When most people think about betting on the UFC, they jump straight to moneyline bets — picking who they think will win. It’s simple, popular, and effective. But when you’re looking to get more value, especially in fights with big favourites or evenly matched underdogs, there’s a smarter tool to use:
👉 Moneyline with Handicap Betting.
Let’s break it down.
💡 What Is a Moneyline Handicap in UFC Betting?
A moneyline handicap (also known as an Asian-style handicap) adjusts the fight by giving one fighter an advantage or disadvantage in terms of rounds. It’s designed to make uneven matchups more even from a betting perspective.
Rather than just betting on who wins, you’re betting on how dominantly a fighter wins or how competitively they lose.
🥋 How Does It Work?
Bookmakers offer handicaps in the form of round margins, such as:
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Fighter A -1.5
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Fighter B +1.5
Let’s explain what this means.
✅ Fighter A -1.5 Handicap
You’re betting on Fighter A to win by a margin of more than 1.5 rounds or by finish.
In a 3-round fight, that means:
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Fighter A must win 30-27 (on all judges’ cards), or
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Win via KO/TKO/Submission
A 29-28 decision win does not cover this bet. It’s about dominance.
✅ Fighter B +1.5 Handicap
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You’re backing Fighter B to either win outright or lose by no more than 1 round.
In a 3-round fight, this means:
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A 29-28 loss is still a winning bet
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If he wins the fight, the bet also wins
Perfect for backing durable underdogs who you think will keep it competitive.
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🧠 Why Use Handicap Betting Instead of Straight Moneyline?
1. Better Odds on Heavy Favourites
If a top-tier fighter is a -400 favourite, betting on them outright offers poor value.
But if you believe they’ll dominate or finish the fight, the -1.5 handicap might be priced around -110 or +100, giving you much better return — without needing an upset.
2. Protects Underdog Plays
If you see value in an underdog but think they’ll likely lose a close decision, the +1.5 handicap gives you coverage.
This way, you’re not relying on them winning — just on not getting dominated.
3. More Edge in Mispriced Fights
These handicap lines are often less efficient than moneylines, especially in lower-level UFC fights or Fight Night cards. That means they’re a prime target for bettors with strong tape or statistical analysis.
🔢 Real UFC Example
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Let’s say:
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Fighter A is -400 on the moneyline
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Fighter A -1.5 is priced at +110
If you’re confident in Fighter A’s ability to dominate or finish:
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Betting the handicap gives a +110 return
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Straight moneyline gives you barely anything — and more risk for less reward
Or, on the flip side:
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Fighter B +1.5 might be -120
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If you believe Fighter B is tough and could lose a split or close decision, that’s a sharp angle
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🧠 Sharp Betting Strategy Tips
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Know the fighters’ styles
Volume strikers or dominant grapplers are more likely to win by wide margins. -
Cardio & durability matter
A tough underdog with gas can survive and make it close — perfect for +1.5 plays. -
Avoid betting -1.5 on point fighters
If someone’s known for split decisions, that handicap is a risk. -
Always compare moneyline vs handicap price
Make sure the extra risk is worth the better odds.
📣 Final Word
Moneyline handicap betting in UFC is an underrated tool that lets you squeeze more value out of favourites and protect your position on underdogs. As betting becomes more competitive, these types of markets separate casual punters from smart investors.
If you’re part of our Prefight Membership, you’ll see these types of handicap bets when the value shows up — especially on UFC Fight Night cards where public money inflates favourites and misprices underdogs.
👇 Want to gain access to our profitable Handicap Bets for the UFC?
Join our Prefight Betting Membership and get:
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Full breakdowns of handicap and value-based bets
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Professional analysis from a profitable UFC bettor
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Exclusive Discord access and weekly betting video content


