How many bets are in a single?

A single bet is perhaps the easiest wager you can make at Paddy Power. Whether youโre betting on football, assessing the horse racing odds, and plan to back someone in the 100m final, itโs likely that you will start your betting journey with single bets.
In this guide weโll take you on a quick run-down of what is a single bet, why theyโre popular, and how you can place them.
How many bets in a single
The answer to how many bets in a single is pretty straightforward: itโs one. There is just one wager in a single bet and it can cover practically any outcome in sport.
Examples of single bets include:
- Backing a team to win a football match
- Backing a horse to win a race
- Backing a golfer to finish in the top 10 at the Masters
- Backing a tennis player to lose their first set
- Backing a snooker player to nail a 147
All single bets focus on one outcome. There are no strings attached to single bets and youโre paid out according to the odds and the size of your stake.
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Why place a single bet?
Single bets are popular purely because of their simplicity. It doesnโt matter if youโre new to sports betting or a seasoned punter with acute knowledge of the Paddy Power sportsbook. A single bet is quick, easy to understand and covers the majority of bet options for most people.
They also intrinsically carry less risk compared to multiple bets such as Doubles, Trebles and accumulators because you are only betting on one outcome.
Is Single bet better than Double bet?

In sports like football, NFL, golf and tennis youโre likely to place single bets all the time. So much so, in fact, that we donโt usually use the term โsingleโ for individual fixed odds bets.
Where single bets really make a difference, though, is in horse racing. Thatโs because itโs far more common for punters to create their own multiples and edge away from a handful of singles.
The next bet up from a Single is a Double. This is where, in horse racing, you bet on two horses, usually to win their individual races. If both horses win, you win your Double at better odds than if you placed two Singles. However, if one horse loses then your bet collapses.
So, what is better, a Single bet or a Double bet? To answer this question you need to think about risk and reward. Singles are less riskier because thereโs nothing more attached to the wager. Doubles rely on two singles to win, so thereโs more risk here, but in return you get better odds and therefore an improved profit potential.
Trebles, Fourfolds, Fivefolds, Trixies and all the other weird and wonderful bet structures all come with greater profit potential and greater risk than a Single bet.
It all depends on your attitude to risk and your willingness to follow more complex bet options.
How to work out a single bet
The beauty of single bets is that they are very, very easy to calculate. Below are three ways to calculate single bets, depending on which odds type you choose:
- Fractional โย You bet ยฃ1 on a horse to win a race at 4/1. If it wins, you get ยฃ4 profit + your stake back = ยฃ5
- Decimal โย The horse you backed for ยฃ1 is priced at 5.00 here, because decimal odds for singles show you your total return off a ยฃ1 stake. You win ยฃ5 back overall
- American โย American odds for single bets show you how much youโd win off a ยฃ100 wager when the odds are positive, and how much you need to bet in order to win ยฃ100 when the odds are negative. So, your horse here was priced at +400. Your ยฃ1 generates ยฃ4 profit and, of course, you get your stake back too
Want to make it really easy? Use the Paddy Power Single Bet Calculator to work out single bet profit for you!
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