How the Acca bet calculator works
Build your slip leg by leg, choose your stake, and the calculator shows total return, net winnings, and implied probability for the full acca. You can add bookie boosts, model insurance where one losing leg triggers a refund, and include commission for any hedges. Leg settlement controls let you update projections as games finish so you always see live exposure.
- Unlimited legs with reorder and removal tools.
- Boost percentage input for sportsbook promos.
- Insurance modelling when one leg is refunded or void.
- Commission and free bet handling built in.
- Leg by leg settlement to track live exposure.
- Exportable summary for tracking and compliance.
When to use the Acca bet calculator
Essential for football coupons, boosted parlays, and reload offers that require a minimum number of legs. It is also useful for matched bettors using acca insurance promos, or anyone laying accas where liquidity allows.
Make smarter staking decisions
Stress test upside versus bankroll by trying different stake sizes and insurance scenarios. If you cannot lay the whole acca at once, map out a sequential lay approach and check exposure after each leg. Use implied probability on the combined price so you do not overestimate how likely a big acca is to land. If you are just doing standard back-and-lay qualifiers (no acca mechanics), use the main matched betting calculator instead.
Frequently asked questions
What counts as an acca?
Any multiple with four or more selections. Every leg must win unless an insurance offer refunds the stake.
Can I enter free bet stakes?
Yes. Toggle free bet mode to remove the stake from the returned amount.
Can I hedge an accumulator?
Yes. You can either lay the entire acca where available or lay legs sequentially as they win. The calculator helps you size stakes and track exposure.
How do boosts or insurance affect returns?
Enter the bookie boost or insurance terms and the tool recalculates total return and net profit instantly.
Does it support acca freeze style promos?
You can model the remaining exposure and expected return to decide if freezing a leg is worth it relative to cashing out or hedging.