Updated daily · June 17, 2026

Darts Tips Betting

A working shortlist of darts calls, grouped by the market each one sits in. Open any pick and the thinking behind it is right there — the scoring, the checkout and the format, no name pulled from thin air. Written by Saara Virtanen.

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🎯 Today's Darts Tips

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Darts tips betting by Saara Virtanen
Every darts call here comes with its working shown — the scoring, the checkout and the read that led to it.

How to use these darts tips

Every pick folds out into the reasoning behind it: the bet type the selection is built on, the matchup that drives it, and the argument linking the two. That's what separates these darts tips from a bare list of names — the card spells out where the edge comes from, so you can weigh it yourself.

1

Clock the bet type first

Whether it's a match winner, a leg handicap, a most-180s or a total legs line, the selection's wording tells you what's actually being backed before you read a word of the case.

2

Weigh the argument behind it

Open the pick and the write-up walks through three-dart and first-nine scoring, checkout efficiency under pressure and the format it leans on — enough to decide for yourself whether it stacks up.

3

Favour the calls that converge

A selection is firmest when the scoring, the checkout and the logic all pull one way. Where they pull apart, treat it as a lean, not a lock.

Treat every call as a lean, never a sure thing. The ones worth the most weight are where the scoring, the checkout and the reasoning all agree — and even those deserve a sensible stake.

Which darts tips actually earn a stake

Confidence shouldn't be spread evenly across the card. The picks worth a second look are the ones where the scoring power, the finishing on doubles and the format all agree. A heavy scorer who also closes legs cleanly against an opponent who wobbles on doubles — and a write-up that says so — carries far more weight than one big average on its own.

A lean is more honest than a lock

Darts turns on small margins — one missed double can flip a leg, and short formats only amplify that variance. That's exactly why naming a fair price beats promising a winner, and why leg handicaps, player totals and 180 markets often offer more value than the match winner on a short favourite.

Use it to narrow down, not to pile on

The page works best as a filter. Run an eye over the firmest reads, check the format and recent averages, then back only the handful where it all lines up. Over a tournament, being selective and staking small beats betting every match by a distance.

Darts tips — your questions

There is no single best bet — it depends on format, the player profiles and the price. Leg handicaps and player totals often offer better value than the match winner, especially when one player has a clear scoring edge.
The three-dart average and first-nine average measure scoring power, checkout percentage measures finishing on doubles, and 180 rate plus hold of throw shape the totals markets. Reading them together beats leaning on any single number.
Short formats like best-of-11 carry far more variance, so upsets are common and favourites are less reliable. Longer set-play formats reward consistency and let the stronger player's edge show, which firms up handicaps and over markets.
It can be, if you price it off long-term 180 rates and the expected number of legs rather than one match's spike. Matches between two strong scorers who both hold throw, likely to go long, tend to favour the over.
Yes. Every selection and the reasoning behind it is free to read and refreshed from the latest previews, with nothing locked behind a paywall.
The page refreshes from the latest available previews and is cached to stay fast, so it reflects the matches and tournaments actually coming up rather than ones already finished.
Saara Virtanen
Written by
Darts Betting Tips specialist

I'm Saara Virtanen, based in Helsinki, and I write the darts betting tips at htftpredictions.com — reading averages, doubles and momentum rather than just the seedings.

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Everything here is for information only. No result is ever a sure thing — never risk more than you'd be fine losing.