Bet percentage counts tickets; money percentage counts dollars — and the gap between them is the most useful number in any betting split.
Bet percentage is the share of wagers on a side: how many tickets. Money percentage is the share of the dollars wagered: how much. Each bet adds to the ticket count equally, but a large wager adds far more to the dollar count than a small one.
On a game where everyone bets roughly the same amount, the two numbers track each other. They split apart when one side draws bigger bets per ticket than the other.
The gap reveals bet size. If a side has 40% of the tickets but 60% of the money, the average bet there is much larger — a signal that fewer, more confident bettors are backing it. That's the footprint people mean when they talk about sharp money.
The reverse — more tickets than dollars — marks a public favorite: lots of small bets, less real money behind them. Neither pattern is a guarantee, but the direction of the gap tells you which kind of bettor is driving the side.
Treat anything under about 10 points as noise. A gap of 15 points or more is where the average-bet-size story becomes credible and worth acting on. We aggregate publicly reported sportsbook handle on a sub-hourly cadence and surface this gap directly, so you can see the divergence at a glance.
Every MLB game on the slate, ranked by how far the public and the money diverge — the exact gap this page is about, applied live.
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These are data displays. We don't issue picks. Use the splits to inform your own bets — and bet responsibly.
Bet% is the share of tickets wagered on a side. Money% is the share of dollars. They diverge when one side draws bigger bets per ticket than the other.
No. Fading works when the public lean is heavy enough to move the line off the true number. On games with balanced action, there is no edge to fade.
Look for 15+ point gaps where the money is on the unpopular side. Those are the games where the average bet size is doing the talking.
This page defines bet percentage and money percentage as we use it across the site. See how we track public bets and money →
Last updated: May 30, 2026 at 7:27 PM UTC
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