Parlay hedging lets you lock in guaranteed profit before all legs settle. Here's exactly how to hedge a 2-leg and 3-leg parlay with worked examples.
Parlays are how sportsbooks make most of their money off recreational bettors. But there's a specific scenario where a parlay works in your favor: when you're using a bonus bet and all but one leg has already won. At that point, you can hedge the final leg for guaranteed profit.
Here's exactly how it works for 2-leg and 3-leg parlays.
A parlay chains multiple bets together. All legs must win for the parlay to pay. The boosted payout is what makes the hedge work — by the time you're down to the final leg, the remaining payout is large enough to fund a cash hedge on the other side.
The hedging opportunity only exists when:
If the parlay loses early, there's nothing to hedge. The strategy is about positioning yourself for the endgame scenario.
Setup: You have a $100 bonus bet on a 2-leg parlay. Leg 1 has won. Leg 2 is still to play.
The parlay was structured to pay approximately +600 on a $100 bonus bet, so a win would return $600 profit.
Before Leg 2 plays:
You now have a pending ticket worth $700 total ($600 profit + $100 stake) if Leg 2 wins. Since it's a bonus bet, you lose nothing if Leg 2 loses — but you want to lock in some guaranteed profit regardless.
Hedge calculation:
Let Leg 2 be Team A vs Team B. Your parlay backs Team A.
Outcomes:
You've locked in profit on either outcome. Minimum guaranteed: $170.
Three-leg parlays offer higher payouts and more opportunities to create guaranteed profit. The principle is the same, but with two potential hedge points.
Setup: $200 bonus bet on a 3-leg parlay at approximately +1200 (pays $2,400 profit on a $200 bet).
After Leg 1 wins: You don't necessarily hedge yet. The parlay is still alive but unresolved. The remaining payout is large, but you still have two legs to go.
After Leg 2 wins: Now you have one leg remaining on a parlay paying $2,400. This is where the hedge becomes compelling.
Hedge calculation:
Leg 3: Team A (your parlay side) vs Team B at -150 (other side).
You've turned a $200 bonus bet into $920–$1,020 guaranteed. That's a 460–510% return on the bonus value.
Yes, but the math is more complex. After Leg 1 wins, your 3-leg parlay effectively becomes a 2-leg parlay. The remaining payout is still large — you can place a small hedge to break even if either remaining leg loses.
This is called a partial hedge. You're not going for maximum guaranteed profit — you're protecting against a total loss on the remaining legs.
The Ungambled app handles these calculations automatically and shows you the optimal hedge at each stage.
Not all parlay legs are equal. For bonus bet parlays you intend to hedge:
Use one heavy favorite as Leg 1. Heavy favorites win most of the time, which gets you to the hedge scenario quickly. If Leg 1 is a -300 favorite, it wins roughly 75% of the time — you're in hedge territory 75% of the time before Leg 2 even plays.
Use an underdog as the final leg. You want the final leg to have a large payout discrepancy between the two sides. The wider the spread, the more valuable the hedge.
Avoid correlated parlays. Two outcomes that tend to happen together (Team A wins big AND the total goes over) reduce the hedge value. Look for independent outcomes.
Parlay hedging works when all legs except the last have won. The large remaining payout funds a cash bet on the opposite outcome, locking in profit on both sides. For 2-leg parlays, hedge the final leg. For 3-leg parlays, the best hedge point is after Leg 2 wins. Minimum guaranteed profit depends on the cash odds available for the final leg.
For the full advanced hedging framework, read our advanced hedging strategies guide.
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