Yankee Bet Calculator
4 selections making 11 bets (6 doubles + 4 trebles + 1 four-fold) - need 2+ winners for returns
Your 4 Selections
What is a Yankee Bet?
A Yankee is a system bet consisting of 4 selections which creates 11 separate bets: 6 doubles, 4 trebles, and 1 four-fold accumulator. There are no singles - you need at least 2 winners to get any return.
Bet Breakdown
If your selections are A, B, C, and D, your Yankee includes:
6 Doubles: AB, AC, AD, BC, BD, CD
4 Trebles: ABC, ABD, ACD, BCD
1 Four-Fold: ABCD
Total: 11 bets (6 doubles + 4 trebles + 1 four-fold)
How Yankee Returns Work
Because a Yankee has no singles, you need at least 2 winners to see any return:
0-1 Winners
Lose entire stake - need at least 2 for any return
2 Winners
Win 1 double (small return)
3 Winners
Win 3 doubles + 1 treble (decent return)
4 Winners
Win all 11 bets (maximum return)
Example Calculation
Let's see how a Yankee bet performs with a $10 stake per bet:
Scenario: All 4 Selections Win at 3.00 Odds
Total Stake: $10 x 11 = $110
6 Doubles: 6 x ($10 x 3.00 x 3.00) = $540
4 Trebles: 4 x ($10 x 3.00 x 3.00 x 3.00) = $1,080
1 Four-Fold: $10 x 3.00 x 3.00 x 3.00 x 3.00 = $810
Total Return: $2,430 | Profit: $2,320
When to Use a Yankee
Multiple Selections
You have 4 selections with good confidence
Better Value
More profitable than singles if multiple win
Horse Racing
Popular for horse racing and football accumulators
Coverage
Substantial coverage with multiple bet types
Yankee vs Lucky 15
A Lucky 15 is a Yankee plus 4 singles (15 bets total). The Lucky 15 provides returns even if only 1 selection wins, but costs more. Many bookmakers offer bonuses on Lucky 15s (consolation for 1 winner, bonus for all 4 winning).
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a Yankee bet?
A Yankee is a system bet on 4 selections that creates 11 bets: 6 doubles, 4 trebles, and 1 four-fold accumulator. It's popular in horse racing and football. You need at least 2 winners to get any return, making it riskier than bets with singles.
How many winners do I need to profit on a Yankee?
You need at least 2 winners for any return (1 winning double). To actually profit depends on odds - with 2 winners at short odds, you'll likely lose money overall. With 3 winners, you win 3 doubles + 1 treble for better returns. All 4 winners give maximum payout.
What's the difference between a Yankee and Lucky 15?
A Lucky 15 adds 4 singles to the Yankee (15 bets vs 11). This means Lucky 15 costs more but guarantees returns with just 1 winner. Many bookmakers also offer bonuses on Lucky 15s (consolation for 1 winner, bonus for all 4 winning).
How much does a Yankee bet cost?
A Yankee costs 11 times your unit stake. If you bet $10 per line, your total stake is $110. Compare this to a Lucky 15 ($150) or a straight four-fold ($10). Consider your bankroll carefully as 11 bets adds up quickly.
Is a Yankee worth it compared to separate bets?
Yankees shine when 3+ selections win - the accumulated returns from doubles, trebles, and the four-fold add up fast. If you typically win 2+ selections, Yankees offer good value. If your win rate is low, consider safer bets with singles.
What odds work best for Yankee bets?
Medium odds (2.00-4.00) work well for Yankees. Very short odds give poor returns even with 4 winners. Very long odds increase variance dramatically. The sweet spot is confident selections around 2.50-3.50 where multiples compound nicely.
Can I place a Yankee each-way?
Yes, an each-way Yankee doubles to 22 bets. This is common in horse racing with place terms. Each-way gives more coverage for placed horses, but at twice the stake.
How does the four-fold affect returns?
The four-fold only pays if all 4 selections win, but it offers the biggest single payout. At 3.00 odds each, the four-fold pays 81x stake vs 9x for each double. It's the "jackpot" component of the Yankee that makes all 4 winners so lucrative.