Matched Betting Guide — Lesson 2 — Beginner

Qualifying Bets

The qualifying bet is step one of any matched betting offer — it's the real-money bet you place to unlock a free bet. Here's how to do it correctly and minimise losses.

Updated March 2026 5 min read Beginner

What Is a Qualifying Bet?

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The Key to Unlocking Free Bets

Most bookmaker welcome offers require you to place a real-money ("qualifying") bet first, after which you receive a free bet. The qualifying bet is a matched bet — you back a selection with the bookmaker and lay it on an exchange simultaneously, covering all outcomes.

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Small Loss, Big Gain

The qualifying bet almost always results in a small qualifying loss — the cost of unlocking the free bet. Think of it as a small "entry fee" to a much larger profit.

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Why the Loss Occurs

Back odds at the bookmaker are usually slightly lower than lay odds at the exchange. This "cross" exists because the exchange includes a small premium for its services.


The Qualifying Loss

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Defining the Loss

Qualifying loss is the small amount you lose when placing the qualifying bet. It arises from the back/lay odds difference (the "cross").

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The Formula

Qualifying Loss ≈ Stake × (Lay Odds – Back Odds) / Lay Odds × (1 – Commission)

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Small Cross = Small Loss

Back at 3.00 with bookmaker, lay at 3.05 on exchange (2% commission), £10 stake:
Qualifying loss ≈ £10 × (3.05 – 3.00) / 3.05 × 0.98 ≈ £0.16

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Large Stake = More Noticeable Loss

For a £50 qualifying bet at a 0.08 back/lay cross, qualifying loss might be ~£2–3. Still worth it for a £50 free bet!

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Calculator Required

Always use our Matched Betting Calculator to determine the correct lay stake and liability for every bet.


What Odds to Look For

The Golden Rules

Follow these essential rules to keep your qualifying loss as small as possible and maximize your final payout:

1
Match the Minimum Requirements

Find selections where the back odds match the bookmaker's minimum requirement (e.g. 1.5 or 2.0). Always check the promotion terms carefully.

2
Keep the Odds Tight

Find selections where the exchange lay odds are as close to the back odds as possible — this keeps the qualifying loss extremely small.

3
Avoid Huge Crosses

Avoid a huge cross (e.g. back at 3.00, lay at 3.50) — this dramatically inflates your qualifying loss and eats into your final profit.

Pro Tip

Our Live Odds Comparison tool helps you find events where bookmaker and exchange prices are closely aligned without doing the hard work yourself.


Step-by-Step: Placing a Qualifying Bet

The Method

  • Read the offer terms carefully — note the minimum odds requirement, the qualifying amount, and any excluded markets.
  • Find a matching market on the exchange.
  • Enter the back odds, lay odds, stake, and commission into our Matched Betting Calculator.
  • Check the qualifying loss is acceptable (typically <5% of the stake).
  • Place the back bet at the bookmaker first. Write down the exact odds you received.
  • Immediately place the lay bet at the exchange. Ensure your lay stake is precisely what the calculator outputs.
  • Wait for the free bet to be credited!

Wait... so where is the actual profit?

Now that you've placed your qualifying bet and unlocked a reward, let's look at how to extract the maximum cash value from it.

Next: Free Bets Explained →
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