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CalcWolf Finance Vig / Juice Calculator
Finance

Calculate the Sportsbook Vig (Juice)

See how much the sportsbook is charging you in vig on any market. Compare vig across different sportsbooks.

📅 Updated April 2026 Formula verified 📖 4 min read 🆓 Free · No sign-up

What Is the Vig?

The vig (short for vigorish, also called juice) is the sportsbook commission built into every bet. It is how sportsbooks make money. At standard -110 / -110 odds, the vig is 4.55%. This means for every $100 wagered across the market, the sportsbook keeps $4.55 in expected profit regardless of the outcome.

Vig Comparison by Sportsbook

Pinnacle: 1.5-3% (lowest in the industry, sharp-friendly). Circa: 2-3.5% (best in Las Vegas). BetOnline: 3-4%. DraftKings/FanDuel: 4-6% on main markets, 8-15% on props and parlays. Hard Rock/Caesars: 5-7%. Over 1,000 bets per year, the difference between 3% and 6% vig is $1,500 in lost profits on $100 average bets.

⚡ CalcWolf Insight

Reduced juice lines (-105 instead of -110) save you 2.15% per bet. Over 500 bets per year at $100 average stake, that is $1,075 in savings. This is the easiest, most guaranteed way to improve your betting results — before you make a single pick better.

Frequently asked questions
Why does vig matter so much?
The vig is a guaranteed cost on every bet. A bettor placing 1,000 bets per year at -110 (4.55% vig) pays roughly $2,275 in vig on $100 average bets. At -105 (2.4% vig), the cost drops to $1,200. That $1,075 difference often separates winning from losing bettors.
What does -110 on both sides mean?
Both sides cost $110 to win $100. The sportsbook collects $220 total ($110 from each side) and pays out $210 to the winner ($110 stake + $100 profit). The $10 difference ($220 - $210) is the vig — 4.55% of the total action.
✓ Math logic verified against primary sources → See our verification process
Kevin Glover
Founder, CalcWolf · GLVTS · Blickr
All formulas sourced from primary references — IRS publications, peer-reviewed research, and official standards. Results are tested against independent reference calculators before publishing. Rates and brackets updated when official sources change. Editorial policy →
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