Calculate 11/10 Odds Instantly
Enter fractional odds and your stake to see decimal odds, American odds, implied probability, potential profit, and total payout.
Tip: 11/10 means you win $11 profit for every $10 staked (plus your stake returned).
What does 11/10 mean in betting odds?
11/10 odds are fractional odds often called “eleven to ten” or “eleven over ten.” They tell you how much profit you make relative to your stake. For every 10 units you risk, you earn 11 units in profit if your bet wins.
This is very close to even money. In practical terms, it indicates a slightly better than 1:1 return. Because it is near even odds, 11/10 is common in competitive markets where neither side is a heavy favorite.
11/10 odds conversion guide
1) Fractional to decimal
Decimal odds formula:
Decimal = (Numerator / Denominator) + 1
For 11/10:
Decimal = (11 / 10) + 1 = 2.10
2) Fractional to implied probability
Implied probability formula:
Probability = Denominator / (Numerator + Denominator)
For 11/10:
Probability = 10 / (11 + 10) = 10/21 ≈ 47.62%
3) Fractional to American odds
If fractional odds are greater than or equal to 1, American odds are positive:
American = (Numerator / Denominator) × 100
For 11/10:
American = (11/10) × 100 = +110
How payout works at 11/10
The easiest way to think about payout is to split it into two parts:
- Profit: stake × (11/10)
- Total return: stake + profit
Examples:
- $10 stake → $11 profit, $21 total return
- $50 stake → $55 profit, $105 total return
- $100 stake → $110 profit, $210 total return
Why implied probability matters
Odds are not just about payout. They also encode the bookmaker’s view of how likely an outcome is. At 11/10, the implied probability is about 47.62%. That means a bettor needs to believe the real chance of winning is higher than 47.62% (after accounting for market margin) to have long-term value.
When to use an 11/10 odds calculator
- Comparing lines across sportsbooks
- Estimating profit before placing a bet
- Converting between fractional, decimal, and American formats
- Checking whether your own projected probability beats implied probability
Common mistakes bettors make with 11/10 odds
Ignoring stake return
Many beginners confuse profit with payout. Profit excludes your original stake; payout includes it.
Mixing up formats
11/10, 2.10, and +110 all represent the same basic price in different formats. Use a calculator to avoid conversion errors.
Focusing only on “can I win?”
Smart betting asks, “Is the price fair?” A bet can win today and still be bad value long term.
Final thoughts
If you regularly bet markets priced around even money, understanding 11/10 odds gives you a strong foundation. Use the calculator above to quickly evaluate risk, reward, and probability before locking in any wager.