What Is the Vig? How Sportsbooks Make Money — and How to Beat It

The vig is the hidden tax on every bet you place. Understanding how it works — and how to minimize it — is the difference between a long-term winner and a slow loser. Here's the plain-English breakdown.

What the Vig Actually Is

The vig (short for vigorish, also called the juice) is the commission a sportsbook charges for taking your bet. It's built directly into the odds. When you see a standard spread priced at -110 on both sides, that extra 10 cents on the dollar is the vig. You're risking $110 to win $100, and the sportsbook collects that difference regardless of which side wins. It's how books make money without needing to be right about the outcome — they just need balanced action on both sides.

How the Vig Hides in the Odds

Here's the trick most bettors never notice: if you add up the implied probabilities of both sides of a bet, they total more than 100%. A -110/-110 spread implies 52.4% on each side — that's 104.8% combined. That extra 4.8% is the vig, sometimes called the "overround" or "hold." The sportsbook has effectively sold $104.80 of probability for every $100 of real probability. That 4.8% edge, applied across millions of bets, is the entire business model.

Why -110 Means You Need to Win 52.4%

Because of the vig, breaking even isn't a coin flip. At -110 odds, you need to win 52.4% of your bets just to break even — not 50%. Win exactly half your bets and you slowly lose money, because your losses cost more than your wins pay. This is the single most important number in betting: 52.4%. Every percentage point above it is profit; every point below it is the house grinding you down. Picking winners 50% of the time feels like breaking even but is actually a steady loss.

The Vig Varies by Bet Type

Not all bets carry the same vig. Standard spreads and totals are usually -110, a moderate hold. Parlays carry a much higher effective vig — the book's edge compounds with each leg, which is why parlays are so profitable for sportsbooks. Player props often have wider vig (you might see -120 on both sides) because the lines get less sharp attention. Live betting typically has the steepest juice of all. Knowing which markets cost you the most helps you decide where your edge needs to be largest.

How to Beat the Vig

You beat the vig two ways: line shopping and finding genuine edge. Line shopping means having accounts at multiple sportsbooks and always betting the best available number — getting -105 instead of -110 on the same bet directly reduces the vig you pay, and over a season that adds up to real money. Finding edge means only betting when you believe the true probability exceeds the implied probability by more than the vig. If your read says a team should win 56% of the time and the price implies 52.4%, you've cleared the vig and then some.

How SharpCapper Factors In the Vig

SharpCapper removes the vig when it evaluates a line — calculating the "no-vig" fair probability so it's comparing apples to apples. The Edge Board uses vig-free probabilities to compare sportsbooks against Kalshi prediction markets, and the AI's confidence scores account for the price you're actually paying, not just whether a team is likely to win. A pick that's strong at -110 might not clear the vig at -140 — and SharpCapper flags that distinction so you don't overpay for juice.