By Drew Tabor April 2026 4 min read

Hedging vs Arbitrage in Sports Betting: Key Differences

Written by Drew Tabor

Hedging and arbitrage are related but different strategies. Learn how they compare, when each applies, and which is better for bonus farming.

Hedging and arbitrage are often used interchangeably in sports betting conversations, but they're technically different strategies. Understanding the distinction helps you use each one correctly.


What Is Hedging?

Hedging means placing bets on opposite sides of a market to guarantee a profit, regardless of outcome. The profit source can come from anything that creates a favorable position — a bonus bet, a price difference, a special promotion.

The term is broader. Any time you're covering both outcomes and locking in a guaranteed return, that's a hedge.


What Is Arbitrage?

Arbitrage (arbing) is a specific type of hedge where the profit comes exclusively from price differences between sportsbooks.

Two sportsbooks price the same market differently. The combined implied probability of both sides adds up to less than 100%. You bet both sides at the appropriate stakes and lock in profit from the price gap alone — no bonus needed.

Identifying an arb:

Using American odds, if you can convert both sides to implied probability and they add up to less than 100%, you have arbitrage.

Example: FanDuel has Lakers +155 (implied: 39.2%) and DraftKings has Celtics +140 (implied: 41.7%). Combined: 80.9%. There's 19.1% margin — you can bet both sides and guarantee about 9.5% profit.


The Key Differences

HedgingArbitrage
Profit sourceBonus, price difference, or promotionPrice difference only
Bonus requiredOften (bonus bet hedges)No
Speed requiredModerateHigh — arbs close fast
Account profiling riskLower (bonus bets look square)Higher (pure arb is obviously sharp)
ROI per trade30–75% of bonus value1–5% typically
Volume availableMany bonuses dailyDepends on number of accounts

Which Is Better for Bonus Farming?

For the Bonus Phase of a new sportsbook account, hedging bonus bets is better than arbitrage. The reasons:

Higher profit per trade. A $200 bonus bet hedge might return $130–$150 in guaranteed cash. A $200 arb generates $4–$10 in profit. The bonus amplifies the return dramatically.

Better account optics. Bonus bets look like ordinary recreational betting. Systematic arbitrage is a known sharp pattern that sportsbooks actively look for. Arbing repeatedly on new accounts will accelerate limiting.

More volume. You're drowning in bonus offers — signup bonuses, ongoing promotions, SGP bonuses, profit boosts. There's always something to hedge. Pure arb opportunities require actively monitoring odds across books and acting fast.

For the Post-Bonus Phase, arbitrage becomes the primary strategy. Once bonus flow slows, arbitrage is how you continue generating reliable profit from your well-profiled, high-limit accounts.


Worked Example: Same Market, Different Strategy

The market: Lakers vs. Celtics. FanDuel: Lakers +160. DraftKings: Celtics +145.

Arbitrage approach: Both sides are positive odds. Combined implied probability: 38.5% + 40.8% = 79.3%. Bet both sides at appropriate stakes. Guaranteed profit: ~10% of money deployed.

On a $1,000 total bet ($500 each side), profit: ~$100.

Bonus bet hedge approach: You have a $200 bonus bet at FanDuel. Instead of pure arb, use the bonus on Lakers +160. Hedge the Celtics with cash at DraftKings.

If Lakers win: $200 bonus × 1.60 = $320 profit − Celtics cash bet = larger net

If Celtics win: Celtics cash bet profit

Expected return: $130–$150+ on a $200 bonus. Much higher ROI than pure arbitrage.


The Short Version

Arbitrage is a subset of hedging where all profit comes from price differences. Hedging is broader — bonuses make it far more profitable per trade than pure arbitrage. Use bonus hedging during the Bonus Phase; use arbitrage once bonus flow slows. Both are legal, both are profitable, and both require multiple sportsbook accounts.

For a deeper look at both strategies, read our guide to advanced hedging strategies.


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