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You've found a bettor on Pikkit with a verified track record. They've got strong ROI, positive CLV, hundreds of tracked bets. They just placed a 2-leg parlay at +169. You want in.
One tap. That's it. Pikkit's Copy Bets feature replicates the bet in your betslip. You can then place it on your connected sportsbook. No manually rebuilding the bet slip, no messing up the legs, no mistakes. The bet is copied exactly as the original bettor placed it.
But copy betting is more than just tapping a button. Doing it well means knowing who to copy, when to copy, and how to track whether the bets you're copying are actually making you money.
Copy betting lets you replicate another bettor's wager directly to your own sportsbook account. When a bettor you follow tracks a bet on Pikkit, you can copy that exact bet. Same picks, same legs, same market with a single tap.
It works for both straight bets and parlays. If someone places a 3-leg parlay on tonight's NBA slate, you see the individual legs, the odds, and the unit size. Tap Copy and the bet is built in your Pikkit betslip. You can then choose which sportsbook you want to Autofill your bet to.

This isn't a picks service or a tip sheet. Every bet you're copying comes from a real bettor with a verified, auto-tracked record. You can see their full history before you decide to follow them including ROI, win rate, bet volume, and performance by sport and bet type. There's no hiding losses or cherry-picking winners.
Before you can place the bets that you copy, connect your sportsbook accounts through BookSync. Pikkit supports 30+ sportsbooks. Once connected, your bets sync automatically and you can copy bets to directly to place on any of your linked books.
Browse the Discover page to find bettors worth following. Popular Profiles, Consistent Winners, and the Following Leaderboard all surface bettors with strong verified records. For a full breakdown of what to look for, read our guide on how to find profitable bettors to follow.
When a bettor you follow places a bet, you'll see it in your feed with a Copy button. The card shows the full bet details. Tap Copy, select which of your connected sportsbooks to place it on, and the betslip will ois submitted.
You can also browse the Most Copied Straight Bets and Most Copied Parlays sections on the Discover page to see which bets the wider community is copying most.

This is where most copy bettors drop the ball. Copying bets without tracking the results is just gambling with extra steps.
Pikkit automatically logs every bet you copy through BookSync, so you can see your ROI on copied bets separately from the bets you place yourself. Over time, this tells you which bettors are actually making you money and which ones aren't. Then you can adjust who you follow.
Copy Bets works across every bet type your sportsbook supports:
The copy captures the specific picks and market, but the odds you get may differ slightly from the original bettor's odds. This depends on your sportsbook and how much time has passed since the original bet was placed. Getting to a bet quickly after it's posted typically means better odds.
When you copy a bet, your betslip will populate with the current odds not necessarily the odds the original bettor got. Lines move, and even a few minutes can change the number.
This is actually where copy betting gets interesting from a strategy perspective. If you're consistently copying bets quickly after they're posted, you're more likely to get odds close to the original. If you're copying hours later, the line may have moved. Sometimes in your favor, sometimes against.
Tracking your closing line value (CLV) on copied bets with Pikkit Pro tells you whether your timing is working. If the bets you're copying consistently show positive CLV, your process is sharp even if short-term results are noisy.
Not every bettor with a good record is worth copying. Here's what to evaluate:
Verified track record over a large sample. A bettor with a 5% ROI over 1,000 tracked bets is a much stronger follow than someone with a 20% ROI over 50 bets. Small samples are mostly luck. Look for consistency over volume.
Positive CLV. A bettor who consistently beats the closing line is finding real value, not just running hot. CLV is the best predictor of long-term profitability.
Betting style that matches your bankroll. A high-volume bettor placing 15 bets per day might not fit your bankroll or lifestyle. A selective bettor placing 3-5 bets per week might be easier to follow and copy consistently.
Sport and bet type alignment. A bettor might be sharp on NBA player props but mediocre on NFL spreads. Check their performance by sport and market before deciding to copy everything they post. You might only want to copy their NBA plays.
Copying without tracking. If you don't know your ROI on copied bets, you don't know if it's working. Pikkit tracks this automatically through BookSync so use the data.
Following too many bettors. If you're copying bets from 10 different people, your portfolio becomes noise. You're better off following 2-3 bettors you've thoroughly evaluated than spreading across a dozen.
Copying every bet blindly. Even a profitable bettor has losing streaks and bets outside their edge. If you've identified that someone is sharp on NBA props but average on NFL spreads, only copy their NBA props.
Ignoring timing. The earlier you copy after a bet is placed, the more likely you are to get similar odds. A bet copied 5 minutes after posting will have closer odds than one copied 5 hours later. Turn on notifications for the bettors you follow so you can act quickly.
Not adjusting unit size. The bettor you're copying might bet 2 units on a play, but their unit size could be very different from yours. Scale the bet to fit your own bankroll management plan. Don't just match their dollar amount.
It can be, it depends entirely on who you copy and how you manage the process.
Copy betting gives you access to someone else's edge, but you still need to execute properly. That means picking the right bettors (verified, large sample, positive CLV), copying at the right time (quickly, for better odds), and tracking your results to confirm it's actually working.
The bettors who treat copy betting like a strategy by tracking ROI, evaluating performance, and adjusting who they follow, are the ones who make it work. The bettors who treat it like a lottery ticket, copying random popular picks without tracking anything, usually don't.
Copy betting doesn't have to replace your own analysis. Many bettors use it as one piece of a broader approach:
The key is tracking everything. Track your own bets. Track your copied bets. This way you can see what's actually contributing to your bottom line.
Find a bet on the Discover page or in your feed from a bettor you follow. Tap the Copy button to load into your betslip, select your sportsbook you want to place it on, the bet Autofills there, then submit the bet. You need to have at least one sportsbook connected through BookSync.
No. Copy Bets is a free feature on Pikkit. There's no fee to copy bets or follow bettors.
Yes. You can copy both straight bets and parlays, including same-game parlays. The full parlay with all legs is replicated to your betslip and ready to Autofill.
Not always. You get the current odds on your sportsbook at the time you copy. Lines move, so copying quickly after a bet is posted gives you the best chance of getting similar odds.
Track your ROI on copied bets separately from your own bets. Pikkit logs everything through BookSync automatically. If your copied bet ROI is positive over a meaningful sample (100+ bets), it's working. If it's negative, re-evaluate who you're following.
The copy replicates the exact bet as placed. If you want to adjust it (different odds, different leg, different stake), you'd adjust it in your Pikkit betslip and then Autofill it to the sportsbook.
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