Craps may be a game of pure chance, but playing without a plan is almost always a recipe for failure. Many bets carry a high house edge that will eventually erode any profits you have already made. A solid, multifaceted strategy, on the other hand, can help minimize losses and extend your playing sessions, even with a modest bankroll.
Before we delve into the components of a basic craps strategy, it is important to note that no strategy can guarantee long-term winnings in craps. The nature of the game makes complex strategies and betting systems ineffective. Players should remember that the outcome cannot be influenced by their decisions; it is completely random and depends solely on the roll of two dice.
For a craps strategy to succeed, it must consider several factors, including players’ individual goals and resources – how much they can afford to bet and lose, how long they intend to play, their knowledge of the game, and their tolerance for risk. When outlining the main points of our strategy, we should also identify the bets that will form its foundation, as well as those we should avoid.
This article presents some of the safest and most effective tactics for playing craps both online and in land-based casinos. The tips provided should prove useful to novices and experienced players alike.
The Best Bets for a Successful Strategy
One of the first things to consider when learning how to play craps is the variety of available bets. Most casinos offer between 30 and 40 different bets – some focus on a particular number, such as 7, whereas others cover large groups of numbers and are therefore more likely to win. However, to ensure a steady profit, casinos tend to pay at odds that are significantly lower than the true mathematical odds of these wagers.
Still, certain craps bets offer a low house edge of around 1.40%, and these are the wagers players should consider fundamental to their strategy. It is also essential to differentiate between single and multi-roll bets, as they differ dramatically in house-edge percentages, overall complexity, and level of difficulty.

Which Bets to Make?
Every sound craps strategy begins with the Pass Line bet. It is the most basic wager, and the game cannot begin without it. In land-based casinos, the shooter is required to make the Pass Line bet or its exact opposite, the Don’t Pass bet. In online games, players sometimes must place chips on the Pass Line to start the game.
So, what is the Pass Line? With this wager, players simply bet that the shooter will throw a 7 or 11 before crapping out by tossing 2, 3, or 12. After a point is established, players hope that the point will be rolled before a 7. Those who opt for the Don’t Pass bet, on the other hand, win when Pass Line bettors lose and lose when Pass players win. These wagers pay even money, which is not particularly impressive. However, they offer favorable odds and a low house edge.
Focusing on so-called “right” betting, the Pass Line bet offers true odds of 251:244; the chances of winning and losing are nearly identical, and the house edge is 1.41%. The same applies to the Come bet, which mirrors the Pass Line except that it is placed after the point has been established rather than at the start of a new round.
Furthermore, choosing Pass Line Odds bets can be an even better tactic because the Odds bet carries zero house edge. The higher the Odds, the better – often referred to as Free Odds, this option acts as an add-on to the main Pass Line or Come bet. Players effectively increase the size of their main wager by multiplying it by 1x, 2x, 5x, 10x, or more. The Odds taken behind the Pass and Come bets can be increased, decreased, or removed at any time.
With this combination, the house edge falls to 0.80% with single odds, 0.6% with double odds, and 0.4% with 3x, 4x, or 5x odds. It declines further to 0.3% with 5x odds, 0.2% with 10x odds, and 0.02% with 100x odds. Another important point is that the Pass Line and Come bets are both multi-roll wagers, which means they typically require several rolls of the dice before being settled.
This structure allows players to place additional bets, hedge their main wagers, or create different patterns based on the Pass and Come bets. For example, a player can make a Pass Line bet, wait for the point, then take Odds and place a Come or Don’t Come bet. If the main bet is still unresolved on the next roll, the player can add more Come bets, take Odds on the Come, and so on.
Another solid option is to incorporate Place bets on 6 and 8 into your basic craps strategy because 6 and 8 are the most likely numbers to be rolled after 7. These two bets provide favorable odds and a respectable house edge of 1.52%.
Which Bets to Avoid?
As noted above, the majority of craps bets carry a very high house edge. In many cases, it exceeds not only the 1.41% theoretical edge of the Pass Line but also the house edge of other table games such as blackjack, poker, baccarat, or roulette. Players should remember that the house edge is a theoretical advantage calculated over an almost unlimited number of games, and real-life results seldom coincide with the expected value.
What the house edge tells us, however, is the average outcome we can expect from a particular bet in craps. Wagers with a higher house edge are simply less likely to win than those with a much lower percentage. In fact, most proposition bets are considered “sucker” bets because of the extremely high mathematical advantage they give casinos. Here are the worst bets in craps:
- Any 7 – 16.67%
- 2 – 13.89%
- 12 – 13.89%
- Whirl – 13.33%
- Horn – 12.50%
- Yo (11) – 11.11%
- 3 – 11.11%
- Hi-Lo (2 or 12) – 11.11%
- Craps Numbers (2, 3, or 12) – 11.11%
- C&E Bet – 11.11%
- Hard 4/Hard 10 – 11.11%
These bets should be avoided, especially by novices. However, they can be incorporated into a specific betting pattern and combined with wagers that offer significantly better odds. Betting on 7 consistently, however, is almost guaranteed to wipe out your entire bankroll in a very short time.
Betting on the Dark Side
Another effective tactic many experienced craps players, particularly online, like to adopt is betting the “wrong” way. The term refers to the Don’t Pass and Don’t Come wagers, where players essentially bet against the shooter. These bets offer even better odds than their “right” counterparts – the Pass Line and the Come bet. Several other “wrong” betting options also exist, and all come with appealing opportunities to optimize your session.
However, dark siders – players who bet on the shooter to lose – are not always welcomed at the craps table. Usually, all players bet with the shooter – i.e. that the shooter will either toss a 7 or 11 in the come-out roll or the point number after a certain point has already been established. Those who bet on the dark side, however, hope the shooter will lose, and with him, everyone else at the table.
This explains why most people who play live craps in a brick-and-mortar casino prefer to be right bettors – they win or lose together, creating a sense of community and solidarity unique to the game. Online players, however, have nothing to worry about when betting against the shooter because online craps is offered only in its virtual, RNG form. In that environment, you play solo against computer software rather than against a dealer or other players. Below, you can see the advantages of adopting a dark sider’s strategy.


Don’t Pass and Don’t Come Bets
Just as the Pass Line and the Come bets are almost identical, their exact opposites – the Don’t Pass and Don’t Come wagers – are also practically the same. The only difference between them is timing: the Don’t Pass bet is placed before a new come-out roll, whereas the Don’t Come bet is available after a point has been established and the second phase of the game has begun. Both bets pay nearly true odds – a 1:1 payout against odds of 976:949.
The Don’t Pass and Don’t Come bets carry the lowest house edge in the game – only 1.36% when the bet pushes on 12 in the come-out roll. A brief refresher on the Don’t Pass bet: it wins if a 2 or 3 appears on the come-out roll and loses if a 7 or 11 is tossed. When the dice show 12, the bet is a push. If any other number is rolled, that number becomes the point, and Don’t Pass bettors win if a 7 is rolled before the point is repeated.
Adding Odds to your Don’t Pass or Don’t Come bets is even better because it further reduces the already low house edge. Odds are taken in the same manner described above, and most casinos would allow Odds of up to 5x the size of the main bet. Some venues and online games offer even higher Odds, driving the house edge down to near zero – 0.682% with single odds, 0.455% with 2x odds, and 0.431% with full double odds.
The edge shrinks further – to 0.341% with 3x odds, 0.273% with 3x-4x-5x odds, and 0.227% with 5x odds. Players who locate casinos offering even larger Odds bets can enjoy a house edge of just 0.124% at 10x odds, 0.065% at 50x odds, or even 0.014% at 100x odds.
Lay Bets
Another option for wrong bettors is to place Lay bets on the numbers 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, or 10. These are the same numbers that can become points on the come-out roll, and they are the ones right bettors target with Place and Buy bets. Dark siders, however, may lay any of these numbers, effectively betting against it. In other words, Lay betting is the wrong-side equivalent of the Buy bet, which pays at true odds minus a 5% commission.
When you lay a number, you are essentially betting that the shooter will toss a 7 before that number appears. This wager can be made at any time – before or after a point has been established. Because Lay bets are the opposite of Buy bets, their true and payout odds are reversed. For example, the odds of a Lay bet on 4 or 10 winning are 1:2, meaning you are twice as likely to win as to lose. The payout is also 1:2, but a 5% commission (known as vigorish or vig) is charged on the winnings.
Note that to win a specific amount with Lay bets, you must first stake twice that amount. If you lay $20 on 4, for instance, and the shooter tosses a 7 before rolling a 4, you win $10 plus the return of your original $20 stake. The odds and payouts of these bets vary depending on the number you choose to lay. Some casinos also charge the 5% commission on the stake rather than the winnings. Even so, the house edge remains low – 1.67% when laying 4 or 10, 2% when laying 5 or 9, and 2.27% when laying 6 or 8.
Hedge Betting and the Iron Cross Strategy
What is Hedge Betting?
The Iron Cross Strategy
Hedge betting is a popular tactic among craps and roulette players; it entails placing additional bets to cover the weaknesses of an existing wager. Borrowed from the world of finance, hedging in gambling allows you to offset and balance the risks of your previous bets. With this approach, craps players try to insure themselves against losses. In some situations, hedge bets can be very successful, but in others they may not effectively save players money.
One of the most popular hedge-betting methods is to place a Pass Line bet and hedge it with an Any Craps bet. Typically performed before the come-out roll – 5 units are wagered on the Pass Line and a 1-unit bet is made on Any Craps. The Pass Line pays 1:1 when a 7 or 11 appears, while Any Craps pays 7:1 when a 2, 3, or 12 is rolled. This hedge strategy can result in several possible outcomes:
- 7 or 11 on the come-out roll – the Pass Line wins 5 units, while Any Craps loses 1 unit, for an overall profit of 4 units.
- 2, 3, or 12 on the come-out roll – players lose 5 units on the Pass Line but win 7 units on Any Craps, for a net profit of 2 units.
- The roll establishes a point – players lose 1 unit on the Any Craps bet, and the Pass Line remains active for the subsequent rolls.
If the come-out roll produces an immediate outcome, players finish the sequence with a profit. However, most of the time the dice will land on one of the point numbers. According to the game’s odds, 7 or 11 appears an average of 8 times in 36 rolls, compared with just 4 times for the craps numbers. On average, the shooter establishes a point 24 times in 36 rolls, which also means 24 losses for the Any Craps bet.
Overall, players who use this tactic are expected to win 16 units per 36 come-out rolls. If they skip the Any Craps hedge, however, they will complete a 36-roll cycle with 8 wins of 5 units, 4 losses of 5 units, and 24 unresolved rolls. That equates to an overall profit of 20 units – more than the expected return when hedge bets are employed.
Naturally, there are other ways to hedge your primary bets, and some are more effective at protecting the Pass Line or the Come bet than others. Nevertheless, even when these wagers offset certain weaknesses, they introduce additional risks. For this reason, hedge betting is best suited for experienced players who understand the game deeply and are fully aware of what they stand to risk.
View more...There is another intriguing craps strategy with an even more interesting name – the Iron Cross strategy. It takes advantage of the Field bet, which covers more numbers than any other wager in the game, including 2, 3, 4, 9, 10, 11, and 12. This approach combines several bets and is also known as the Anything but 7 system. It works quite simply – players wait for the shooter to establish a point, then place the Field bet along with individual wagers on 5, 6, and 8.
This pattern covers every number except 7. Bet sizing also matters – most players stake 1 unit on the Field and 2 units each on 5, 6, and 8, for a total of 7 units. There are 36 possible dice combinations – 7 is the easiest number to roll, with 6 combinations. Therefore, the Iron Cross strategy offers 30 winning combinations versus 6 losing ones, giving odds of 30 to 6 in the player’s favor (30:6 or 5:1).
As you can see, the strategy is effective because players are five times more likely to win than to lose. At the same time, it is risky – on each roll, players wager 7 units. If your base unit is $10, you risk $70 on every single roll. For this reason, it is advisable to use the system no more than 3 times in a row and never apply it when a new shooter is about to make his come-out roll.
View more...- Craps History: How Craps Evolved from Ancient Times to 21st Century
- Craps Table and Etiquette
- How to Play Craps: Basic Rules
- Dice Combinations and Probabilities in Craps
- Understanding the Game of Craps: Odds and House Edge
- The Line Bets: The Basic Wagers in Craps
- Multi-Roll Bets in Craps
- Craps Proposition Bets
- Craps Variations
- Craps Side Bets
- Advantage Play and Cheating in Craps
- Online Craps: Top Software Providers
- Betting Patterns and Tactics to Win in Craps
- Progressive Betting Systems for Craps
- Bankroll Management Tips for Craps Players
Bankroll Management
1Learn The Rules of the Game
Players who want to succeed at the craps table in the long run should learn the rules of the game and become familiar with all available bets. It is also advisable to stick to bets with a low house edge and to combine them for better results. This may still not be enough, however, because craps is ultimately a chance-based game whose outcome is completely random.
2Set Your Craps Budget
Those who want to avoid losing all their money at the craps tables should adopt a solid bankroll management plan. They should start by defining their bankroll – how much they are willing to wager each session and, more importantly, how much they are prepared to lose. Players should also understand that, just like every casino game ever created, craps favors the casino, not the player – eventually, the house will always win.
3Start With Betting the Table Minimum
Once players have taken these fundamental concepts into account, they should structure their bankroll and bets so they can ensure longer playing sessions. It is also better to start the game of craps by betting the table minimum. A great alternative to live tables is online craps, which often allows wagers as low as $1. The less players stake on each roll of the dice, the longer their bankroll will last. If they start with $1 bets, they should have a bankroll of at least $100 – the more they have, the easier it will be to offset their losses.
4Avoid Props Bets and Progressive Betting Systems
Last, but not least, players should avoid prop bets and progressive betting systems at all costs. These strategies are mathematically proven to result in an overall loss. Moreover, betting progressions rely on illogical and fallacious concepts such as the existence of winning and losing streaks or hot and cold dice. In reality, each roll of the dice is completely random and independent of the previous or next rolls, so players should not assume that after five losses they are more likely to win.
Overall, money management is extremely important when playing craps, just as it is in any form of gambling. This section of the article is by no means detailed or comprehensive when it comes to managing your craps bankroll, which is why players should consult the dedicated bankroll management page.