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Advanced Intermediate 14 min read

Parlays and
Multi-Bets

A parlay turns two or more winning picks into a single ticket with multiplied payouts. A four-team parlay that wins pays roughly 11/1. The same four picks as straight bets return far less. That gap is why parlays are the most marketed and the most mis-bet product at every Ontario sportsbook. The maths are not complicated. The discipline required to use them correctly is. This guide covers exactly how parlay payouts are calculated, where vig compounds against you, when parlays are mathematically justified, and what SGPs are actually pricing in when the book offers them.

The one parlay truth most bettors never calculate: a three-team parlay at -110 per leg pays roughly +595. The true fair odds with no vig would be +700. The book keeps the difference. On SGPs, the correlation between legs is additional margin the book charges on top. Parlays are not automatically bad bets. But they require the same EV discipline as any other wager.
Parlay at a Glance Key numbers
~14.5% Book margin on a typical 3-team -110 parlay
+595 Typical 3-team parlay payout at -110 per leg
+700 Fair value payout on same parlay with no vig
20%+ Typical SGP margin (vs 4.55% on straight bet)
12.5% True win rate of a 3-team parlay at 52.38% per leg
Start the guide

How Parlay Payouts Are Calculated

A parlay multiplies the decimal odds of each leg together, then converts back to American odds for the payout. Every single leg must win for the ticket to pay.

Example: 3-team parlay, all at -110
1
Convert each leg to decimal odds
-110 American = 1.909 decimal (100 / 110) + 1 = 1.909
2
Multiply all three decimal odds together
1.909 x 1.909 x 1.909 = 6.96
3
Convert decimal result back to American odds
6.96 = (6.96 - 1) x 100 = +596 American
$
Your $100 stake returns $696 total ($596 profit)
If zero vig: 1.952 x 1.952 x 1.952 = 7.44 = +644 fair value
LegsAll at -110Fair payout (no vig)Book payoutVig cost
2-team52.38% x 52.38%+265+260Small
3-team52.38% x 52.38% x 52.38%+644+595Moderate
4-teamFour 52.38% legs+1,228+1,100Growing
5-teamFive 52.38% legs+2,344+2,000Significant
6-teamSix 52.38% legs+4,476+4,000Large
The win rate problem: a 3-team parlay where you win each leg 52.38% of the time wins as a ticket only 52.38% x 52.38% x 52.38% = 14.37% of the time. You need to win that ticket 14.37% of the time to break even at +596. The book pays +595. The margin is small but compounding with every added leg.

How Vig Compounds Across Parlay Legs

On a straight bet, you pay vig once. On a parlay, you pay it on every single leg simultaneously. The margin compounds multiplicatively, not additively.

Margin growth as legs are added (all legs at -110)
1 leg
4.55%
2 legs
8.87%
3 legs
12.97%
4 legs
16.86%
5 legs
20.56%
6 legs
24.10%

A 6-team parlay carries over 24% book margin. You need to be right roughly 26% more often than the book's implied probability on every leg just to break even. That is an enormous edge requirement.

Same-Game Parlays: What the Book Is Pricing Against You

SGPs are the fastest-growing and highest-margin product at every Ontario sportsbook. Understanding how they are priced is the difference between treating them as entertainment versus being quietly exploited.

The Correlation Problem

A standard parlay assumes legs are independent. In a same-game parlay, legs are correlated by definition. If Patrick Mahomes throws for 350 yards, a Chiefs win becomes more likely. If the Chiefs win by 10+, the total Over is more likely. The correlation between legs represents real added probability of all legs winning together. The book knows this and prices the SGP at reduced odds relative to independent legs. In most cases they price it more conservatively than the true correlation warrants. That extra margin is the SGP tax.

SGP vs straight bets: same game, same picks
Three straight bets
Chiefs -3.5 (-110)
Over 48.5 (-110)
Mahomes 280+ yds (-115)
$100 x 3 = $300 risked
If all win: ~$276 profit (3 x $92 avg)
Vig paid once per bet. Each bet independent. Partial wins possible.
vs
3-leg SGP same picks
Chiefs -3.5
Over 48.5
Mahomes 280+ yds
$100 risked
If all win: ~$420-480 profit
All or nothing. Correlation margin baked in. 20%+ effective vig on the combined probability.
The SGP pays more when you win. It also prices in the correlation between legs conservatively - meaning the combined odds offered understate the true probability of all legs hitting together. The entertainment value is real. The edge claim is not.

The Three Cases Where Parlays Are Mathematically Justified

Parlays are not universally bad bets. There are specific situations where the parlay structure offers genuine value or serves a legitimate strategic purpose.

01

Correlated Parlays You Build Yourself

If two outcomes are genuinely correlated and the book is pricing them as independent legs, you are getting the correlation for free. Example: a team's moneyline combined with the Over in a game you believe will be high-scoring. The team winning makes a high score more likely. If the book prices these as independent, the parlay odds are higher than the true correlated probability warrants. This is positive EV parlay construction. It is rare, requires genuine game-model knowledge, and disappears quickly as books improve their correlation pricing. Same-game parlays at books are NOT this situation.

Identify: two legs that are positively correlated but priced by the book as independent
02

Reduced-Juice Books with Better Parlay Payouts

When each individual leg has genuine positive expected value at a book with low vig, combining them in a parlay multiplies that edge rather than the standard vig. At Pinnacle, where totals are priced at -104, a 3-team parlay starts with 1.962 decimal per leg rather than 1.909. The combined payout is +653 instead of +596. If you have identified three -104 legs you believe are each positive EV, the parlay payout at Pinnacle is meaningfully better than at -110 books.

Requirement: genuine positive EV on each individual leg at a low-vig book
03

Bankroll-Constrained Upside Targeting

A bettor with a small bankroll who needs a specific payout to reach a meaningful threshold may rationally choose a parlay over straight bets even at negative EV, because the variance maximises the chance of reaching that threshold. This is a theoretically sound application in specific bankroll-management contexts. It is not a strategy for consistent profitability. It is a deliberate upside bet at the cost of long-run expected value.

Context: deliberately accepted negative EV for targeted upside, not a profitability strategy

Parlay Variants Available at Ontario Sportsbooks

Beyond the standard parlay, Ontario books offer several variants with different risk and payout structures. Each has a specific use case and a specific vig profile.

Standard Parlay

All legs must win. Payout is calculated by multiplying decimal odds of each leg. Minimum 2 legs. Available at every Ontario book. Pinnacle and bet365 offer the best parlay payouts due to lower per-leg vig.

Teaser

A parlay where you adjust spreads or totals by a fixed number of points (typically 6 in NFL, 4 in NBA) in your favour. You get the line movement; the book adjusts payout downward accordingly. 6-point NFL teasers through key numbers (3 and 7) are the only teasers with documented historical edge.

Round Robin

Creates multiple smaller parlays from a larger set of picks. A 4-team round robin with 3-team combos creates four separate 3-team parlays from your four picks. More expensive (multiple stakes) but reduces the all-or-nothing variance of a single large parlay.

Same-Game Parlay

Multiple legs from a single game. Correlation between legs is the defining characteristic. The book prices correlation into payout. Most heavily marketed product at DraftKings and FanDuel. Highest vig of any parlay type. Best treated as a recreational product with a defined budget.

The Only Parlay Variant With Documented Historical Edge: 6-Point NFL Teasers

Wong teasers (named after Stanford Wong's original research) involve 6-point NFL teasers that cross both the 3 and the 7 key numbers. A team at +1.5 teased to +7.5 now covers all one-score game losses. A team at -7.5 teased to -1.5 now covers even close losses. Research consistently shows that 6-point teasers crossing these key numbers have produced positive EV historically, particularly in certain game types.

Tease a team from +1.5 to +7.5 (crosses 3 and 7)
Tease a team from -7.5 to -1.5 (crosses 7 and 3)
Do not tease teams from lines that do not cross key numbers
Do not apply to totals (teaser value is specific to spreads)
The Wong teaser edge has compressed as books repriced teasers. It still exists at some books at specific prices but requires careful line shopping. Never tease a game with a key injury unknown, and verify the teaser payout is at least -120 per pair of legs before considering it positive EV.

Bankroll Rules for Parlay Bettors

Parlays carry higher variance than straight bets by design. The bankroll rules are different.

Smaller Unit Size

Because parlay win rates are lower by definition, losing streaks are longer. A bettor who uses 2% units on straight bets should use 0.5-1% units on parlays. The upside is larger; the downside frequency is also larger.

Separate Parlay Budget

The most practical approach: allocate a separate monthly recreational budget for parlays and SGPs, distinct from your edge-based straight bet bankroll. This prevents parlay losses from contaminating your serious betting capital and removes the emotional pressure of needing parlays to recover straight bet losses.

Verify Individual Leg EV First

Before combining legs into a parlay, calculate the EV of each leg independently. A parlay of negative EV legs is a multiply-negative-EV bet. The only parlays with any chance of long-run profitability are those where each individual leg is a positive EV bet in its own right at the current odds.

Never Chase with Parlays

The most dangerous bankroll pattern: a bettor down on straight bets who places a large parlay to recover. The parlay's higher payout is attractive when chasing. Its lower win rate makes recovery mathematically less likely, not more. This is the fastest route to a blown bankroll in sports betting.

Seven Parlay Mistakes Canadian Bettors Make Constantly

01
Adding a leg to "boost" the payout

The most common parlay error. A bettor has two strong picks, sees the payout at +265, and adds a third weaker pick to reach +595. The third leg reduces the ticket win probability by more than half. You are not boosting your payout. You are dramatically reducing your chance of winning. Each additional leg must carry the same positive EV justification as the first one, or it should not be on the ticket.

02
Treating SGP boost promotions as free money

Books offer SGP insurance, profit boosts, and leg count bonuses as marketing. These are designed to bring bettors into the highest-margin product on the board. The boost compensates for some of the correlation margin but rarely overcomes it. Read the terms: boosts are typically credited in bonus funds with wagering requirements, not cash.

03
Not comparing parlay payouts across books

A 3-team parlay at -110 per leg pays +595 at DraftKings and +596 at FanDuel. At Pinnacle, the same three legs at -104 per leg pays +653. The difference on a $100 bet is $57 of additional payout for the same picks. Line shopping applies to parlays exactly as it applies to straight bets.

04
Believing correlated SGP legs are a smart play

Bettors frequently add a QB Over yardage prop to a team Win and Over total because they feel correlated wins should all hit together. The book knows this too and prices the correlation conservatively. The belief that you have found a smart correlation angle in a pre-built SGP market is almost always wrong. The book got there first.

05
Confusing a big parlay win with a profitable strategy

Hitting a 6-team parlay for +4,000 is real money. It is also consistent with a strategy that loses money over hundreds of bets. Results over a small sample tell you nothing about EV. The only measure of whether a parlay strategy is working is whether the individual legs are consistently beating the closing line.

06
Using parlays to recover losses from straight bets

A parlay placed to recover a previous loss is never a justified bet on its own terms. It is an emotionally driven bet that compounds the mathematical disadvantage with poor decision-making. Losing straight bet bettors who switch to parlays are moving from a strategy with one margin to one with multiple compounding margins.

07
Not knowing the payout before placing the ticket

Many bettors build parlays by feel, hitting confirm before checking the actual displayed payout against what the fair payout should be. The book always shows you the payout before you confirm. Compare that number to the independently calculated fair value. If the gap is large, the book is taking an outsized margin on that specific ticket.

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