Bacbeast

Baccarat strategy tools

Baccarat odds chart: prefer Banker first, then compare everything else.

Use this baccarat odds chart as a live-play decision aid: Banker is the best standard baseline, Player is the clean backup, and Tie or side bets should be capped before they touch your session.

Prefer Banker Lowest standard edge, even after commission
Accept Player Clean payout, slightly higher long-run cost
Cap or skip Tie Big payout hides a much higher edge

Table rule calculator

Check the table format before you sit down.

Pick the felt type, confirm the Banker commission, and change the Tie payout preset to see how the call shifts before you put money on the table.

Recommended now Banker

Banker stays the lowest-cost standard bet on a typical 5% commission table.

Banker pricing 0.95:1

~1.06% house edge

Player pricing 1:1

~1.24% house edge

Tie pricing 8:1

~14.36% house edge

Standard commission tables still favor Banker first, but the exact edge changes when a room switches to EZ Baccarat, Super 6, or a richer Tie promo.

Shared workflow

Use the Bacbeast tools in the order a real decision happens.

Start with the table odds, calculate only when the shoe or hand state matters, then compare whether the bet plan is still worth taking.

Tool step 1

The baccarat bet menu, ranked by long-term cost.

Use this chart before you choose a wager. Lower house edge means the casino takes less from each dollar over many hands, but it does not guarantee a short-session win.

One-glance comparison

Use this first on mobile.

Lower edge is better
Compact baccarat odds comparison with live-play guidance
Bet Pays House edge What to do
Banker 0.95:1 ~1.06% Prefer first. Lowest standard cost and the benchmark for every system.
Player 1:1 ~1.24% Playable backup. Use it for simplicity, not because it beats Banker.
Tie 8:1 or 9:1 ~14.36% at 8:1 Skip by default. It is not a recovery bet or a main strategy.
Player Pair Often 11:1 Often 10%+ Entertainment-only. Cap it before play starts.
Banker Pair Often 11:1 Often 10%+ Tiny optional wager only. Do not use it to chase missed pairs.
Lucky 6 variants 12:1 to 20:1 Rule-dependent Read the felt first. Payout ladders change the value.
Rule of thumb: Banker is the default, Player is the clean fallback, and Tie or side bets should only appear after you have compared the math.
Best standard bet Banker

What this means at the table: Banker is the default when you want the lowest standard edge. Use the comparator if you are changing your unit size or staking plan, and use the calculator if the table rules change the cost.

Acceptable backup Player

What this means at the table: Player is the cleaner even-money backup when you value simple payouts more than the small edge difference. Use the calculator if you want to check a specific hand state.

Skip unless entertainment Tie

What this means at the table: Tie looks tempting because the payout is large, but the edge is much higher than the standard bets. Only take it if you have already capped a tiny entertainment budget and want to check the strategy guide first.

Side-bet warning Pairs and Lucky 6

What this means at the table: Treat side bets as separate entertainment lines, not as a main strategy. Check the felt rules first, compare the payout ladder, and cap the spend before play begins.

Fast read

Choose by house edge first, not by payout size.

Banker is the best standard bet because its lower house edge beats the commission drag. Player is close enough for simple even-money practice. Tie and most side bets are expensive because the attractive payout does not offset how rarely they hit.

1
Start with house edge

Use the lowest edge as your default filter. Banker leads the standard menu even after commission.

2
Check payout second

Bigger payout does not mean better value. Tie pays more because it lands much less often.

3
Use side bets sparingly

Most side bets are entertainment wagers. Keep them tiny or leave them out of the session plan.

Payout What you win

A 1:1 payout means a $10 win earns $10 profit. Banker usually pays 0.95:1 after commission.

Win rate How often it lands

The result frequency over many hands. It helps set expectations, but it does not predict the next deal.

House edge The long-run cost

The casino's average advantage. Lower numbers are better when comparing bets.

Deeper reference

Compare the main bets and the common side bets in one place.

Read this as a long-form shortcut: the first two rows are the standard wagers, the next row is the high-variance chase bet, and the final rows are optional side action that should stay small.

Full baccarat bet comparison with beginner takeaways
Bet Common payout Typical edge Beginner takeaway
Banker 0.95:1 on a 5% commission table ~1.06% Prefer this first. It is usually the lowest-cost standard wager, even after commission.
Player 1:1 ~1.24% Acceptable backup when you want a simple even-money bet. It is not stronger than Banker.
Tie 8:1 or 9:1 High, even when promo rates improve it Skip by default. The payout looks big because the result is rare and costly.
Player Pair Often 11:1 Often 10%+ Entertainment only. Keep it tiny and separate from your main plan.
Banker Pair Often 11:1 Often 10%+ Same warning as Player Pair. Do not treat it as a recovery bet.
Lucky 6 / Dragon-style side bets Usually 12:1 to 20:1 Rule-dependent Read the felt first. The same name can mean a very different cost.

Compare variants

Common table formats do not all price the same way.

Use this section to tell standard commission, commission-free, and side-bet-heavy tables apart before you decide whether the default advice still holds.

Standard commission Best default when the room takes 5% on Banker wins.

Banker still leads at about 1.06% house edge, Player sits near 1.24%, and Tie remains expensive unless the payout gets unusually rich.

EZ Baccarat Use the Dragon 7 rule to price the table correctly.

Banker wins even money, except a three-card 7 pushes. That special rule keeps Banker near a 1.02% house edge, so the base advice usually stays the same.

Super 6 / commission-free Check the replacement rule before assuming the fee is gone.

Some commission-free tables pay half on a Banker six, which still leaves Banker ahead but closer to Player than a standard table.

Side-bet scenarios Pairs and Dragon-style bets live in their own risk bucket.

These wagers can be fun, but their edges are much higher than the base game. Keep them separate from your Banker or Player plan.

When the table changes only the Tie payout, the recommendation may shift at very rich promo rates. When the Banker rule changes, rerun the calculator before you sit.

Side bets

High payout does not mean high value.

Side bets can be fun for tiny entertainment stakes, but most carry much higher house edges than Banker or Player. Treat them as optional risk, never as your core strategy.

Common baccarat side bet odds and practical use cases
Side bet Common payout Typical edge Use case
Player Pair 11:1 Often 10%+ Entertainment-only side stake. Cap it before the shoe starts and never chase missed pairs.
Banker Pair 11:1 Often 10%+ Tiny optional wager only. It should not replace the lower-cost Banker or Player decision.
Lucky 6 variants 12:1 to 20:1 Rule-dependent Check table rules first. Different payout ladders can turn the same name into a different bet.

Before adding any side bet to a real session, run it through the comparator as a separate risk line.

What this means at the table: Side bets should not be used to repair a losing standard-bet session. If you want to test one, cap the stake before play starts, compare it separately, and stop treating a high payout as proof of better value.

Practice routine

What to do at the table.

Turn the odds into a short pre-bet check instead of trying to solve the whole shoe in your head.

Next training action

Follow the learner path: drills, strategy, calculator, comparator.

The odds chart gives the baseline. Move in order so practice comes before analysis, and analysis comes before staking decisions.

FAQ

Clarifications before you bet from the chart.

These answers keep the odds numbers practical without turning them into promises. Baccarat still has variance, and no chart can make the next hand certain.

Does the lowest house edge mean Banker always wins?

No. House edge is a long-run average, not a prediction for the next hand. Banker is usually the best standard bet because it costs less over many resolved wagers, but short sessions can still swing hard.

Why does Banker pay less than even money?

Banker wins slightly more often because of the drawing rules, so casinos usually charge a 5% commission on winning Banker bets. That commission reduces the payout to about 0.95:1, but Banker still commonly keeps the lowest standard house edge.

Is a 9:1 Tie payout good enough to use by default?

Usually no. A 9:1 Tie is better than an 8:1 Tie, but Tie still lands rarely and remains much more expensive than Banker or Player in most games. Treat it as optional entertainment, not a main plan.

When should I use side bet numbers?

Use them only to decide whether a tiny optional wager belongs in your session plan. If the side bet has a high edge or unclear rules, compare it separately and avoid mixing it with your main Banker or Player record.