How to Use Bettor Ed’s NFL Teaser Calculator to Find +EV Teasers
- Ronald Lockington
- Dec 12, 2025
- 8 min read
Updated: Mar 24
NFL teasers used to be the sharpest public secret in football betting. In the 2000s, Stanford Wong demonstrated that teasing NFL sides through key numbers like 3 and 7 could yield a significant edge. If you could secure 2-team, 6-point teasers at -110, you had about a 5% edge or more. That’s substantial in a liquid market like the NFL.
However, sportsbooks have caught up. The prices for 2-team, 6-point teasers have shifted from -110 to -120, -130, or even -140. The landscape has changed. After the extra point moved back, scoring patterns shifted, and push rates on 3 and 7 changed too.
So, are Wong teasers dead? Not exactly. The free money is gone. Any edge you still have comes from doing extra work.
Bettor Ed’s NFL Teaser Calculator is designed for this new reality. It doesn’t assume teasers are automatically good. Instead, it uses data to tell you whether your teaser is +EV in today’s market.
What Is an NFL Teaser?
A teaser is a parlay of alternative lines. Here’s how it works:
You adjust each spread or total in your favor by a fixed number of points (e.g., 6, 6.5, 7).
In exchange, your payout is reduced compared to a standard parlay.
All legs must win for the teaser to cash.
Example of a Teaser
Consider this example:
Leg 1: Vikings +1.5 → +7.5
Leg 2: Patriots -8 → -2
You get a better number on both teams. But remember, both legs must cover, and you’re taking whatever fixed teaser price the book posts (e.g., -120 for a 2-team, 6-point teaser).
The key question is, “Do these teased numbers cover often enough to justify the teaser price?” That’s exactly what the NFL Teaser Calculator answers.
Why Wong Teasers Used to Be Special
Back when 2-team, 6-point teaser prices were +100 or -110, the math was favorable.
At +100:
Implied probability to win the teaser = 50%
Break-even per leg = √0.50 ≈ 70.7%
Wong’s research indicated that NFL sides teased through 3, 6, and 7 were covering around 76% historically.
76% actual > 70.7% required = clear edge.
At -110:
Implied probability to win teaser ≈ 52.38%
Leg break-even = √0.5238 ≈ 72.4%
Still below 76%, still a strong edge.
Fast forward to today:
Books have moved to -120 for 2-team, 6-point teasers.
Implied probability ≈ 54.55%
Leg break-even = √0.5455 ≈ 73.9%
The margin between “what history gives you” and “what price requires” is now much thinner. Many books have pushed even worse.
Bottom line: classic Wong teaser rules are still a good starting filter, but they are not an automatic green light.
How Bettor Ed’s NFL Teaser Calculator Prices Modern Teasers
The calculator is built for the current market, not 2005. It blends:
Consensus NFL lines
Historical NFL results
Your teaser legs and teaser price
Step 1: Start from Consensus, Not One Rogue Book
The calculator pulls current spreads and totals from multiple sportsbooks. It identifies the sharpest books and averages their lines. This matters because you want to measure your teaser against the true market opinion, not against a generic 6-point teaser. For example, teasing from -7.5 to -1.5 is more valuable if -7.5 is priced at -120 than if it's -110 on either side.
Step 2: Use Historical Data
For each potential teased leg, the engine looks at games that looked similar:
Same general spread range (e.g., home favorite around -7).
Similar total (since total affects scoring spread).
Example:
You’re teasing a home favorite from -7 to -1.
The calculator finds a large sample of past games where the home team closed around a 7-point favorite with a similar total.
It counts how often the final margin was >1 (so the teased number -1 would have covered).
If that happened in 70% of comparable games, the leg’s cover probability is about 70%.
Elihu Feustel described this method, which he calls Answer Key, in his book Beyond the Odds. It's an advanced but excellent way to price derivatives when you have a large enough sample. However, calculating teasers for games with spreads greater than 10 may not be as accurate due to the smaller sample size.
Step 3: Combine Leg Probabilities into Teaser Probability
If you have two legs:
Leg 1 covers: p₁
Leg 2 covers: p₂
Teaser win probability = p₁ × p₂.
Concrete example:
Leg 1: 74%
Leg 2: 72%
Teaser win probability = 0.74 × 0.72 ≈ 53.3%
Step 4: Calculate Expected Value
The calculator then compares fair odds to your book’s teaser price. It returns expected value.
If your teaser wins 53.3% of the time and you’re being charged a price that requires 55% to break even, it’s -EV. If another book offers a better price (or your legs are stronger), you might flip to +EV.
Where the Real Edge Is Now: Exceptions
If traditional Wong rules and static menus are mostly priced out, where does your edge come from? Here are three places, which I discuss in detail in my book, Secrets of Sports Betting:
Handicapping (your numbers vs. market)
Consensus disagreement (sharp pricing makes it more favorable)
Variance (low volatility spots where each point matters more)
1) Handicapping: Your Numbers vs. the Spread
If your model or handicap rates a team stronger than the market, you might be teasing from a fairer line than the posted one.
Example:
Market line: Vikings +1.5.
Your numbers: Vikings should be -2.
Teaser: +1.5 → +7.5 looks like you are really going from -2 to +7.5 in terms of fair strength.
That extra hidden cushion boosts the true cover probability beyond what the raw historical data suggests. The calculator shows you the baseline; your handicap is the “bonus.” However, the line can also move AGAINST you, making your teaser -EV. If you're unsure where the market's headed, just wait until game day when the numbers have settled.
2) Consensus: One Book Off the Rest
If one book has:
Broncos +1.5 while sharp books sit at pick’em, then teasing Broncos +1.5 to +7.5 is more like teasing from 0 to +7.5 in real terms.
You can:
Use the calculator’s consensus lines to see the true market spread.
Spot when your book is lagging or shaded.
Use that stale or off-market number as a teaser leg, boosting your edge.
3) Variance: When 6 Points Matter More
Teasers are worth more in lower-variance games:
Lower totals.
Clear motivation (playoff chase, no tanking).
Starters confirmed on both sides.
A 6-point move in a 17–13 type game is much more valuable than in a 42–35 shootout where scores fluctuate wildly.
The calculator’s historical base already incorporates variance through totals. You can tighten further by favoring low variance games as teaser candidates.
Bad Teaser Habits to Avoid
Most teaser leaks are predictable and boring. Here are some habits to avoid:
Teasing Through 0
Moving from -2 to +4 might seem appealing. In reality, 0 is a dead number in the NFL. Ties are rare, and spending points to cross through zero usually offers little value. The calculator will give you leg probabilities that don’t come close to leg break-even.
Teasing Totals
Totals don’t behave like spreads. Each point is worth much less. Moving an under from 56 to 62 sounds like a big cushion; in practice, the historical jump in under-hit rate is small.
Teasing College Football
College football spreads can be -30, -40, or -50. Outcomes are often skewed enough that a 6-point move hardly matters. If you run CFB-style teasers through a spread- and total-based engine, you’ll see the value just isn’t there.
Teasing Other Sports at Random
NFL push rates around 3 and 7, plus scoring structure, make teasers somewhat analyzable. Basketball and other sports don’t provide the same structure, and sportsbooks are aware of this. Unless you have a sport-specific model, stay focused on the NFL.
Turning the NFL Teaser Calculator into a Process
Here’s a simple workflow for every NFL teaser you consider.
Price the Teaser
Open the NFL Teaser Calculator.
Choose your teaser type (points, price).
Select candidate legs.
Look at:
Individual leg cover probabilities.
Combined teaser win probability.
Look for Exceptions
When the math is close to break-even:
Check your own handicapping. Do your numbers push leg probabilities higher?
Compare the consensus line to your book’s line. Are you teasing off a stale number?
Consider variance: stable-conditions game or a volatile spot?
If those exceptions push the effective leg probabilities above the leg break-even threshold, the teaser might be worth playing.
Capitalize: Size and Track
Once you have a teaser with a clear edge:
Size your bet with fractional Kelly or a simple fixed percentage (e.g., 0.5–2% of bankroll).
Log every teaser in SlipSync:
- After building your teaser, click the button in the calculator, and it'll automatically fill in bet data (date, sport, what you bet, stake, etc.).
- SlipSync will also track performance stats like your teaser ROI, profit, and volume.
FAQ
Q: Are NFL teasers still beatable today?
A: Yes, but not the way they were 20 years ago. Classic Wong teaser rules at -110 were a clear 5% edge. At modern prices like -120 or alt-line parlays, most “standard” teasers are close to break-even or worse. You need data, good prices, and a few extra angles (handicapping, market disagreement, variance) to find real +EV spots.
Q: What does Bettor Ed’s NFL Teaser Calculator actually do?
A: It starts from consensus NFL lines, uses historical data from similar games to estimate how often each teased leg covers, multiplies those into a teaser win probability, and converts that into fair odds and expected value. You see, in plain English, whether your teaser is underpriced, fairly priced, or overpriced at your sportsbook.
Q: Which games are best for NFL teasers?
A: NFL sides that:
Cross key numbers like 3 and 7.
Come from low-total, lower-variance games.
Involve stable lineups and clear motivation.
Even then, the calculator has to confirm that leg cover probabilities beat the teaser’s break-even thresholds at your actual price.
Q: Should I tease totals or college football?
A: Generally no, unless you have a very specific, data-backed edge. Totals and CFB spreads don’t reward point-buying the way NFL spreads do, and most teaser menus are priced to punish those bets. The calculator will show weak leg probabilities relative to what you’re paying.
Q: How do I know how much to bet on a teaser?
A: Use a fixed small percentage of bankroll (0.5–2%) or a fractional Kelly approach based on the calculator’s edge output. Don’t over-bet. The calculator gives you edge; your bankroll rules keep you from blowing up.
Q: How do I track whether my teaser strategy really wins?
A: Use SlipSync. Click the button in the calculator or upload your bet slips, and review teaser-only ROI and variance over meaningful samples. Use the NFL Teaser Calculator to eliminate guesswork, not to justify every teaser you want to fire. In a market where easy edges have been priced out, the bettors who win are the ones who do the extra math.
The Future of NFL Teasers
As we look ahead, the NFL teaser landscape will continue to evolve. Sportsbooks are always adjusting their lines based on data and market behavior. This means that the strategies we use today may not be as effective tomorrow.
Adapting to Changes
To stay ahead, I must constantly adapt my approach. This involves:
Monitoring line movements closely.
Analyzing how changes in team performance impact spreads.
Staying informed about rule changes that could affect scoring.
Embracing New Technology
Technology plays a crucial role in modern sports betting. Advanced analytics and machine learning models can provide insights that were previously unattainable. By leveraging these tools, I can enhance my betting strategies and make more informed decisions.
Conclusion
In conclusion, while Wong teasers may no longer hold the same edge they once did, there are still opportunities to find value in NFL betting. By utilizing tools like Bettor Ed’s NFL Teaser Calculator and staying informed about market dynamics, I can navigate the complexities of modern sports betting. The key is to remain diligent, adaptable, and always ready to refine my strategies.
With the right approach, I can still find ways to grow my bankroll and make smarter betting decisions. The journey of a sports bettor is ongoing, and I’m excited to see where it leads next.




Comments