A betting exchange matches bettors against each other instead of against the house. You can back or lay outcomes, there are no account restrictions, and margins are lower.
A betting exchange is a platform where bettors trade with each other rather than against a sportsbook. Instead of accepting odds set by a bookmaker, you either take someone else's offer or post your own. The exchange earns a commission on net winnings rather than taking a position on the outcome.
On a standard sportsbook, you can only back outcomes (bet that something will happen).
On a betting exchange, you can do both:
Laying is powerful for hedgers because it's the cleanest way to bet against an outcome without needing the exact opposite side at a sportsbook.
Exchanges don't care whether you win or lose — they profit from commission regardless. A consistently winning bettor isn't a problem; they're just a customer who wins more often. Exchanges have never restricted accounts for winning.
This makes exchanges ideal for post-bonus operations, where a hedger's sharp patterns have already gotten them limited at recreational books.
Betfair (the world's largest exchange) has limited U.S. presence. U.S.-accessible options include:
Liquidity is the primary limitation. U.S. exchanges are less liquid than Betfair internationally, meaning the bet sizes available are smaller.
Exchanges typically charge 2–5% commission on net winnings, significantly lower than the 4.5–10% vig on standard sportsbook bets. Lower margins mean better value on every trade.
For the full advanced hedging framework, read our advanced hedging strategies guide.
This is part of our complete guide. Read the full breakdown for the complete strategy.
Read: Advanced Hedging Strategies for Sports Bettors →