Estimate final payouts, overlay risk, min-cash spots, and payout depth in one clean tournament view
Enter the field and buy-in to see the prize pool.
The calculator will show the net pool, payout depth, and overlay risk.
| Step | Formula | Value | Note |
|---|
| Spot | Share | Prize | Running |
|---|
| Profile | Depth | Shape | Best Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flat 30% | High | Even | Small fields |
| Balanced 20% | Medium | Middle | Club events |
| Top-heavy 15% | Low | Winner | Championships |
| Satellite 8% | Very low | Sharp | Seat pools |
| Fee | Net of $100 | Drag | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5% | $95 | Low | Soft rake |
| 10% | $90 | Common | Standard club |
| 12% | $88 | Medium | Typical live |
| 15% | $85 | High | Heavy drag |
| Net Pool | GTD | Overlay | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| $2.5k | $3k | $500 | Shortfall |
| $5k | $5k | $0 | On target |
| $6.2k | $5k | $0 | Above GTD |
| $9k | $12k | $3k | Large GTD |
| Spots | 1st | Min Cash | Depth |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | 60% | 20% | Fast |
| 9 | 30% | 5% | Final table |
| 15 | 24% | 2% | Deep |
| 30 | 20% | 1% | Marathon |
If the net pool is below the GTD, the overlay becomes your real risk number.
Deep payouts raise the min cash, while tight profiles push more into first place.
The prize pool of a tournament is made up of the whole amount of money that you distribute between the winners. Every tournament has its own prize pool, that forms the amount of all possible profits in it. Usually the money comes from the entry fees of the players.
Those fees commonly break into two parts, for instance 24 dollars + 2 dollars or 100 dollars + 9 dollars. The first part goes directly in the prize pool.
The structure of prize pools range based on events. Some has a base amount plus additions of participants. Occasionally it depends on the number of players or how profitable the tournament was.
For instance, some tournaments deliver certain prize after every stage. Some organizers use guaranteed funds of investors or ad budgets. Small tournaments mix their own funds, sponsorships, tickets and media incomes.
Sometimes you set a basic amount and add money from collection.
As you distribute the prize between players, that decide many things. The best distributions consider the whole prize amount, the number of players, entry fees and goals as make stronger competition or fairness. In big events fewer percentages go to the first place.
For instance, you can give around 15 % to the winner, a bit more than 10 % to the second and 8 % to the third. Some tournaments award every finalist with money. In other cases a 100 000-dollar pool goes to the top eight players.
If players tie in tournament, you commonly combine their shares for those ranks and split them equally. In a double elimination tournament, if 7th and 8th ranks tie, they receive each one share, while 5th and 6th positions have each 2.5 shares. The payment calculated by means of multiply the prize amount for that share and divide by the whole number of shares.
Small prize pool helps other top organizers compete. It stops them from being refused events with too big prizes, that it is possible not see.