Bacbeast

Baccarat bankroll tool

Baccarat bet sizing planner for a fixed unit and a clear session cap.

Set a bankroll, pick a target unit, and check whether the table minimum actually fits the plan. If the minimum forces the bet above your comfort range, the table is too expensive for the session and the clean answer is to step away.

Shared workflow

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

Read the odds chart first, use the planner to size the unit second, then test any aggressive change in the comparator before you sit down at the table.

Tool step 2

Set the bankroll rules once, then keep the unit fixed.

Open comparator
Planner presets

Ready. Set the numbers, then build the plan.

Start with a small unit, confirm the table minimum, and only then decide whether the table belongs in the session.

Planner inputs

Bankroll, unit target, and table minimum

Planning notes

The planner turns the bankroll into a clean unit, then tells you whether the table minimum still leaves enough room to respect the stop-loss and stop-win you set.

Do not raise the unit just because the table minimum looks convenient. If the minimum is too high, the table is the wrong fit for the bankroll. Use the copy-ready summary as a pre-session checklist.

Planner results

Readable session guardrails

Comfortable unit -- Target percentage of the bankroll.
Table minimum share -- How much of the bankroll the minimum consumes.
Minimum bankroll -- Amount needed to keep the target unit intact.
Stop-loss -- Hard session cap before the bankroll gets hurt further.
Stop-win -- Useful profit checkpoint that keeps the session tidy.
Table fit -- Whether the table belongs in the plan.
Table pressure --

The meter shows how hard the table minimum leans on the chosen unit. Lower is better.

Bacbeast bet sizing plan will appear here.

Next training action Check the odds baseline

Once the unit is set, confirm the bet pricing before you decide whether the table is worth the session.

Open odds chart

Examples

How the plan changes with real bankrolls.

These examples show how the same table minimum can feel comfortable for one bankroll and too aggressive for another. The goal is to keep the unit readable before the first wager.

Example 1

$100 bankroll, $5 minimum

A 2% target unit is $2. The table minimum consumes 5% of the bankroll, so the table is too expensive for a disciplined beginner session.

Example 2

$250 bankroll, $5 minimum

A 2% target unit is $5. The table fits cleanly, the stop-loss still has room to work, and the session stays easy to track.

Example 3

$500 bankroll, $25 minimum

A 2% target unit is $10, but the felt minimum is $25. That pushes the plan above the comfortable range and changes the risk picture fast.

Playbook

Keep the bankroll decision boring and repeatable.

The best bet sizing plan is the one you can follow without improvising. The page below turns the planner output into a short live-play checklist.

01

Set the bankroll first

Separate the session money from every other expense and decide the cap before the table is even open.

02

Convert it into a unit

Use the target percentage to keep the base wager fixed and small enough to survive a normal losing stretch.

03

Check the minimum

If the table minimum eats too much of the bankroll, the clean move is to leave the table alone and keep the session plan intact.

04

Write the exits

Use stop-loss and stop-win lines so the session closes on purpose instead of drifting until the bankroll makes the decision for you.

Table fit

When the table minimum is a warning instead of an invitation.

A minimum that is comfortable for one player can be a bad fit for another. The planner compares the same table against your own bankroll instead of guessing from the felt.

Good fit

The minimum stays near the target unit.

Keep the stake flat, respect the stop rules, and move on to odds or drills if you want to tighten the decision loop.

Borderline

The minimum takes a meaningful bite.

That is a sign to slow down, compare the downside in the comparator, and be honest about how much variance the bankroll can actually take.

Bad fit

The table minimum breaks the plan.

Walk away or lower the table requirement. A forced unit is just a larger risk hidden behind a familiar chip stack.

FAQ

Baccarat bet sizing questions with direct answers.

These answers stay practical. They are built to help you decide whether the table fits the bankroll, not to promise a better shoe.

What is a good baccarat unit size?

For most beginner sessions, a unit near 1% to 2% of the session bankroll keeps the plan readable and easier to follow under variance.

What if the table minimum is higher than my target unit?

Then the table does not fit the plan. Use a lower minimum, increase the bankroll, or skip the table instead of quietly changing the rule mid-session.

Should I raise the bet after a loss?

Not by default. If you want to test a progression, do it in the comparator first and treat the output as a downside check, not a profit guarantee.

Where should I go after sizing the unit?

Open the odds chart, then compare any non-flat plan in the comparator, and finish with the coach if you want a session review.