A no action bet is a wager that is voided and refunded — neither won nor lost. Your stake is returned as if the bet never happened.
When Bets Go No Action
Player props: If the player you bet on doesn't participate in the game (doesn't play at all, or doesn't meet the minimum participation threshold), the bet is typically graded no action.
Game cancellations: If a game is postponed or cancelled before enough play, bets are voided.
Listed pitcher rule in baseball: If you bet "listed pitchers" and one of them is scratched before the game, your bet is no action.
Over/under bets on stats: If a player is ejected early or exits injured before any meaningful play, many books void over/under props.
No Action vs. Push
A push occurs when a bet ties — for example, a team covers exactly on the spread and the spread hits exactly on the number. A no action is a void — the event didn't happen as expected.
Both return your stake, but they're tracked differently in your history.
Why It Matters for Tracking
No action bets shouldn't count against your win rate or ROI. Make sure your tracking app handles them correctly — counting voided bets as losses distorts your actual performance data.
[Oddible handles no action and pushed bets correctly in your stats →]

