Kelly Criterion Calculator
Calculate the mathematically optimal bet size based on your win rate and risk/reward ratio
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The Kelly Criterion Explained
The Kelly Criterion is a mathematical formula that calculates the optimal fraction of your capital to risk on a favorable bet or trade. Developed by John L. Kelly Jr. at Bell Labs in 1956, the formula was originally designed for information theory applications but quickly found applications in gambling and financial markets. The formula maximizes the long-term geometric growth rate of capital, meaning it produces the fastest compounding over many repeated bets or trades.
The formula is elegantly simple: f* = (bp - q) / b, where f* is the fraction of capital to risk, b is the ratio of average win to average loss,p is the probability of winning, and q is the probability of losing (1 - p). The output tells you what percentage of your account should be at risk on each trade to maximize the rate at which your capital grows over time.
Full Kelly vs Fractional Kelly
While full Kelly is mathematically optimal for maximizing long-term growth, it comes with significantvariance. Using full Kelly sizing, you can experience drawdowns of 50% or more even with a positive edge. This is why virtually all professional traders and investors use fractional Kelly — typically half Kelly or quarter Kelly.
Half Kelly achieves roughly 75% of the long-term growth rate of full Kelly while cutting the variance approximately in half. Quarter Kelly provides about 50% of the growth rate with dramatically reduced drawdowns. The tradeoff is clear: you sacrifice some growth rate for significantly smoother equity curves. For most traders, the psychological benefit of reduced drawdowns far outweighs the small reduction in long-term returns.
Applying Kelly to Trading
To use the Kelly Criterion for trading, you need two accurate inputs: your win rateand your average win-to-loss ratio. These must come from a statistically significant sample of your actual trading results — at minimum 100 trades in the same strategy and market conditions. Using hypothetical or backtested numbers without live trading validation can lead to dangerously oversized positions.
Consider a trader with a 55% win rate and a 2:1 risk-reward ratio. The Kelly formula gives: f* = (2 x 0.55 - 0.45) / 2 = 0.325, or 32.5%. This means full Kelly would suggest risking 32.5% of the account per trade. However, most traders would use half Kelly (16.25%) or quarter Kelly (8.1%) to reduce drawdown risk while still capitalizing on their edge.
Expected Value and Edge
The expected value (EV) of your trading strategy is the average profit or loss per trade, calculated as: EV = (Win Rate x Average Win) - (Loss Rate x Average Loss). A positive EV means your strategy is profitable on average. The Kelly Criterion only produces a positive allocation when the expected value is positive — if your strategy has negative EV, Kelly correctly tells you not to trade it.
Your edge is the expected value expressed as a percentage of the average loss. An edge of 50% means you expect to earn $0.50 for every $1.00 of risk. The larger your edge, the more aggressively Kelly recommends sizing, because your probability of long-term success is higher. But remember: even with a positive edge, individual trades can and will lose. Kelly optimizes the journey, not any single trade.
Common Mistakes with Kelly Criterion
Using full Kelly on every trade. Full Kelly is theoretically optimal but produces unacceptable drawdowns for most people. Always use fractional Kelly in practice. Half Kelly is the most common choice among professional traders, providing an excellent balance between growth and risk management.
Overestimating your edge. If your win rate or average win/loss is even slightly overestimated, Kelly will suggest dangerously large positions. Always use conservative estimates from verified trading data, and consider using quarter Kelly if you have any uncertainty about your edge statistics.
Ignoring correlation. Kelly assumes each trade is independent. In practice, many trades are correlated — if the market crashes, multiple positions may lose simultaneously. When running multiple concurrent trades, reduce your Kelly percentage to account for this correlation. The Risk Management Calculator can help you analyze portfolio-level risk with correlation factors.