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Closing Line Value Calculator

Compare the price you got against the closing line. CLV is the leading indicator of long-run betting profitability — even when results have not caught up yet, consistent positive CLV means your decisions are out-pricing the market at game-time.

Closing Line Value Calculator

Compare your bet price to the close and estimate whether the position beat the market.

Closing Line Value Calculator
Quick presets
-120 · dec 1.833 · 54.55%
-150 · dec 1.667 · 60.00%
Result
Beat close ✓
Implied prob delta
+5.45%
Cents movement
-30
positive = line moved toward your side

CLV: the leading indicator of long-run EV

Game outcomes are noisy. A 56% true-probability bet at +EV pricing loses 44% of the time; in a small sample your ROI can swing wildly even with sharp picks. Closing line value cuts through that noise. The closing price is the market's final, fully-informed estimate. Beat it consistently and your decisions are sharper than the consensus — variance just hasnt caught up to your edge yet.

Two ways to measure CLV: cents and probability delta

Cents movement: cents = close_odds − bet_odds in American terms. A bet placed at -110 that closes at -125 represents 15 cents of positive CLV. Probability delta: delta = implied(close) − implied(bet). The same bet's implied moved from 52.38% to 55.56% — a +3.18 percentage-point delta. Probability delta is more comparable across odds ranges; cents are easier to read on the bet slip.

Worked example: bet +120 closes at +105

Implied at +120 = 100 / 220 = 45.45%. Implied at +105 = 100 / 205 = 48.78%. Probability delta = +3.33 pp in your favor. Cents movement = 120 − 105 = 15 cents of positive CLV. At standard -110 markets, 3+ cents average CLV is roughly break-even after vig; 3.33 pp on a single bet is strong, especially repeated across hundreds of placements.

FAQ

What is closing line value (CLV) and why does it matter? +
Closing line value is the difference between the price you got and the price the market closed at. If you bet a team at +120 and the line closes at +105, you got 15 cents of CLV. Pros track CLV obsessively because it's the leading indicator of long-run profitability: even when results haven't materialized yet, persistently positive CLV means your decisions are sharper than the average bettor at the moment of placement, and over enough bets the results will follow.
How do you calculate CLV in cents and in probability? +
Two views, same information. Cents movement: closing_odds − bet_odds in American terms (e.g. +120 → +105 = 15 cents of positive CLV; -110 → -125 = 15 cents of positive CLV). Implied-probability delta: implied(close) − implied(bet); your example moves implied from 45.45% to 48.78%, a 3.33 percentage-point gain. Probability delta is the more comparable metric across different odds ranges; cents are easier to read on the bet slip.
Why is CLV considered a leading indicator of long-run profitability? +
Closing lines are the most efficient price the market produces — they integrate all available information up to game time. Beating the close consistently means your model is finding edges the market only sees later. Beating the close by 1-2 cents on average (over hundreds of bets) corresponds to roughly 1-2% long-run ROI at standard juice levels. Results-based ROI is dominated by variance over small samples; CLV cuts through the variance and surfaces the underlying decision quality.
How much CLV do I need to be a profitable bettor? +
On standard -110 markets, breaking even on closing line means beating the close by approximately 2.5-3 cents on average to offset the vig and clear net positive ROI. Sharp bettors target 3-5 cents average CLV across their action. Sustained CLV above 5 cents is exceptional and usually means you are betting markets with stale lines, low-volume sports, or that you have a genuine edge sharper bettors havent caught yet. Below 1 cent of CLV, you are essentially flipping a vig-adjusted coin.
What's the difference between CLV and ROI? +
ROI measures realized outcomes — how much actual money came back from actual bets. CLV measures decision quality at the moment of placement, independent of how the games actually played out. A bettor with +5% ROI but 0 CLV is benefiting from variance; eventually that ROI regresses. A bettor with 0% ROI but consistent +3 cents CLV will likely earn that variance-adjusted ROI back over time. Track both, but trust CLV more on small samples (under ~500 bets).
Devig first
No Vig Calculator →

Strip vig from both bet and close prices for an apples-to-apples CLV.

Stake
Kelly Calculator →

Size bets by expected edge — CLV is the receipt that the edge was real.

Decide
EV Calculator →

Compare your fair probability to the market — the input that drives CLV.

By H.L. Baitken — Shark Snip Desk. Math is open: see clv.ts.

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