Moneyline Betting Explained


The simplest sports bet; pick the winner. Odds determine how much you win relative to your stake.

What is a moneyline bet?

A moneyline bet is a wager on which team or player wins a contest outright, with no point spread involved. Odds are shown as a positive number for the underdog (e.g., +130, meaning $100 wins $130) or negative for the favorite (e.g., βˆ’150, meaning $150 wins $100). It is the simplest type of sports bet.

How moneyline betting works

A moneyline bet is the simplest wager in sports betting: pick which team or player you think will win. There’s no point spread to worry about, no totals; just a winner and a loser.

How moneyline odds work

Moneyline odds are shown as either a negative number (favorite) or a positive number (underdog).

  • βˆ’150 means the team is favored. You must wager $150 to win $100 in profit.
  • +130 means the team is the underdog. A $100 wager wins you $130 in profit.

The bigger the favorite, the larger the negative number; and the more you must risk to win a smaller amount. The bigger the underdog, the larger the positive number; and the more you win on a small stake.

Calculating payouts

For favorites (negative odds): Stake Γ— (100 / odds) = profit

  • Example: $50 at βˆ’200 β†’ $50 Γ— (100/200) = $25 profit, plus your $50 back ($75 total return)

For underdogs (positive odds): Stake Γ— (odds / 100) = profit

  • Example: $50 at +180 β†’ $50 Γ— (180/100) = $90 profit, plus your $50 back ($140 total return)

Most Missouri sportsbooks calculate this for you in the bet slip; but understanding the math helps you spot good prices.

When moneyline betting makes sense

Moneylines are best for:

  • Heavy favorites when you’re confident in the outcome and can absorb the lower payout (e.g., Chiefs βˆ’300 at home).
  • Live underdogs with a real shot; paying +200 or higher.
  • Sports without natural spreads, like baseball, hockey, soccer, and tennis.

Moneylines are less useful in NFL or NBA when the game is expected to be close; there, point spreads usually offer better value.

Three quick tips for Missouri bettors

  1. Shop the line. A team might be βˆ’150 at DraftKings and βˆ’145 at Circa. Over time, those small price differences add up.
  2. Avoid heavy favorites in parlays. Stacking multiple βˆ’300 favorites barely moves the payout while compounding risk.
  3. Watch for live moneylines. If a favorite falls behind early, you can sometimes grab them at +110 or better; strong value if you trust the underlying matchup.