Back to Encyclopedia
Kelly Criterion
generalA mathematical formula for determining the optimal bet size based on your perceived edge and the odds offered.
Key Takeaways
- 1Kelly Criterion calculates optimal bet size based on edge
- 2Most pros use fractional Kelly (25-50%) to reduce variance
- 3Over-betting is more costly than under-betting
- 4Requires accurate probability estimation to work properly
What is the Kelly Criterion?
The Kelly Criterion is a formula developed by John Kelly at Bell Labs in 1956. It calculates the optimal percentage of your bankroll to wager based on your edge and the odds.
The Formula
f = (bp - q) / b**
Where:
- f* = fraction of bankroll to wager
- b = decimal odds - 1 (net odds)
- p = probability of winning
- q = probability of losing (1 - p)*
Example
You believe a team has a 55% chance of winning at +100 (decimal 2.0):
- b = 2.0 - 1 = 1
- p = 0.55
- q = 0.45
- f* = (1 × 0.55 - 0.45) / 1 = 0.10 = 10% of bankroll*
Fractional Kelly
Most professionals use fractional Kelly (typically 25-50% of the full Kelly recommendation) because:
- It reduces variance significantly
- It protects against errors in probability estimation
- The cost of over-betting is much higher than under-betting
Key Insight
The Kelly Criterion assumes you know the true probability. In practice, your probability estimates are imperfect, which is why fractional Kelly is preferred.
The Daily Edge
Best odds across 15+ sportsbooks, delivered daily.
