Why Did My Each-Way Bet Lose?
An each-way bet can lose even on a decent run — usually because the horse didn't finish in the paid places. The number of places paid depends on the terms when you bet and the field size. Non-runners and dead heats can also cut a return that looked like a winner.
🔑 Key takeaways
- Most often: the horse missed the paid places.
- Places paid depend on the terms shown and the runners under starter's orders.
- Remember a £10 each-way bet is £20 — finishing second wins only the place half.
- Withdrawn runners can reduce the number of paid places.
- A dead heat for the final place splits the place stake.
An each-way bet can lose even when your horse runs a decent race. The most common reason is simple: it did not finish in the paid places.
Places and stake
Each-way payouts depend on the place terms shown when you bet — first three, four, five, or more with an extra-place promotion. Finish fifth in a race paying only four and the place part loses. The other common confusion is the stake: a £10 each-way bet costs £20 because it’s two bets, so finishing second wins only the place half. If that’s new, start with how each-way betting works.
Non-runners and dead heats
Sky Bet explains each-way bets are governed by starting-price place-betting terms, so the number of paid places can depend on how many runners come under starter’s orders — several withdrawals can reduce the places. A dead heat is another nasty surprise: tie for the final place and the stake is divided by the number involved, with full odds on the divided stake and the rest lost. Tie two-way for fourth in a four-places race and only half the place stake is treated as successful.
Check the receipt
If a return looks wrong, open the bet and check: place terms, finishing position, non-runners, Rule 4, dead-heat rules and whether an extra-place promotion actually applied. Confirm you backed the right market too — ante-post, extra-place, without-favourite and standard win/place markets settle differently.
Sources
Frequently asked questions
My horse finished fourth but I got nothing — why? +
Check how many places the bet actually paid. If only three places counted (e.g. after withdrawals), fourth misses out.
Does finishing second pay the full bet? +
No. The win part loses; only the place half is settled as a winner, at the place fraction of the odds.
How does a dead heat affect it? +
If your horse ties for the final paid place, the place stake is divided by the number tied — so a two-way dead heat settles only half as a winner.
Editor at BritishGambler.co.uk and partnership manager, working with the best licensed UK casino providers.
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