Bet tracker

Sports betting tracker for complete betting records.

Betfolyo keeps the whole bet record together, so a wager can be reviewed later by account, market, tag, status, stake size, CLV, and bankroll context instead of disappearing into a sportsbook history screen.

  • Record stake, odds, selections, markets, tags, notes, tipsters, settlement, payout, cash-outs, and CLV context.
  • Connect each bet to the sportsbook account and bankroll movement behind it.
  • Review the same record later in reports, calendar, dashboard, goals, Smart Stake, and AI Coach.
Betfolyo bet editor with book account, stake, odds, settlement, selections, market, tags, payout, and notes.

What a useful bet tracker should capture

A betting record is only useful if it keeps the details that explain the result. Betfolyo stores more than wins and losses, because stake, price, account, market, and context are what make later review possible.

  • Stake, odds, odds format, settlement status, payout, cash-out, and return.
  • Selections with sport, competition, event, market, pick, line, result, and closing odds.
  • Book account, tags, tipsters, live-bet context, notes, and CLV context.

Why independent tracking matters

Sportsbook history pages are built around the ticket inside one book. Betfolyo is built around the portfolio across books, so records stay searchable when you want to review behavior over time.

  • Compare records across sportsbook accounts instead of one account at a time.
  • Separate real betting performance from deposits, withdrawals, bonuses, and transfers.
  • Keep the same source of truth for reports, goals, AI Coach, and bankroll review.

Related tracking guides

Keep building the betting portfolio record.

These pages connect the same Betfolyo workflow from bet entry to bankroll and performance review.

Bet tracker vs spreadsheet

See where spreadsheets help, where they break, and when a structured tracker becomes easier to trust.

Bankroll tracker

Connect bet records to sportsbook balances, deposits, withdrawals, and open risk.