upset wrecks the session. Leg handicap offers a middle ground: you can back the same favourite at longer prices by accepting the handicap rather than the straight match result.
For a full breakdown of darts-specific markets, see the Darts Betting Guide.
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