Shadow

Blackjack Rules That Change the Odds

Spot the best tables in seconds—and know exactly what each rule does to the math.

Last updated: September 3, 2025 · Guide Math‑honest

Quick Rule Effects (Cheat Sheet)

Effects shown are typical changes to player expected return, assuming basic strategy and a standard eight‑deck baseline.

RuleEffect on player returnWhy it matters
Blackjack pays 3:2 vs 6:56:5 worsens edge by ~1.39%Biggest single gotcha on many floors. Prefer 3:2 tables.
Dealer on Soft 17S17 is better; H17 costs ~0.22%H17 lets the dealer improve many A‑x hands; you’ll push/win less.
Deck countFewer decks help: single‑deck ≈ +0.48% vs 8‑deckAll else equal, 1–2 decks are friendlier—watch out for 6:5 traps.
DAS (Double After Split)Not allowing DAS costs ≈ 0.14%Post‑split doubles (e.g., splitting 8s then doubling 11) add EV.
Late Surrender (LS)Worth ≈ +0.08% overallSaving half a bet on the worst matchups trims long‑run losses.

TL;DR: Hunt 3:2, S17, DAS, LS, with the fewest decks you can find.

How to Read the Felt & Signage

The 10‑second scan

  1. Does the felt say BLACKJACK PAYS 3 TO 2? If not: move on.
  2. Check placard for S17 vs H17.
  3. Look for DAS and SURRENDER on the rules plaque.
  4. Ask the dealer: “How many decks? Do you allow late surrender?”

Watch for marketing traps

  • Single‑deck that pays 6:5 is often worse than 6–8 deck 3:2.
  • ETGs/video “blackjack” may use H17 and short pays—always read info screens.
  • Side bets often carry big edges; treat them as entertainment, not value.

Common Rule Packages: Best vs Worst

Player‑Friendly (seek these)

  • 3:2 payout, S17, DAS, LS, 2–6 decks
  • Clear signage; no obscure “push 22” or 6:5 variants

Predatory (avoid if possible)

  • 6:5 payout (or worse), H17, no DAS, no surrender
  • Rule packages like “dealer 22 pushes” or tie‑loses variants

Las Vegas trend watch: some casinos increased 3:2 tables in 2025; still verify every table—policies vary by pit and time.

Worked Examples: What It Costs Per Hour

Illustration for a casual player betting $25/hand at ~60 hands/hour:

  • Solid 3:2 S17 DAS LS game with basic strategy: total edge can be ≈ 0.3–0.5% → expected loss ≈ $4.50–$7.50/hour.
  • Same table but H17: add ≈ 0.22% → +$3.30/hour.
  • Change to 6:5: add ≈ 1.39% → +$20.85/hour (now ≈ $25–$30/hr total).

These are illustrative. Real results vary with pace, side bets, tips, and mistakes. The direction is what matters: small rule changes compound into big hourly differences.

Mini‑FAQ

Is single‑deck always better?

No. Single‑deck helps the math, but casinos often pair it with 6:5 or H17, which more than cancel the benefit. Always weigh the full package.

Should I chase tables just for Late Surrender?

It’s a small edge saver (≈ 0.08%), but useful for disciplined players who apply it correctly against strong dealer upcards (e.g., 16 vs 9/10/A in multi‑deck).

Quick order of importance?

1) 3:2 payout → 2) S17 → 3) DAS → 4) Decks → 5) Late Surrender.

Original Bullets (Preserved)

We keep the exact original wording below for transparency.

  • 3:2 vs 6:5 blackjack payout: 6:5 is significantly worse—avoid where possible.
  • Dealer stands on soft 17 (S17) vs hits (H17): standing is better for players.
  • Decks: fewer decks are generally better, all else equal.
  • DAS (double after split) and late surrender (LS): small but meaningful improvements.

Tip: scan felt signage before you sit, or ask the dealer to confirm rules.

References (Authoritative & Global)

  • Math & Rules: Wizard of Odds — House‑edge basics & rule effects; H17 vs S17; deck counts; surrender; DAS; calculator.
  • Regulatory & RG: UK Gambling Commission (UK), NCPG/GRA (Singapore), DICJ (Macau, China SAR), ERAI (Russia), iGaming Ontario/AGCO (Canada).
  • Market trend examples: Las Vegas Review‑Journal coverage of 3:2 expansions (Palms; The STRAT, 2025).

We review and refresh these links periodically. Always check your local laws and the specific table’s posted rules.