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Super Heinz Calculator

Total Stake
$0.00
Total Payout
$0.00
Profit
$0.00
$

Total outlay = stake per bet x 120

Selections (7 required)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

How To Use This Calculator

The Super Heinz calculator computes returns for all 120 bets that come out of 7 selections: 21 doubles, 35 trebles, 35 four-folds, 21 five-folds, 7 six-folds, and 1 seven-fold. No singles, so at least 2 of your 7 picks must win for any return.

Step 1
Enter Stake Per Bet

Your unit stake is multiplied by 120 to give the total outlay.

Step 2
Add 7 Selections

Enter the odds for each pick and toggle won or lost.

Step 3
Review the Breakdown

See returns split by doubles, trebles, four-folds, five-folds, six-folds, and the seven-fold accumulator.

What Is a Super Heinz?

A Super Heinz is the 7-selection sibling of the Heinz. Adding one more pick scales the bet from 57 to 120 wagers because the combinatorial structure expands sharply with each added leg. There are no singles, so a single winning selection returns nothing.

Super Heinz bets are offered at most UK and Irish bookmakers, including Bet365, William Hill, and Paddy Power. They are most commonly placed on full UK horse racing cards or busy football accumulator weekends where the bettor has high-conviction selections across seven events.

Bet Composition
  • 21 doubles
  • 35 trebles
  • 35 four-folds
  • 21 five-folds
  • 7 six-folds
  • 1 seven-fold accumulator
  • 120 total bets per Super Heinz

How a Super Heinz Pays Out

Each of the 120 component bets settles independently. Winning combinations pay; losing combinations contribute zero. Because there are no singles, you need at least 2 winners to see any return, and most of the upside lives in 5+ winners.

Worked Example: 7 Winners at 2.00

Stake: 1 unit per bet. 7 selections, all winners at decimal odds 2.00.

Doubles: 21 x 4 = 84 units

Trebles: 35 x 8 = 280 units

Four-folds: 35 x 16 = 560 units

Five-folds: 21 x 32 = 672 units

Six-folds: 7 x 64 = 448 units

Seven-fold: 1 x 128 = 128 units

Total return: 2172 units (stake 120)

Profit: 2052 units (about 17.1x the total outlay)

Super Heinz upside concentrates in the 5-fold through 7-fold combinations, where each additional winner multiplies several existing accumulator legs at once. A single missing winner removes a large slice of the maximum return.

Sample Super Heinz Returns

All scenarios below assume 1 unit stake per bet (120 unit total outlay) with all selections at the same decimal odds.

WinnersOdds EachReturnProfit
1 of 72.000 units-120 units
2 of 72.004 units-116 units
3 of 72.0020 units-100 units
4 of 72.0080 units-40 units
5 of 72.00272 units+152 units
6 of 72.00844 units+724 units
7 of 72.002172 units+2052 units

Returns are calculated from the combinatorial structure only and exclude any bookmaker bonus, which is rare on Super Heinz bets.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Misreading the 120x outlay

A 2 unit Super Heinz costs 240 units, not 2. The 120x multiplier on Super Heinz outpaces what most casual bettors expect from a 7-selection bet.

Treating it like a 7-pick Lucky bet

Super Heinz has no singles. One or two winners still leaves you well below break-even. If you want each pick to pay individually, a parlay structure is the wrong shape; consider a Lucky-family bet instead.

Not shopping odds across bookmakers

Across 120 component bets, small price differences on each leg add up significantly. Compare odds at every bookmaker before placing.

Forcing in weak selections to hit 7

Filling in a Super Heinz with a marginal 7th pick to round out the bet destroys EV. If you only have 5 strong opinions, a Lucky 31 or 5-fold accumulator is the cleaner shape.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a Super Heinz bet?

A Super Heinz is a UK system bet of 120 wagers across 7 selections: 21 doubles, 35 trebles, 35 four-folds, 21 five-folds, 7 six-folds, and 1 seven-fold accumulator. No singles.

How many bets are in a Super Heinz?

Exactly 120. Your unit stake is multiplied by 120 to reach the total outlay, so a 1 unit Super Heinz costs 120 units.

How many winners do I need on a Super Heinz?

At least 2. One winning selection returns nothing because there are no singles. Two winners pay the connecting double; three winners pay 3 doubles plus 1 treble; and the payout structure grows combinatorially from there.

What does a Super Heinz pay if all seven selections win at 2.00?

With a 1 unit stake per bet the return is 2172 units against a 120 unit outlay, roughly 18.1x. Returns rise rapidly as the average price per leg increases because the seven-fold multiplies all 7 prices together.

What is the difference between a Heinz and a Super Heinz?

A Heinz uses 6 selections (57 bets); a Super Heinz uses 7 selections (120 bets). Same no-singles structure, but the Super Heinz roughly doubles the bet count and stakes proportionally.

What is the difference between a Super Heinz and a Goliath?

A Goliath adds an 8th selection, growing the bet to 247 wagers. Goliaths are the largest mainstream UK system bet and the cost difference relative to a Super Heinz is significant.

Where does the Super Heinz name come from?

The 'Super Heinz' name is a straight UK bookmaker convention: the Heinz family is named after the 57 wagers in the original Heinz bet, and the Super Heinz is the standard 7-selection extension.

Are there bookmaker bonuses on a Super Heinz?

Bonuses are uncommon on Super Heinz bets. Some UK books occasionally run all-winners percentage bonuses on system bets during major race meetings, but these promotions are tied to specific markets and should always be confirmed in the bookmaker's terms.

Can I bet a Super Heinz each-way?

Yes. Each-way doubles the bet count to 240 (120 win + 120 place), so a 1 unit each-way Super Heinz costs 240 units. The place leg settles at the win odds reduced by the bookmaker's place fraction (commonly 1/4 or 1/5).

Can I bet a Super Heinz on football?

Yes. Super Heinz bets work on any sport with discrete outcomes. They are most popular on UK and Irish horse racing where seven-event each-way bets are common, but football accumulator weekends and golf head-to-head slates also fit the structure.

Are Super Heinz bets profitable long term?

Only when every selection has positive expected value. The 120-bet structure punishes weak picks faster than smaller system bets because every leg contributes to many accumulator combinations.

What unit stake should I use on a Super Heinz?

Pick a unit you would happily place 120 times. Most disciplined bettors keep total Super Heinz exposure under 1 to 2 percent of bankroll, which puts the unit stake at a small fraction of one percent of bankroll.

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Pro Tip: Demand +EV on Every Leg

A Super Heinz only outperforms straight bets when each of the 7 selections is a value bet on its own. With 120 component bets, a single weak leg drags down many accumulator combinations at once. Use our EV Calculator to validate every pick before committing to the 120x outlay.

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