What you should be willing to pay should be based partly on your bankroll. If your bankroll is small, then paying for a capper is not a good idea because you will not win enough to cover their costs if you are using proper money management. The best cappers will realistically hit 54-57% so you have to figure that into how much you are willing to pay. If you play at $100 a game and a capper has 75 plays a month and hits 55%, then he is going to go 41-34. You are going to win 4100 and lose 3,740 so you will profit $360. Obviously if you play less than that your profit is going to be less. You need to figure that into whather a capper's price is worth the investment. If you buy a longer term like 3 months or 6 months the cost of breaking even is less due to the fact that the per month cost is less. To do that though is more risky so you need to really do your homework before making a long term commitment to any capper. I can't see paying any more than a $10/day average that is the absolute high end. Anything more than that and you are getting ripped off. If you really like a capper you should buy their whole sport at the beginning of the season so the plays are cheaper. Often buying a whole season of a capper's best sport will come out to like $2-3 bucks a day if you buy a whole season.

A capper's plays should be easy to figure out exactly what to put down on each play based on your bankroll. A capper's plays should always have money management plan in mind. If you can't tell how much to put down on a play, then that is a good sign that you should run away from that capper as that type of capper will only tell you that you + your bad money management are to blame for losing rather than them(and it is probably true).

Just remember more expensive doesn't mean better. A good capper won't try to kill you b/c they make money off their own plays. They just want to pay for their website and staff and then make something for their time. 90% of these guys don't even bet what they hand out and it is obvious who does and who doesn't.

Multi-level cappers are a waste of time. Different levels of picks mean they always have something to market.

Mega * or huge dime amounts or fancy names for plays are usually a tell tale sign of a non capper, just a good marketer.

You should always do your own capping just to improve your skills. Then if you get good enough you won't need these guys.