Asian Odds Converter
Enter any odds value in any format — get instant conversion to all other formats plus implied probability.
Your conversion will appear here.
How to Use This Converter
- Select the format of the odds you have (Decimal, HK, Malay, Indonesian, or American)
- Enter the odds value — for Malay/Indonesian negative odds, enter the negative number (e.g. −1.25)
- Click Convert — all equivalent formats and the implied probability appear instantly
Worked Examples
Input: Decimal 1.93
HK equivalent: 0.930 (profit per unit staked)
Malay equivalent: +0.930 (same as HK for prices below 2.00)
Indonesian equivalent: +0.93
American equivalent: −108 (stake $108 to win $100)
Implied probability: 51.8% (plus book margin)
Input: Indonesian −1.30
Indonesian negative uses the same formula as negative Malay: Decimal = (1 / 1.30) + 1 = 1.769
Decimal equivalent: 1.769
HK equivalent: 0.769
Malay equivalent: −1.300
American equivalent: −130
Implied probability: 56.5%
Input: American −110
American negative: Decimal = (100 / 110) + 1 = 0.909 + 1 = 1.909
Decimal equivalent: 1.909
HK equivalent: 0.909
Malay equivalent: +0.909
Indonesian equivalent: +0.91
Implied probability: 52.4% — compare with PS3838's typical 1.93 (51.8%). US −110 is effectively a 2.5% margin vs PS3838's ~2% on equivalent AH markets.
Access Asian Bookmakers Through a Single Account
AsianConnect gives you access to PS3838, SBOBET, ISN, MaxBet and more from one wallet — the widest Asian book coverage of any broker. Competitive commission from 0.5%.
Open AsianConnect AccountUnderstanding Odds Formats: Quick Reference
All four Asian odds formats represent the same underlying price — the probability and payout are identical. The difference is purely presentational. Here is the conversion logic for each format:
| Format | To Decimal | Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Decimal | — (already decimal) | 1.01 to ∞ | Includes returned stake in multiplier |
| Hong Kong | HK + 1 | 0.01 to ∞ | Always positive; profit per unit only |
| Malay (+) | Malay + 1 | 0.00 to +1.00 | Underdogs / near-evens; identical to HK |
| Malay (−) | (1 / |Malay|) + 1 | −1.00 to −∞ | Favourites; inverted stake/profit logic |
| Indonesian (+) | Indo + 1 | 0.00 to ∞ | Identical to Malay for same range |
| Indonesian (−) | (1 / |Indo|) + 1 | −1.00 to −∞ | Identical to Malay negative formula |
| American (+) | (US / 100) + 1 | +100 to ∞ | Profit per $100 staked |
| American (−) | (100 / |US|) + 1 | −101 to −∞ | Stake needed to profit $100 |
For detailed explanations of each format, see the dedicated guides: Hong Kong odds, Malay odds, and Indonesian odds.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between Malay and Indonesian odds?
Malay and Indonesian odds use identical formulas. For prices below even money (decimal ≤ 2.00), both show positive values where the number represents profit per unit staked. For prices above even money (decimal > 2.00), both show negative values where the number represents stake per unit of profit. The formats are numerically identical and interchangeable — the naming simply reflects which regional market popularised the display. SBOBET calls its format "Indonesian" because it was the initial target market; Malaysian-facing books call the same format "Malay."
Why does the converter show American odds with a negative sign for favourites?
American moneyline convention uses negative values for favourites — the negative number shows how much you must stake to win $100. A −110 line means stake $110 to win $100. Positive American odds show underdogs — a +200 line means win $200 on a $100 stake. This mirrors the Malay/Indonesian sign logic but uses 100 as the base unit rather than 1.
How do I use this converter for live line shopping?
When comparing prices between books using different formats, enter the price from one book in its native format, read the decimal equivalent, then compare against the other book's decimal price. Most professional bettors standardise everything to decimal during live operations and use this converter to quickly translate any displayed price. For systematic line shopping across multiple books, consider switching all your book display settings to decimal to eliminate format conversion overhead.