House Edge Craps Field Bet

They also bet on long-shot wagers like boxcars (12) and snake eyes (2), where the house takes an average of nearly 14-percent. Sure, an occasional Hardway bet is fun, but it's going to drain your bankroll fast. Take a look below at the edge the house has on the wagers available at a craps game. An example of the field bet can help clarify this wager. Lets assume your betting 10$ on the field bet. The shooter then throws a 6, and you lose. Then you feel lucky and place 100$ on the field bet. The dice score is now 9 and you win big. The Payoff Odds. In online Craps,The field bet has a house edge of 5.56%, and it pays evenly, with. The house edge on a field bet is 5.55%. The payouts typically are 1 to 1 for the 3, 4, 5, 10, and 11. The 2 and the 12 receive higher payouts. Some casinos make these payouts 2:1 and others make them 3:1. The Field bet has a house edge similar to American Roulette, so it is not a great wager. It would be easier to overcome the lower edge, obviously. But not many players can actually control the dice well enough to even overcome a 2.7 percent house edge. The Field is a bet that many craps players make as an aside. They'll throw a dollar or two up every so often on the Field in an attempt to have many numbers working for them. Probably the greatest disadvantage of the Field bet is the fact that it features a pretty large house edge. The casino advantage on this bet is normally 5.56%, but it also could be as low as 2.78% in case of the most generous 3:1 payouts.

Introduction


One argument that comes up a lot is how to quantify the house edge in craps. Normally the house edge is defined as the ratio of expected loss to the initial bet. However, how do you treat bets, like the place bet for example, when many rolls may be required to resolve the bet and the player can take it down anytime? Is it a push or should we assume the bet will stay on the table until resolved?

HouseEdge

Personally, I prefer to define the house edge in craps on a 'per bet resolved' basis. However, for those who disagree, I present this page, which defines the house edge all three ways.

Multi-Roll Bets


The following table shows the house edge of all the bets in craps which may take multiple rolls to resolve. The house edge is shown three ways: per bet made, per bet resolved, and per roll.

Craps House Edge

Bet Pays Expected RollsHouse Edge
Per Bet Made
House Edge
Per Bet Resolved
House Edge
Per Roll
Pass 1 to 1 3.38 1.41% 1.41% 0.42%
Don't Pass 1 to 1 3.47 1.36% 1.40% 0.40%
Taking Odds 6 and 8 6 to 5 3.27 0.00% 0.00% 0.00%
Taking Odds 5 and 9 3 to 2 3.60 0.00% 0.00% 0.00%
Taking Odds 4 and 10 2 to 1 4.00 0.00% 0.00% 0.00%
Laying Odds 6 and 8 5 to 6 3.27 0.00% 0.00% 0.00%
Laying Odds 5 and 9 2 to 3 3.60 0.00% 0.00% 0.00%
Laying Odds 4 and 10 1 to 2 4.00 0.00% 0.00% 0.00%
Place 6 and 8 7 to 6 3.27 0.46% 1.52% 0.46%
Place 5 and 9 7 to 5 3.60 1.11% 4.00% 1.11%
Place 4 and 10 9 to 5 4.00 1.67% 6.67% 1.67%
Big 6 and 8 1 to 1 3.27 2.78% 9.09% 2.78%
Don't Place 6 and 8 4 to 5 3.27 0.56% 1.82% 0.56%
Don't Place 5 and 9 5 to 8 3.60 0.69% 2.50% 0.69%
Don't Place 4 and 10 5 to 11 4.00 0.76% 3.03% 0.76%
Buy 6 and 8 * 23 to 21 3.27 1.46% 4.76% 1.46%
Buy 5 and 9 * 29 to 21 3.60 1.32% 4.76% 1.32%
Buy 4 and 10 * 39 to 21 4.00 1.19% 4.76% 1.19%
Buy 6 and 8 ** 23 to 20 3.27 0.69% 2.27% 0.69%
Buy 5 and 9 ** 29 to 20 3.60 0.56% 2.00% 0.56%
Buy 4 and 10 ** 39 to 20 4.00 0.42% 1.67% 0.42%
Lay 6 and 8 * 19 to 25 3.27 1.22% 4.00% 1.22%
Lay 5 and 9 * 19 to 31 3.60 0.90% 3.23% 0.90%
Lay 4 and 10 * 19 to 41 4.00 0.61% 2.44% 0.61%
Lay 6 and 8 ** 19 to 24 3.27 0.69% 2.27% 0.69%
Lay 5 and 9 ** 19 to 30 3.60 0.56% 2.00% 0.56%
Lay 4 and 10 ** 19 to 40 4.00 0.42% 1.67% 0.42%
Hard 6 and 8 (US) 9 to 1 3.27 2.78% 9.09% 2.78%
Hard 6 and 8 (AU) 19 to 2 3.60 1.39% 4.55% 1.26%
Hard 4 and 10 (US) 7 to 1 4.00 2.78% 11.11% 2.78%
Hard 4 and 10 (AU) 15 to 2 4.00 1.39% 5.56% 1.39%

Footnotes:
* Commission always paid
** Commission on win only
AU Australia rules
US United States rules

Let me add two more things, based on frequent reader comments:

House Edge Craps Field Betting

  1. Some of these bets may not exist anywhere on earth. For example, I've never seen a casino with buy bets on a 5, 6, 8, and 9 where the commission was payable on a win only. Nevertheless, I don't know the rules of every craps table on earth. I also know that if I omit such bets, somebody will write in and take me to task for the omission.
  2. The table above assumes wins are calculated exactly. In other words, no rounding up or down. Let me make it perfectly clear that you can lower the house edge if the dealers will round a win up or a commission down. A common one is a 5% commission on a $25 bet is $1.25. If the casino rounds that down to $1, then that cuts the commission to 4%. Finding other situations is an exercise left up to the reader.

Single-Roll Bets


The following table shows the house edge of all the bets in craps which are always resolved in a single roll, except the field. Thus, there can be only one way to define the house edge.

Craps House Edge

Bet Pays Probability
Win
House Edge
2, 12, and all 'hard' hop bets 33 2.78% 5.56%
2, 12, and all 'hard' hop bets 32 2.78% 8.33%
2, 12, and all 'hard' hop bets 31 2.78% 11.11%
2, 12, and all 'hard' hop bets 30 2.78% 13.89%
2, 12, and all 'hard' hop bets 29 2.78% 16.67%
3, 11, and all 'easy' hop bets 16 5.56% 5.56%
3, 11, and all 'easy' hop bets 15 5.56% 11.11%
3, 11, and all 'easy' hop bets 14 5.56% 16.67%
Any craps (2, 3, or 12) 7 11.11% 11.11%
Any craps (2, 3, or 12) 7.5 11.11% 5.56%
Any seven (US) 4 16.67% 16.67%
Any seven (AU) 4.5 16.67% 8.33%

Field

House edge craps field bets
  • If the field bet pays 2 to 1 on both the 2 and 12, then the house edge is 5.56%.
  • If the field bet pays 2 to 1 on the 2 and 3 to 1 on the 12, then the house edge is 2.78%.
  • If the field bet pays 3 to 1 on the 2 and 2 to 1 on the 12, then the house edge is 2.78%.
  • If the field bet pays 3 to 1 on both the 2 and 12, then the house edge is 0.00%.

House Edge Craps Field Bets

Internal Links

  • How the house edge for each bet is derived, in brief.
  • The house edge of all the major bets on both a per-bet made and per-roll basis
  • Dice Control Experiments. The results of two experiments on skillful dice throwing.
  • Dice Control Advantage. The player advantage, assuming he can influence the dice.
  • Craps variants. Alternative rules and bets such as the Fire Bet, Crapless Craps, and Card Craps.
  • California craps. How craps is played in California using playing cards.
  • Play Craps. Craps game using cards at the Viejas casino in San Diego.
  • Number of Rolls Table. Probability of a shooter lasting 1 to 200 rolls before a seven-out.
  • Ask the Wizard. See craps questions I've answered about:
  • Simple Craps game. My simple Java craps game.

Written by: Michael Shackleford

I’ve heard it described many ways. Some people say it’s “A place to have fun” others say its “Disneyland for adults”. No matter what you think a casino is, keep this in mind. A casino is a business. BIG BUSINESS!! Bob Stupak, the former owner of Vegas World Casino, told US and World Report, “Its our duty to extract as much money from the customer as we can and send them home with a smile on their face.”

So, how does the casino go about extracting money from you? Do they Cheat you?
NO!

They don’t have to cheat because except for Blackjack and Video Poker, every Casino game has a built-in profit on every bet. This is known as the House Edge or Casino Advantage.

Every bet you make has a certain probability of winning or losing. If you bet on the flip of a coin, the probability of heads or tails is 50-50. This would be an even money bet. If you bet a dollar and was paid a dollar when you won, you would be paid TRUE ODDS. However, if the casino only paid you 95 cents every time you won instead of a dollar the House edge would be 2.5%. Simply put, The house edge is the difference between the true odds and the odds that the casino pays you when you win.

Look at this It shows the Casino’s advantage for different casino games. All are fixed except for Blackjack and Video Poker. These two games actually can have a positive payback depending on the skill of the player and the rules or payback table.

Look at the game of Roulette. You will see that the house edge is 5.26% for the double zero game. This is how we figure the edge. In the game, there are 36 numbers plus the 0 and 00. The odds of you winning is one in 38 or 37 to 1. If you win the casino pays you 35 for your dollar bet. You keep your original dollar and are paid an additional $35 returning $36. The difference is two dollars (38 minus 36). Divide the $2 by 38 which is the true odds and you come up with the house edge of 5.26%. So you could actually cover all the numbers on the layout and still lose money. These are great odds for the house but not for you. Games like Roulette, Craps, Big Six a have a fixed percentage because one roll or spin will never change the outcome. There will always be 38 numbers on a roulette layout and 12 numbers on a pair of dice.

Blackjack is in a different category because every time a card comes out of the shoe, it changes the makeup of the cards remaining. The advantage can shift from player to house depending on which cards have been played and the Skill in which you play your cards. Video Poker also is based on skill. If you play the perfect strategy, there are actually some games that have a positive return based on their pay table.

From the above chart, you can see why a casino does not have to cheat to make money. Does that mean you will lose every time? No of course not. If you did you wouldn't keep coming back. However, in the long run, the casino will win on negative expectation games.

Until Next time remember:
Luck comes and goes.....Knowledge Stays Forever.