Probability and odds are closely connected, but they are not the same concept. Probability measures the likelihood of an outcome occurring. Odds are the pricing format used by markets to represent that probability. Understanding the difference between probability and odds is essential for interpreting betting markets, prediction markets and pricing systems more accurately.
Probability represents the estimated likelihood of a specific event occurring.
It is usually expressed as a percentage.
Examples:
Probability focuses on expectation, not certainty.
Probability is a way of expressing how likely an event is to occur, usually as a percentage or fraction.
a probability of 50% means an event is expected to occur half of the time
a probability of 25% means an event is expected to occur once every four times
Probability is theoretical.
It does not account for pricing, margins or commercial considerations.
Bookmakers typically start with an estimate of probability and then convert it into odds.
During this process:
a margin is added
prices are adjusted to balance the market
As a result, odds are not a direct translation of probability.
The bookmaker’s margin (overround)
In a betting market, the total implied probability across all outcomes usually exceeds 100%.
This excess represents the bookmaker’s margin (also known as overround).
For example:
a perfectly fair market would total 100%
a typical betting market may total 105% or more
This difference ensures that the bookmaker has a built-in advantage over time.
Probability and odds are often confused because:
odds can be converted into implied probability
betting interfaces display odds more prominently than probability
marketing language often simplifies complex concepts
This leads many people to assume that odds represent “true chance”, which is not the case.
Example: probability vs pricing
Imagine an outcome with an estimated probability of 50%.
Fair odds (no margin): 2.00
Priced odds (with margin): 1.91 (example)
The difference may seem small, but over many bets it becomes significant.
This illustrates how pricing and probability diverge.
Even high-probability outcomes:
can fail
can occur less frequently in short samples
do not guarantee results
Probability describes long-term expectation, not short-term outcomes.
Understanding the difference between probability and odds helps:
reduce unrealistic expectations
clarify how betting markets are structured
avoid common misconceptions
It encourages a more informed and responsible perspective.
Probability explains likelihood.
Odds explain price.
They are connected, but they are not the same.
Understanding this distinction is essential to understanding how betting markets work.
For related guides, continue with:
Odds Explained
Types of Football Bets
Accumulators & Multiples