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Fibonacci Staking Plan Calculator (AUD)

Step up the 1-1-2-3-5 sequence on losses, back two on a win.

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The Fibonacci plan sets your stake from the famous sequence (1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13…). After a loss you advance one place; after a win you step back two. It chases losses more aggressively than D’Alembert but less than a martingale.

Set the unit and play a sequence — watch the stake climb the sequence on a cold run.

How it works

Advancing on losses means a recovery only needs a single win to claw back several previous bets, because each Fibonacci number is roughly the sum of the prior two. Stepping back two on a win banks ground steadily.

It is a genuine progression, so a long losing run escalates the stake quickly — the 13th place is 233 units. Pair it with the Losing Streak calculator to see how long a cold run is normal at your odds before you trust it.

stake = unit × Fibonacci(place); +1 place after a loss, −2 after a win.

Worked example

Unit $10 (1% of $1,000) · odds $3.00
  • Losses climb the sequence: $10, $10, $20, $30, $50, $80…
  • A win steps back two places, banking the recovery.

Tap Loss a few times above to watch the sequence build.

FAQ

How does the Fibonacci betting system work?
Your stake follows the Fibonacci sequence: advance one number after a loss, step back two after a win. One win can recover several prior losses.
Is the Fibonacci system risky?
It’s a loss-chasing progression, so stakes rise fast on a cold run — a long-but-normal losing streak can demand very large bets. Check the Losing Streak calculator for what’s normal at your odds.
Is it better than Martingale?
It escalates more slowly than doubling, so it’s less explosive — but it still can’t overcome the house edge. It changes the shape of the swings, not the long-run result.
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