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Lucky 63 Bet Explained

A Lucky 63 bet is a full-cover multiple built from six selections, combining every possible double, treble, four-fold, five-fold, six-fold and single into one wager, giving 63 bets in total. It's designed so you can still land a return even if only one selection wins, which is why it's popular with horse racing punters chasing a big multiple without needing all six to come in. This guide explains how the maths works, what it costs to place, and which UK bookmakers handle these bet types well, so you can decide if it suits how you actually bet.

What is a Lucky 63 bet?

A Lucky 63 takes six selections and combines them into every mathematically possible bet: 15 doubles, 20 trebles, 15 four-folds, 6 five-folds, 1 six-fold accumulator, and 6 singles. Add those up and you get 63 individual bets, hence the name. It sits in the same family as the Lucky 15 (four selections) and Lucky 31 (five selections), all of which include singles alongside the combinations, unlike a Yankee or Canadian bet, which skip the singles entirely.

The appeal is straightforward: because singles are included, one winning selection still returns a payout, even though the rest of your stake on the higher combinations is lost. Some bookmakers also add a bonus for winning single or all six selections landing, though the exact terms vary by operator and change over time, so it's worth checking the current offer on the bookmaker's own promotions page rather than assuming a fixed figure.

How does a Lucky 63 work in practice?

Say you stake £1 on a Lucky 63. Because there are 63 individual bets, your total outlay is £63, not £1. That's the part newcomers most often get wrong, and it's why this bet type suits smaller stakes per line rather than treating it like a standard accumulator. Each of the 63 bets is settled independently, and your total return is the sum of whatever wins.

Because so much of the potential return depends on several selections landing together, a Lucky 63 tends to work best with each-way horse racing bets, where a place as well as a win still contributes to the combinations. Applying it to six low-odds football favourites, for example, rarely makes sense financially given the total stake required. It's a bet type built for punters comfortable with variance, not one that suits a cautious, low-risk approach to a wager.

Where to place a Lucky 63

Most established UK bookmakers offer Lucky 63 as a standard bet-builder option, particularly those with a strong horse racing heritage. A few worth knowing:

William Hill

William Hill is one of the most recognised names in UK racing and has offered full-cover multiples like the Lucky 63 for decades, with a straightforward bet slip for building them. The trade-off is that its bonus terms on multiples can be less generous than some newer platforms, so it's worth comparing before assuming it's the best value on any given day.

Betfred

Betfred has built a strong reputation around multiples and specifically markets Lucky 15, 31 and 63 bets, often with an added bonus for landing just one winner. That focus makes it a natural fit for this bet type, though its wider sports coverage outside racing and football can feel thinner than some competitors.

bet365

bet365's bet slip handles Lucky 63s cleanly and its live streaming means you can follow every leg of your combination as it happens, which matters when a six-selection bet can take an entire race day to settle. The catch is that its any-bonus terms on these bets aren't always as prominently advertised as at operators built specifically around multiples.

Paddy Power

Paddy Power's platform is well suited to racing-heavy multiples and its app makes tracking a long-running Lucky 63 straightforward across a full card. As with most Flutter-owned brands, terms and promotions are shared across the group, so it's worth checking whether a sister site offers a better specific incentive for this bet type.

Sky Bet

Sky Bet's racing coverage and mobile-first design make it easy to build and monitor a Lucky 63 on the move, particularly on a busy Saturday card. It doesn't always lead the market on bonus terms for full-cover bets specifically, so it's a solid all-rounder rather than a specialist pick for this bet type.

For a fuller comparison of how these and other operators stack up more generally, the betting sites page runs through strengths and weaknesses across the market, and current promotions relevant to multiples can be checked on the offers page.

Is a Lucky 63 worth it?

That depends entirely on what you want from a bet. It spreads risk across many combinations rather than needing every selection right, which is why it appeals to punters who find a straight six-fold accumulator too all-or-nothing. But the total stake adds up fast, 63 times your unit stake, and it's easy to underestimate that cost when focusing on the potential top-end return from the six-fold accumulator.

It works best when you genuinely fancy several selections rather than padding out numbers to hit six. Treat it as a structured way to bet on a shortlist you believe in, not a shortcut to a big multiple payout. And because the total outlay can be higher than it first appears, it's worth setting a clear budget before building the bet slip, in line with the general guidance on the safer gambling page.

FAQs

What is a Lucky 63 bet?
It's a full-cover bet built from six selections, combining every possible double, treble, four-fold, five-fold, six-fold and single into 63 separate bets. Because singles are included, you can still get a return even if only one selection wins. It's most commonly used for horse racing, especially with each-way selections.
How much does a Lucky 63 actually cost?
Your total stake is your unit stake multiplied by 63, so a £1 Lucky 63 costs £63 in total, not £1. This is the most common point of confusion, so it's worth calculating the full outlay before placing the bet rather than after.
Is a Lucky 63 worth it compared to a straight accumulator?
It depends on your appetite for risk. A Lucky 63 gives you a return if even one selection wins, unlike a six-fold accumulator where every leg has to land, but the total stake is much higher across all 63 bets. It suits punters who genuinely rate six selections rather than those chasing a big multiple payout for a small outlay.
Can I place a Lucky 63 with any UK bookmaker?
Most established UK bookmakers support Lucky 63 bets on their standard bet slip, particularly those with strong horse racing coverage such as William Hill, Betfred and Paddy Power. Bonus terms for winning singles or full clearances vary between operators and change over time, so it's worth checking the specific terms on the bookmaker's site before betting.