Value Betting Explained: Finding Value in Football Odds
Last updated: April 2026 | By WinFulltime Team
If there's one concept that separates successful bettors from losing ones, it's value betting. It's not a secret system or a fancy strategy - it's simply the foundation of profitable betting.
Once you understand value, everything else in betting makes more sense. Let me explain.
📌 In This Guide:
• What value betting actually means
• How to calculate expected value
• Finding your own odds
• When to bet and when to walk away
• Common value betting mistakes
What Is Value Betting?
Value exists when the odds offered by the bookmaker are higher than the true probability of an outcome happening.
Think of it like buying a product on sale. If a watch is worth £100 but you find it for £60, you've got value. The same applies to odds.
Simple Value Example
You think Liverpool have a 50% chance of winning (true odds: 2.00)
The bookmaker offers odds of 2.40
This is value! You're getting better odds than the outcome deserves.
How to Calculate Expected Value (EV)
Expected Value tells you whether a bet is profitable in the long run:
EV = (Probability × Odds) - 1
Or more simply:
EV = (Your Odds - Bookmaker Odds) × Probability
EV Calculation
Your estimated probability: 50% (0.50)
Bookmaker odds: 2.20
EV = (0.50 × 2.20) - 1
EV = 1.10 - 1 = +0.10 (10% expected return)
This is a +EV bet - profitable over time.
💡 The Key Insight
You don't need to win every bet. You need to win bets where the odds are in your favour. Even a 52% hit rate at the right odds makes you money.
Finding Your Own Odds
The challenge is you need your own probability estimates. Here's how:
Step 1: Research Thoroughly
Look at:
- Recent form (last 5-10 matches)
- Home vs away record
- Head-to-head history
- Injuries and suspensions
- Motivation (title race vs mid-table)
Step 2: Convert to Probability
Once you've assessed the match, convert your view to a percentage:
- You're 60% confident = 0.60 probability
- True odds = 1 ÷ 0.60 = 1.67
Step 3: Compare to Bookmaker
If bookmaker offers 2.00 and your true odds are 1.67, you've found value!
2.00 > 1.67 = Value bet
How to Spot Value
Situations Where Value Often Exists
- Early season - Bookmakers rely on reputation, not form
- Less popular leagues - Less efficient odds
- After big transfers - Team strength changed
- Derby matches - Form goes out the window
- Fatigue situations - Midweek games affect weekend performance
The Kelly Criterion
Once you've found value, how much should you bet? The Kelly Criterion is a mathematical formula:
Stake % = (BP - Q) / B
Where:
- B = Decimal odds - 1
- P = Your probability estimate
- Q = 1 - P
Kelly Example
Odds: 2.20, Your probability: 55%
B = 1.20, P = 0.55, Q = 0.45
Stake = (1.20 × 0.55 - 0.45) / 1.20
Stake = (0.66 - 0.45) / 1.20 = 0.175
Bet 17.5% of your bankroll
⚠️ Warning
Kelly can be aggressive. Most bettors use "Fractional Kelly" (e.g., half Kelly) to reduce variance. You don't need to follow Kelly strictly - consistency matters more than perfect sizing.
Common Value Betting Mistakes
Mistake 1: Not Being Consistent
Changing your approach or chasing losses destroys your edge. Stick to your process.
Mistake 2: Overestimating Your Edge
Most people think they're better than they are. Track your results honestly.
Mistake 3: Not Shopping Around
Different bookmakers offer different odds. Even 0.05 difference matters long-term.
Mistake 4: Ignoring Variance
Short-term results don't prove your system works. You need thousands of bets to know.
Building Your Value Betting Strategy
The Process
- Pick your leagues - Focus on 1-2 you know well
- Develop your model - How do you estimate probabilities?
- Be patient - Wait for genuine value, don't force bets
- Track everything - Record every bet to measure your edge
- Stay disciplined - Don't chase, don't tilt
💡 Remember
Value betting is a long-term game. You'll lose plenty of "good" bets. The key is consistently finding situations where the odds are in your favour.
Next Steps