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The Kelly Criterion is a mathematical formula that calculates the optimal percentage of your bankroll to wager on a bet based on your edge and the odds offered. Developed by John Kelly at Bell Labs in 1956, it maximizes long-term bankroll growth while minimizing the risk of ruin. Professional bettors use fractional Kelly (25-50%) to reduce volatility.
Kelly Criterion
The Kelly Criterion is the mathematically optimal formula for bet sizing, calculating exactly what percentage of your bankroll to wager based on your edge and the odds. Unlike flat staking or arbitrary unit systems, Kelly maximizes the geometric growth rate of your bankroll over time. It's the gold standard for professional bettors, investors, and anyone managing risk with positive expected value opportunities.
Table of Contents
- Understanding Kelly Criterion
- The Kelly Formula
- Step-by-Step Calculation
- Fractional Kelly
- Kelly for Multiple Bets
- Common Mistakes
Understanding Kelly Criterion {#understanding}
Imagine you have a coin that lands heads 60% of the time, and someone offers you even money (2.0 odds) on heads. You have an edge—but how much should you bet?
- Bet too little: You don't capitalize on your advantage
- Bet too much: One bad run wipes out your bankroll
- Bet optimally (Kelly): Maximum long-term growth
The Kelly Criterion answers: Given your edge and the odds, what bet size maximizes wealth over time?
Key Insight: Kelly doesn't maximize expected profit—it maximizes expected logarithmic utility, which translates to maximum geometric growth rate. This distinction is crucial for long-term wealth accumulation.
Why Kelly Works
| Strategy | Short-term | Long-term |
|---|---|---|
| Bet everything | High variance | Bankrupt |
| Flat 1% stakes | Low growth | Slow accumulation |
| Kelly optimal | Balanced | Maximum growth |
Kelly finds the perfect balance between growth and survival. Understanding your risk of ruin helps determine optimal Kelly fraction.
The Kelly Formula {#formula}
Basic Kelly Formula
Where:
- f* = Fraction of bankroll to bet
- b = Decimal odds - 1 (net odds)
- p = Probability of winning
- q = Probability of losing (1 - p)
Simplified Formula
For decimal odds:
Or even simpler:
Where Edge % = (Probability × Odds) - 1
Kelly Formula Derivation
The formula maximizes expected log wealth:
Taking the derivative and setting to zero yields the Kelly formula.
Step-by-Step Calculation {#calculation}
Example 1: Football Match
Scenario: You estimate Liverpool has 55% chance to beat Chelsea. Bookmaker offers odds of 2.10.
Step 1: Identify variables
- Odds = 2.10
- p (your probability) = 0.55
- q = 1 - 0.55 = 0.45
- b = 2.10 - 1 = 1.10
Step 2: Calculate edge
Step 3: Apply Kelly formula
Result: Bet 14.1% of your bankroll.
Example 2: Tennis Match (Underdog)
Scenario: You estimate underdog has 35% chance. Odds are 3.50.
- Edge = (0.35 × 3.50) - 1 = 0.225 = 22.5%
- Kelly = 0.225 / (3.50 - 1) = 0.225 / 2.50 = 9%
Example 3: No Edge (Negative Kelly)
Scenario: True probability 45%, odds 2.00.
- Edge = (0.45 × 2.00) - 1 = -0.10 = -10%
- Kelly = -0.10 / 1.00 = -10%
Negative Kelly means don't bet. If you could bet against this outcome, you would.
Kelly Calculation Table
| True Prob | Odds | Edge | Kelly % |
|---|---|---|---|
| 50% | 2.00 | 0% | 0% |
| 50% | 2.20 | 10% | 8.3% |
| 55% | 2.00 | 10% | 10% |
| 55% | 1.90 | 4.5% | 5% |
| 60% | 1.80 | 8% | 10% |
| 40% | 3.00 | 20% | 10% |
| 30% | 4.00 | 20% | 6.7% |
Fractional Kelly {#fractional}
Why Use Fractional Kelly?
Full Kelly assumes you know your exact edge. In reality:
- Your probability estimates have errors
- Sample sizes are limited
- Edge can change over time
Fractional Kelly (betting a fraction of full Kelly) addresses these issues.
Fractional Kelly Performance
| Fraction | Growth vs Full Kelly | Variance Reduction |
|---|---|---|
| 100% (Full) | 100% | None |
| 75% | 93.75% | Significant |
| 50% (Half) | 75% | Major |
| 25% (Quarter) | 43.75% | Very large |
Half Kelly achieves 75% of optimal growth with far less risk.
Recommended Fractions by Confidence
| Your Edge Confidence | Recommended Fraction |
|---|---|
| Very high (verified model, 1000+ bets) | 50-75% |
| High (good model, 500+ bets) | 33-50% |
| Medium (reasonable estimates) | 25-33% |
| Low (uncertain) | 10-25% |
Fractional Kelly Example
Full Kelly says bet 14.1%. Using half Kelly:
Kelly for Multiple Bets {#multiple-bets}
Simultaneous Independent Bets
When placing multiple bets at once, reduce each bet's Kelly fraction:
Where k is your target total exposure (often capped at 30-50% of bankroll).
Practical Approach: Diversification
| Number of Bets | Max Single Bet | Max Total Exposure |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Full Kelly | Full Kelly |
| 2-3 | 2/3 Kelly each | 50% total |
| 4-5 | 1/2 Kelly each | 50% total |
| 6+ | 1/3 Kelly each | 50% total |
Sequential vs Simultaneous
Sequential bets (one after another resolves): Use full calculated Kelly each time—your bankroll updates.
Simultaneous bets (all pending at once): Reduce allocation to prevent over-exposure.
Common Mistakes {#mistakes}
Mistake 1: Overestimating Your Edge
The most dangerous mistake. If you think your edge is 10% but it's actually 2%, full Kelly will devastate your bankroll.
Solution:
- Track your actual results over 500+ bets
- Compare to closing line value (CLV)
- Use fractional Kelly
Mistake 2: Ignoring Correlation
Kelly assumes independent bets. Betting on related outcomes (same game, same team) violates this assumption.
Example of correlated bets:
- Liverpool to win
- Liverpool over 1.5 goals
- Liverpool clean sheet
These aren't independent—treat as one large bet.
Mistake 3: Not Recalculating Bankroll
Kelly percentages should apply to your current bankroll, not starting bankroll.
| Bankroll | 10% Kelly Bet |
|---|---|
| $1,000 (start) | $100 |
| $1,200 (after wins) | $120 |
| $800 (after losses) | $80 |
This automatic adjustment is part of Kelly's power—you bet more when winning, less when losing.
Mistake 4: Applying to Negative EV
Kelly never recommends betting on negative expected value. If your calculation gives a negative number or zero, don't bet.
Mistake 5: Ignoring Practical Constraints
Kelly might suggest betting 25% of bankroll. Practical issues:
- Bookmaker limits
- Liquidity (can you actually get the bet down?)
- Account preservation
Kelly Criterion in Practice {#practice}
The Professional Approach
- Calculate theoretical Kelly
- Apply uncertainty discount (typically 25-50% of Kelly)
- Cap maximum bet (usually 5-10% regardless of Kelly)
- Consider correlation with other bets
- Track and adjust based on results
Kelly with Bankroll Constraints
| Constraint | Adjustment |
|---|---|
| Limited bankroll | Use absolute minimums ($10 regardless of %) |
| Bookmaker limits | May need to distribute across books |
| Account longevity | Sometimes underbetting preserves access |
Sample Kelly Betting Log
| Date | Bet | Prob | Odds | Edge | Full Kelly | Actual Bet | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 1 | Liverpool | 55% | 2.10 | 15.5% | 14.1% | 7% | Win |
| Jan 2 | Man City | 70% | 1.50 | 5% | 10% | 5% | Win |
| Jan 3 | Chelsea | 45% | 2.40 | 8% | 5.7% | 3% | Loss |
Kelly Criterion Visualized {#visualization}
Growth Rate by Bet Size
For a bet with 10% edge at 2.0 odds (Kelly = 10%):
| Bet Size | Expected Growth Rate |
|---|---|
| 0% (no bet) | 0% |
| 5% | ~0.45% per bet |
| 10% (Kelly) | ~0.50% per bet |
| 15% | ~0.45% per bet |
| 20% (2x Kelly) | 0% per bet |
| 25%+ | Negative growth |
At 2x Kelly, expected growth drops to zero. Beyond that, you're mathematically expected to lose money despite having an edge.
Risk of Ruin by Strategy
| Strategy | Risk of 50% Drawdown |
|---|---|
| Full Kelly | ~50% eventually |
| Half Kelly | ~11% |
| Quarter Kelly | ~1% |
Learn More
For a comprehensive guide including real-world examples, simulation results, and spreadsheet templates, read our complete Kelly Criterion guide.
Related Calculators
Apply Kelly Criterion with these tools:
- Kelly Criterion Calculator - Calculate optimal bet size
- Bankroll Management - Plan your bankroll strategy
- Bankroll Growth Calculator - Project growth over time
Frequently Asked Questions
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