Kelly Criterion Calculator

The Kelly Criterion tells you the bet size that maximizes long-run bankroll growth given a real edge. Enter your bankroll, your honest estimated win probability, and the offered American odds. Most pros use half or quarter Kelly to soften variance. Last updated: May 2026.

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Total money you're willing to bet.
Your honest estimate, not the book's.
e.g. -110, +150, +250.

Recommended Bet Size

$0.00
Half Kelly (recommended for most bettors)
Full Kelly %
Full Kelly $
Half Kelly %
Half Kelly $
Quarter Kelly %
Quarter Kelly $
Implied Win Prob (book)
Your Edge

Formula: f = (b × p − q) ÷ b, where b = decimal odds − 1, p = your win probability, and q = 1 − p. If f comes out negative, you have no edge and the right bet size is zero.

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How This Calculator Works

This tool runs the classic Kelly Criterion formula: f* = (bp − q) ÷ b. Here b is your net decimal payout (decimal odds minus 1 — the profit you collect per $1 risked), p is the win probability you entered, and q is 1 − p, your chance of losing. The output f* is the fraction of bankroll that maximizes long-run compound growth.

Before applying Kelly, the calculator converts your American odds to decimal: positive odds become (odds ÷ 100) + 1, negative odds become (100 ÷ |odds|) + 1. It also reports the book's implied probability (1 ÷ decimal odds) and your edge (your probability minus that implied figure). If your edge is zero or negative, f* drops to zero or below — and the correct stake is nothing. The half and quarter Kelly numbers are just f* multiplied by 0.5 and 0.25, the fractional approach most disciplined bettors actually use to tame variance.

A Worked Example

Take the default inputs: a $1,000 bankroll, a 55% win estimate, and odds of −110. First, −110 converts to decimal: (100 ÷ 110) + 1 = 1.909, so b = 0.909. With p = 0.55 and q = 0.45, the math is f* = (0.909 × 0.55 − 0.45) ÷ 0.909 = (0.50 − 0.45) ÷ 0.909 = 0.055, or 5.5% of bankroll.

Full Kelly therefore recommends 0.055 × $1,000 = $55.00. Half Kelly cuts that to $27.50 and quarter Kelly to $13.75 — exactly the figures the calculator displays. The book's implied probability at −110 is 1 ÷ 1.909 = 52.38%, so your stated edge is 55% − 52.38% = 2.62 percentage points. Notice how thin that edge is: trimming your win estimate to 53% would shrink the recommended stake to roughly $13, and dropping below 52.38% would zero it out entirely. That brutal sensitivity is the whole reason to size cautiously.

What Affects Your Result

I treat Kelly as a ceiling, not a target. When my edge estimate is uncertain — which is most of the time — I bet a fraction of what the formula suggests and never chase a number I can't honestly defend.

Kelly Criterion FAQ

What is the Kelly Criterion?

A formula developed by John Kelly in 1956 that gives the bet fraction maximizing long-run logarithmic growth of a bankroll. It assumes you have a known edge and can rebet repeatedly.

Why use half or quarter Kelly?

Full Kelly is mathematically optimal but extremely volatile — a string of losses can cut your bankroll in half. Half Kelly captures roughly 75% of the growth with much lower variance, which is why most professional bettors use it.

What if my win probability is wrong?

Kelly is brutally sensitive to bad inputs. Overestimating your edge by even a small amount can flip the recommendation from "bet" to "ruin." When in doubt, use a smaller fraction of Kelly or skip the bet.

What does a negative Kelly mean?

It means the bet is -EV — your estimated win probability is lower than the implied probability of the odds. Kelly's correct recommendation is zero. Don't bet.

Does Kelly account for parlays or multi-bet days?

The basic single-bet Kelly formula assumes one wager at a time. For simultaneous bets, you need fractional Kelly across the slate or a more advanced "Kelly portfolio" model.