What arbitrage is
Arbitrage happens when different books disagree enough that a bettor can cover all outcomes and lock a theoretical return after stake sizing.
Arbitrage looks for price gaps across sportsbooks where both sides of a market may be covered for a theoretical profit if the odds are still available.
Arbitrage happens when different books disagree enough that a bettor can cover all outcomes and lock a theoretical return after stake sizing.
The arbitrage board checks odds gaps, implied probability, market type, book availability, and line freshness so stale or unsafe gaps are easier to spot.
Arbitrage can create small, repeatable opportunities when both legs are accepted at the displayed prices. The profit comes from book disagreement, not predicting the winner.
Subscribers get the dashboard arbitrage board, sorted opportunities, book/source details, implied return, and warnings to verify odds before placing either side.
Only if both wagers are accepted at the listed prices and neither side is voided, limited, or changed. Users must verify odds and sportsbook rules before betting.
Books move prices, limit accounts, or remove stale lines. That is why BetSignal emphasizes freshness and verification.