guide
House edge and RTP, explained without the hype
What "RTP 96%" really means, why the house always has a mathematical edge, and how to read the numbers before you play.
Every casino game is built so that, over time, the operator keeps a slice of every bet. That slice is the house edge, and its mirror image is RTP — return to player. They are the single most important numbers in gambling, and they are routinely misunderstood.
What RTP actually means
RTP is a long-run average. An RTP of 96% means that, across millions of bets, the game is expected to return 96 units for every 100 wagered — leaving a 4% house edge. It says nothing about your next hour. You can hit a jackpot or lose your whole balance in a session; the percentage only emerges over a vast number of plays.
In other words: RTP describes the machine, not your visit.
Why the house always wins (eventually)
The edge is not cheating — it is arithmetic baked into the rules. A European roulette wheel has 37 pockets but pays a 35-to-1 win on a single number. That gap is the 2.7% house edge. Repeat any negative-expectation bet long enough and the average grinds your balance down. This is why “systems” that promise to beat the edge do not work: no betting pattern changes the underlying maths.
How to read the numbers before you play
- Find the RTP. Reputable games publish it. Provably fair “originals” (Dice, Crash, etc.) often state the edge directly — that transparency is a good sign.
- Compare edges. Blackjack with correct strategy can sit near 0.5%; many slots are 3–8%. Lower edge means slower average losses, not guaranteed wins.
- Ignore volatility myths. “Due” payouts do not exist on a fair RNG. Each spin is independent.
- Set a loss limit first. Decide what the entertainment is worth to you before you start, and stop there.
The honest takeaway
Gambling is paid entertainment with a built-in cost — the house edge — and real risk to your deposit. Understanding RTP will not make you a long-term winner, because the maths is against you by design. It will help you choose lower-edge games, avoid bogus systems, and play within limits you set in advance. That is the only edge a player reliably has.
FAQ
- Does a 96% RTP mean I get 96% of my money back?
- Not per session. RTP is a long-run statistical average over millions of spins. In any single session you can win more or lose everything; the percentage only describes the expected payout across a huge number of bets.
- Can a casino change a game's RTP?
- Some games ship with multiple RTP configurations that operators can select. The honest casinos publish the exact RTP in force. If you cannot find it, treat that as a red flag.
- Which games have the lowest house edge?
- Generally, blackjack with correct strategy, baccarat banker bets and some video poker variants have the lowest edge. Most slots and "originals" run a higher edge. Always check the specific game.