Fibonacci Staking Plan Calculator (AUD)
Step up the 1-1-2-3-5 sequence on losses, back two on a win.
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
- 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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