Dead Heat
Sports bettingA dead heat occurs when two or more competitors finish simultaneously. Winnings are split by the number of tied competitors.
A dead heat occurs when two or more competitors finish a race or event in a tie that officials cannot separate, even after examining the photo finish. Because there is no single outright winner, settlement rules adjust the payout: the bookmaker treats the tied runners as splitting the position. In practice your stake is divided by the number of competitors who dead-heated for that place, and you are paid at the full odds on the reduced portion, with the remainder of the stake treated as a loser.
Worked example: you back a horse to win at decimal odds of 5.00 with a 10 stake, and it dead-heats for first with one other horse. Under dead-heat rules your stake is halved because two ran the position, so 5 is settled at the full 5.00 odds, returning 25 (a 20 profit on that half), while the other 5 is lost. Your net return is 25 on a 10 stake — far less than the 50 a clean win would have paid, but more than a total loss. For an each-way bet, the win portion is reduced the same way and the place portion settled separately (see Each Way).
Dead heats matter because they quietly reduce payouts a bettor may have assumed would settle in full, and they arise more often than people expect in horse racing, golf, and athletics. The common mistake is not checking a bookmaker's dead-heat rules before betting markets where ties are plausible, such as top-finisher or place bets in golf, then being surprised when a winner returns a fraction of the expected amount. The reduction is not an error or a Push — it is the correct dead-heat settlement. Always read how ties are handled, particularly on each-way and multiple-runner markets, so the payout holds no surprises.
More in Sports betting
Hemen kullan
Ready to put it into play?
Now you know what Dead Heat means — see our top-rated betting sites and live odds.
✓Uzman puanlı siteler✓En iyi hoş geldin bonusları✓Canlı oranlar karşılaştırıldı