
Each-Way Arbitrage Explained: How Each-Way Arbing Works and When to Use It (2026)
Each-way arbitrage means laying the win and place legs of an each-way bet separately on the exchange. Here's when it's a true lock and when it isn't.
Guides, tips, and strategies to help you get more from matched betting.
Getting Started13 of 38 articles
New to matched betting? Start with the fundamentals and your first covered bet.

Each-way arbitrage means laying the win and place legs of an each-way bet separately on the exchange. Here's when it's a true lock and when it isn't.

How to place your first matched bet, step by step: pick a welcome offer, size your lay with a calculator, place both bets, then convert the free bet to cash.

How to use an oddsmatcher: read the rating, the back and lay odds and the exchange liquidity, then hand the right match to the calculator and place it.

Reload offers are the existing-customer promotions that keep matched betting paying once the welcome offers run out. What each is worth, and how to use them.

How much can you really make from matched betting? Around £800–£1,500 from sign-up offers, then £100–£300 a month — here's the honest, declining picture.

An oddsmatcher compares bookmaker back odds against exchange lay odds and ranks the close matches. Here's what the rating column means and how to use one.

A step-by-step walkthrough of the matched betting calculator using a real Sky Bet welcome offer — and the five mistakes that catch out first-timers.

Lay betting means betting against an outcome at a betting exchange. Here's how it works, why it's central to matched betting, and a worked example.

Best Odds Guaranteed pays out at the better of your taken price or the SP. Here's how it works, which UK bookies offer BOG, and how to profit from it.