Casino Blackjack When To Hit

In some casinos or game versions, if a dealer is dealt a soft 17 (an ace plus cards totaling six additional points) he must also hit. If the dealer busts all players active in the hand win automatically. Basic Strategy. Despite its simplistic premise, blackjack is one of the most difficult games in the casino. Every gambler wants to know how to win at Blackjack; The basic strategy and some math can help you get better odds; There are 11.2 million articles on 'how not to lose at Blackjack' on the internet. Playing Blackjack can be a frustrating experience. On the one hand, Blackjack is known to be the Casino game with the best odds of winning.

Blackjack

The object of the game of blackjack or “21″ is to get a card total higher than that of the dealer's without going over 21.All cards are counted at their numerical value with face cards having a value of 10 and Aces as 1 or 11: it's your choice.

The game begins with the placing of a wager and the player receiving two (2) cards. The cards are all dealt face up except the dealers “hole card” which will be exposed after all player cards have been dealt. The cards will be touched only by the dealer. The player will indicate by hand signals how his hand is to be played. The dealer will be happy to explain how to do this.

Once you receive your cards you may:

STAND

Remain with that total

AND REMEMBER anytime you have a question about the games or anything else please ask. We pride ourselves on our friendly, helpful employees.

HIT

Take one or more additional cards

Stand

AND REMEMBER anytime you have a question about the games or anything else please ask. We pride ourselves on our friendly, helpful employees.

SPLIT

If you are dealt two (2) cards of equal value you may split them into two (2) different hands betting the same amount and playing them separately. You may split a maximum of 3X (4 hands). If you receive two (2) Aces you may only split once receiving one (1) card per Ace.

Casino blackjack when to hit 2

AND REMEMBER anytime you have a question about the games or anything else please ask. We pride ourselves on our friendly, helpful employees.

DOUBLE DOWN

You may double down on any first two cards. This means that you may place an additional wager up to your original bet and receive one (1) more card.

  • If the first two (2) cards dealt to you are an Ace and a Ten value card you have a Blackjack. This pays 3 to 2. If the dealer also has a Blackjack it is a push or standoff.
  • If the dealer's up-card is an Ace you have the option of making an Insurance bet. This is a wager that the dealer has a 10 value card for a down card making a Blackjack. You can bet up to ½ of your bet and it pays 2 to 1.
  • We also allow the player to take even money if the dealer has an Ace up and the player has a Blackjack.
  • The dealer peeks at his hole card when his up card is a Ten value card or an Ace. Other than that, the dealer will hit 16′s and all soft 17′s. Wagers are then paid, taken, or pushed. Cards are collected and a new round of play begins.

AND REMEMBER anytime you have a question about the games or anything else please ask. We pride ourselves on our friendly, helpful employees.

Double Deck Black Jack

  • No person under twenty-one (21) years of age is allowed to gamble or be on the casino gaming floor.
  • All bets are final after the first card has been dealt.
  • Players are responsible for counting their own point total for their hands.
  • Players must clearly scratch the table felt with their hand to indicate they elect to hit their hand.
  • Player must tuck their cards under their bet to indicate they wish to stand.
  • The dealer must hit soft 17.
  • Players will have the option to bet up to one-half of their bet on the insurance line when the dealer's face card up is an ace.
  • Players may elect to draw additional cards until they break or reach a hard of soft total of 21.
  • Players may split any pair up to three times.
  • Players splitting aces will receive only one card per ace.
  • Players may double down on their first two cards dealt to them that total 8, 9, 10 or 11 only. No soft doubling.
  • Players may not double down on Blackjack
  • Players must receive one card when doubling down
  • Players must receive at least one card per hand when splitting pairs.
  • Players may double down after splitting pairs on two card hands that total 8, 9, 10 or 11 only. Doubling down on a soft 21 after splitting is not allowed.
  • Players may not double down after splitting aces.
  • If a player chooses not to make a bet on any hand during an active deal, the player will not be allowed to re-enter the game until the cards are re-shuffled.
  • Players are limited to one hand per person.
  • New players will not be allowed to enter the game during an active deal. No mid-deal entry.
  • Players may not instruct other players at the table on how to play a hand or how to bet.
  • Players may use only one hand on their cards.
  • A player's cards must remain over the table at all times.
  • A player may not show or share his hand with any other player.
  • Written or mechanical aids are prohibited.
  • Management may request valid identification from a player at any time. If a player refuses to identify himself, management reserves the right to terminate their play.
  • Management reserves the right to terminate a guest's play at management's discretion.
  • A Floorperson will correct any dealing errors that may occur on the game.
  • The Floorperson's decision is final.

Payouts

  • Winning insurance bets pay 2 to 1.
  • All winning Blackjacks are paid 3 to 2.

AND REMEMBER anytime you have a question about the games or anything else please ask. We pride ourselves on our friendly, helpful employees.

Payouts

  • Winning insurance bets pay 2 to 1.
  • All winning Blackjacks are paid 3 to 2.

AND REMEMBER anytime you have a question about the games or anything else please ask. We pride ourselves on our friendly, helpful employees.

There's more to mastering any game than a fundamental understanding of how to play. You must also know the customs of the game and how to finnesse the rules.

Etiquette

When you sit down at a table, wait for the dealer to finish the hand in progress. Then you may buy chips by placing currency on the layout, pushing it toward the dealer, and saying, 'Change, please.'

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Do not leave currency in the betting box on the table. In most newer gaming jurisdictions, casinos are not allowed to accept cash bets. However, casinos in some places allow cash bets with the call 'Money plays.' Don't leave the dealer wondering if that $100 bill is a request for change or a bet on the next hand.

Once you make a bet, keep your hands off the chips in the betting box until the hand is over.

If you are betting chips of different denominations, stack them with the smallest denomination on top. If you put a larger denomination on top, the dealer will rearrange them before going on with the hand. It's one way the casino guards against someone attempting to add a large-denomination chip to their bet after the outcome is known.

In multiple-deck games, give playing decisions with hand signals. In single- or double-deck games dealt facedown, pick up the cards with one hand, scratch the table with the cards for a hit, and slide the cards under your chips to stand. Turn the cards faceup if you bust or if you wish to split pairs or double down. At the conclusion of play, let the dealer turn faceup any cards under your chips.

If you are a novice, you might want to avoid the last seat at the table, the one all the way to the players' left. This is called 'third base,' and the player here is the last to play before the dealer. Although in the long run bad plays will help other players as much as they hurt them, in the short term other players will notice if a mistake by the third baseman costs them money. For example, the dealer shows a 6, the third baseman has 12 and hits a 10 to bust. The dealer turns up a 10 for 16, then draws a 5 for 21, beating all players at the table. The third baseman is likely to take heat from other players for taking the dealer's bust card instead of standing. If you don't want the heat, sit elsewhere.

If you wish to use the rest room and return to the same seat, you may ask the dealer to mark your place. A clear plastic disk will be placed in your betting box as a sign that the seat is occupied.

The House Edge

Because the player hands are completed first, the players have the chance to bust before the dealer plays. And the house wins whenever the player busts, regardless of how the dealer's hand winds up. That is the entire source of the casino's advantage in blackjack. Because of this one edge, the casino will win more hands than the player, no matter how expert.

The casino gives back some of this advantage by paying 3-2 on blackjack, allowing players to see one of the dealer's cards, and by allowing the player to double down and split pairs. To take advantage of these options, the player must learn proper strategy.

Basic Strategy

Played well, blackjack becomes a game of skill in a casino full of games of chance. Studies of millions of computer-generated hands have yielded a strategy for when to hit, when to stand, when to double, when to split. This strategy can take the house edge down to about 0.5 percent in a six-deck game -- and lower in games with fewer decks. In a single-deck game in which the dealer stands on all 17s and the player is allowed to double down after splits, a basic strategy player can even gain an edge of 0.1 percent over the house. Needless to say, such single-deck games are not commonly dealt.

Compare those percentages with players who adopt a never-bust strategy, standing on all hands of 12 or more so that drawing a 10 will not cause them to lose before the dealer's hand is played, to players who use dealer's strategy, always hitting 16 or less and standing on 17 or more. These players face a house edge estimated at 5 percent — about 10 times the edge faced by a basic strategy player.

Basic strategy takes advantage of the player's opportunity to look at one of the dealer's cards. You're not just blindly trying to come as close to 21 as possible. By showing you one card, the dealer allows you to make an educated estimate of the eventual outcome and play your cards accordingly.

One simple way to look at it is to play as if the dealer's facedown card is a 10. Since 10-value cards (10, jack, queen, king) comprise four of the 13 denominations in the deck, that is the single most likely value of any unseen card. Therefore, if you have 16 and the dealer's up-card is a 7, you are guessing that the most likely dealer total is 17. The dealer would stand on 17 to beat your 16; therefore, you must hit the 16 to have the best chance to win.

On the other hand, if you have 16 and the dealer's up-card is a 6, your assumption would be that his total is 16, making the dealer more likely than not to bust on the next card. Therefore, you stand on 16 versus 6.

That's an oversimplification, of course, but very close to the way the percentages work out when the effect of multiple-card draws are taken into account.

The most common decision a player must make is whether to hit or stand on a hard total -- a hand in which there is no ace being used as an 11. Basic strategy begins with the proper plays for each hard total faced by the player. You can refer to this simple chart:

Basic blackjack strategy

Many players seem to hit the wall at 16 and stand regardless of the dealer's up-card. But that 16 is a loser unless the dealer busts, and the dealer will make 17 or better nearly 80 percent of the time with a 7 or higher showing. The risk of busting by hitting 16 is outweighed by the likelihood you'll lose if you stand.

Basic strategy for hard totals is straightforward enough, but when it comes to soft totals many players become confused. They seem lost, like the player aboard a riverboat in Joliet, Illinois, who wanted to stand on ace-5 --a soft 16-- against a dealer's 6. The dealer asked if he was sure, and another player piped in, 'You can't HURT that hand,' so the player finally signaled for a hit. He drew a 5 to total 21 and was all grins.

In a facedown game, no friendly advice is available. Once, at a downtown Las Vegas casino, the dealer busted, meaning all players who hadn't busted won. One player turned up two aces and a three. 'Winner five!' the dealer called out. Though it worked out that time, five (or 15) never wins without the dealer busting, and the player could have drawn at least one more card without busting. That's too big an edge to give away.

Nothing you could draw could hurt a soft 16, or a soft 15, or many other soft totals. Just as with hard totals, guesswork is unnecessary. A basic strategy tells you to what to do with soft hands.

Hit

The hand of ace and 6 is the most misplayed hand in blackjack. People who understand that the dealer always stands on 17 and that the player stands on hard 17 and above seem to think 17 is a good hand, but the dealer must bust for 17 to win. If the dealer does not bust, the best 17 can do is tie. By hitting soft 17, you have a chance to improve it by drawing ace, 2, 3, or 4, or leave it the same with 10-jack-queen-king. That's eight of 13 cards that either improve the hand or leave it no worse. And even if the draw is 5, 6, 7, 8, or 9, you have another chance to draw if the dealer shows 7 or better, and you're still in position to win if the dealer busts while showing 2 through 6, and all you've given up is a chance to tie a 17. You can refer to this chart for soft-hand strategies:

Soft-hand blackjack strategies

Standing on soft 18 will lose the player money in the long run when the dealer shows 9, 10, or ace. When the dealer shows 3 through 6, the chances of the dealer busting are strong enough to make doubling down the best play here.

The final category of hands consists of those in which the first two cards match. Then the player must decide whether or not to split the pair into two hands. You can refer to this chart for pair splitting advice:

Pair splitting advice in blackjack

Some Strategy Variations: Double Down After Splits Permitted

Many casinos allow the player to double down after splitting pairs. This is a good rule for players -- in fact, any rule that allows a player an option is a good one if the player knows when to take advantage of the option. If you split 8s against a 6, for example, and a 3 is dealt to your first 8, you now are playing this hand as an 11, and it is to your advantage to double down if the house allows it.

If the casino allows doubling after splits, the following strategy variations are necessary:

If you have 2, 2; 3, 3: Split against 2 through 7 instead of 4 through 7.

If you have 4, 4: Split against 5 and 6 instead of just hitting against all.

If you have 6, 6: Split against 2 through 6 instead of 3 through 6.

Casino Blackjack When To Hit Florida

Single-Deck Blackjack

You can find many single-deck games in Nevada, and they pop up occasionally in other parts of the country. You will need a few variations for single-deck blackjack. Basic strategy is much the same as in the multiple-deck game, with a few twists, given below:

If you have 11: Double down against all dealer up cards.

If you have 9: The difference comes when the dealer shows a 2. In multiple-deck you hit; in single-deck, double down.

If you have 8: Double down against 5 and 6.

If you are holding ace, 8: As good as that 19 looks, it is to the player's advantage to double down against a 6. Stand against all else.

If you are holding ace, 7: Stand against an ace, unless you are playing in a casino in which the dealer hits soft 17. In that case, hit.

If you are holding ace, 6: Double against 2 through 6.

If you are holding ace, 3 or ace, 2: Double against 4, 5, and 6.

If you are holding 2, 2: Where doubling after splits is not allowed, split against 3 through 7 in a single-deck game. Otherwise, follow the same strategy as in multiple-deck games.

If you are holding 3, 3: If doubling after splits is permitted, split against 2 through 8.

If you are holding 4, 4: If doubling after splits is permitted, split against 4 through 6.

If you are holding 6, 6: If doubling after splits is permitted, split against 2 through 7; if not, split against 2 through 6.

If you are holding 7, 7: If doubling after splits is permitted, split against 2 through 8. Also, stand against a 10 in the single-deck game.

In our final section, you will learn the most advanced strategy for playing blackjack -- counting cards.