Craps Payout Calculator: Every Bet, True Odds and House Edge 2026
Pick any craps bet and a stake, and this calculator returns the exact payout in dollars and as a ratio, the true odds, the house edge and your win probability. It ranks every bet from the 0% Odds bet to the 16.67% Any Seven, so you see which bets are worth it and which to avoid. Real dice math, not a system.
Craps payout and odds calculator
Pick your bet and stake
Tap a bet, set your stake, and read the payout, true odds and house edge instantly.
Payout, odds and house edge
10
Pays 1 : 1
Total back on a win: 20
1.41%
A solid, low-edge bet worth playing.
Even money
49.29%
per resolved bet
Behind a Pass or Come bet you can place a free-odds wager that pays true odds, so the house edge is exactly zero. Pick your point and multiple to see the payout.
Max here: 5x
Odds wager
50
Odds win pays
60
House edge on this portion: 0%
Pays 6 : 5 (true odds). This point makes before a 7 about 45.45% of the time.
Every roll is independent. The dice have no memory, so no number is ever "due". These are fixed probabilities, not predictions, and the house edge is permanent on every bet except the free Odds bet.
Full craps payout chart (every bet)
Every craps bet with its payout, true odds, house edge and win probability. This is the whole board in one place, the same numbers the calculator uses. Bookmark it as your craps payout cheat sheet.
| Bet | Payout | True odds | House edge | P(win) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pass Line | 1 : 1 | Even money | 1.41% | 49.29% |
| Come | 1 : 1 | Even money | 1.41% | 49.29% |
| Don't Pass | 1 : 1 | Even money | 1.36% | 47.93% |
| Don't Come | 1 : 1 | Even money | 1.36% | 47.93% |
| Odds on 4 / 10 | 2 : 1 | 2 : 1 | 0.00% | 33.33% |
| Odds on 5 / 9 | 3 : 2 | 3 : 2 | 0.00% | 40.00% |
| Odds on 6 / 8 | 6 : 5 | 6 : 5 | 0.00% | 45.45% |
| Lay Odds 4 / 10 | 1 : 2 | 1 : 2 | 0.00% | 66.67% |
| Lay Odds 5 / 9 | 2 : 3 | 2 : 3 | 0.00% | 60.00% |
| Lay Odds 6 / 8 | 5 : 6 | 5 : 6 | 0.00% | 54.55% |
| Place 6 or 8 | 7 : 6 | 6 : 5 | 1.52% | 45.45% |
| Place 5 or 9 | 7 : 5 | 3 : 2 | 4.00% | 40.00% |
| Place 4 or 10 | 9 : 5 | 2 : 1 | 6.67% | 33.33% |
| Buy 4 or 10 | 2 : 1 | 2 : 1 | 4.76% | 33.33% |
| Lay 4 or 10 | 1 : 2 | 1 : 2 | 2.44% | 66.67% |
| Lay 5 or 9 | 2 : 3 | 2 : 3 | 3.23% | 60.00% |
| Lay 6 or 8 | 5 : 6 | 5 : 6 | 4.00% | 54.55% |
| Field | 1 : 1 | Even money | 5.56% | 44.44% |
| Big 6 / 8 | 1 : 1 | 6 : 5 | 9.09% | 45.45% |
| Hard 6 / 8 | 9 : 1 | 10 : 1 | 9.09% | 9.09% |
| Hard 4 / 10 | 7 : 1 | 8 : 1 | 11.11% | 11.11% |
| Any Craps | 7 : 1 | 8 : 1 | 11.11% | 11.11% |
| Any Seven | 4 : 1 | 5 : 1 | 16.67% | 16.67% |
| 3 or 11 | 15 : 1 | 17 : 1 | 11.11% | 5.56% |
| 2 or 12 (snake eyes, boxcars) | 30 : 1 | 35 : 1 | 13.89% | 2.78% |
House edge values follow the standard craps appendix. Buy, Lay and Field figures assume a 5% commission and the common rule where the Field pays 2 to 1 on the 12. Win probability is per roll for one-roll props and per resolved bet for line, place and point bets.
How craps payouts and the house edge really work
I have logged enough hours at a craps table to know the two questions every player actually has: what does this bet pay, and is it a good bet. Most craps payout pages answer only the first. They hand you a number and stop, which is exactly how people end up on the worst bets on the table thinking they found value. This calculator answers both. As of 2026, two dice still produce 36 combinations, the 7 still shows up more than any other total, and the house still holds an edge on every bet except one. The free Odds bet is the only wager in the casino that pays true odds, so its house edge is exactly zero. Everything else, from the 1.41% Pass line to the 16.67% Any Seven, carries a cost that the payout alone will never show you. What follows is the honest math, the same numbers the tool computes, with nothing invented.
Craps payout and odds calculator
Pick your bet and stake
Start by tapping the bet you want, grouped by type so the line bets, place bets, hardways and props are easy to find. Set your stake and the calculator returns the payout in dollars and as a ratio. Try a Place 6 at a $6 stake and you will see it pay exactly $7, which is why $6 units are the classic way to bet the 6 and 8.
Payout, true odds and house edge
The results panel shows four numbers that together tell the whole story: the payout, the true odds, the house edge and your win probability. The payout is what the casino gives you. The true odds are what a fair bet would pay. The gap between them is the house edge, and it is the only number that predicts your long-run cost. A bet that pays 30 to 1 sounds generous until you see it should pay 35 to 1, which is a 13.89% edge hiding behind a big number. To see how any edge turns into an hourly cost, run it through our house edge calculator. house edge calculator.
Free odds (3x-4x-5x), the only 0% bet
Once a point is set you can put a free-odds wager behind your Pass or Come bet. It pays true odds, so the house edge on that portion is exactly zero. The common table rule is 3x-4x-5x: up to 3x your line bet on the 4 and 10, 4x on the 5 and 9, and 5x on the 6 and 8. The odds calculator here shows the payout for any point and multiple. The rule of thumb every craps regular knows: always take the maximum odds you can afford, because it is the only bet the casino cannot beat.
Share, print or embed
Set up any bet and the Share button copies a link that reopens the exact same numbers, so you can send a friend the math instead of arguing about it. Site owners can grab the embed code and drop the whole calculator into their own page. It resizes itself and needs no setup, part of the free craps toolkit on ToolsGambling.com.
Full craps payout chart (every bet)
The table above lists every bet with its payout, true odds, house edge and win probability. Print it or bookmark it as a cheat sheet. Below is the plain-English version of what each group of bets actually costs, because a payout ratio on its own hides the edge.
Line bets (Pass, Don't Pass, Come)
Line bets are the backbone of craps and the cheapest way to play. The Pass line and Come bet both pay 1 to 1 and carry a 1.41% house edge. The Don't Pass and Don't Come pay the same 1 to 1 but shave the edge to 1.36%, because the 12 pushes instead of losing. On the come-out roll a 7 or 11 wins the Pass line and a 2, 3 or 12 loses (craps). Once a point is set, you win if the point repeats before a 7. These are the bets to build a session around, and they are the only ones you can back with free odds.
Place, Buy and Lay bets
Place bets let you bet a number directly without waiting for a come-out. The Place 6 and 8 are the standouts at just 1.52%, paying 7 to 6, which is why $6 units matter: a $6 bet pays exactly $7. The Place 5 and 9 pay 7 to 5 for a 4.00% edge, and the Place 4 and 10 pay 9 to 5 for a steep 6.67%. Buying the 4 or 10 pays true 2 to 1 but charges a 5% commission, dropping the edge to about 4.76%, better than placing them. Lay bets are the mirror: you bet against a number, pay a commission, and take on edges from about 2.44% on the 4 and 10 up to 4.00% on the 6 and 8.
Field, Big 6/8 and proposition bets
This is where the board turns against you. The Field pays even money on 3, 4, 9, 10 and 11 and double on the 2 and 12, but it still runs a 5.56% edge at most tables. Big 6 and Big 8 pay even money for a punishing 9.09%, when placing the same numbers pays 7 to 6 instead. The hardways pay 7 to 1 or 9 to 1 and cost 9.09% to 11.11%. The one-roll props are the worst of all: 2 and 12 pay 30 to 1 for a 13.89% edge, and Any Seven pays 4 to 1 for a 16.67% edge, the single worst bet on the table.
Why the payout looks big but the edge is worse
A 30 to 1 payout feels like a jackpot, so the props are where the noise and the chips fly. Here is the trap. The 2 (snake eyes) has exactly 1 way to roll out of 36, so the true odds against it are 35 to 1. The casino pays 30 to 1. That 5-unit shortfall on every win is the 13.89% edge. Any Seven is even worse: the 7 has 6 ways in 36, true odds of 5 to 1, and the casino pays 4 to 1, a 16.67% edge. The bigger the advertised payout, the more likely it is quietly cheating the true odds, which is exactly what the calculator exposes side by side.
Best and worst craps bets ranked
Sort every bet by house edge and the smart plan becomes obvious. The 0% Odds bet is untouchable, the line bets sit near 1.4%, and everything past the place bets is a slow leak or a fast one. Payout size tells you nothing about value. Only the edge does.
The smart bets (Pass plus Odds)
The smartest craps strategy is boring and it works: a Pass or Come bet at 1.41%, backed with the maximum free odds at 0%. The more odds you take, the lower your blended edge falls, because you are pouring money into the only bet the house cannot beat. Add the Don't Pass at 1.36% and the Place 6 and 8 at 1.52%, and you have covered every low-edge option craps offers. There is nothing lower. The rest of the board only costs you more.
The sucker bets (Any Seven, props)
Any Seven at 16.67% is the bet the dealers quietly hope you make, because it bleeds a sixth of every dollar over time. The other props (Any Craps at 11.11%, 3 and 11 at 11.11%, 2 and 12 at 13.89%) are barely better, and the hardways at 9.09% to 11.11% are dressed-up versions of the same trap. Big 6 and Big 8 are the cleanest example: they pay even money for a 9.09% edge when the Place 6 and 8 pay 7 to 6 for 1.52%. Same numbers, six times the cost. If a bet on ToolsGambling ranks red, there is almost always a cheaper way to bet the same number.
Craps odds and probability explained
Every number on this page traces back to the same 36 combinations. Once you see them, the edge stops being mysterious and the props stop being tempting.
How the 36 dice combinations work
Two dice make 36 equally-likely combinations. The 7 has 6 of them (1-6, 6-1, 2-5, 5-2, 3-4, 4-3), so it rolls 6 times in 36, more than any other total. The 6 and 8 have 5 ways each, the 5 and 9 have 4, the 4 and 10 have 3, the 3 and 11 have 2, and the 2 and 12 have just 1. That single count drives every probability in craps. A point of 6 makes before a 7 exactly 5 times for every 6 sevens, which is 5 in 11, and that is why Place 6 and 8 are the best place bets. Our win probability calculator uses the same counting logic across other games. win probability calculator.
How often a 7 rolls
The 7 rolls once every six throws on average, 16.67% of the time. That is the whole reason craps is built the way it is. It also explains why Any Seven is such a tempting trap: the 7 really is the most common number, so betting it feels smart, until you notice the casino pays 4 to 1 on something with true odds of 5 to 1. Being the most likely number does not make it a good bet when the payout is rigged against the odds.
Friend on the come-out, enemy on the point
The same 7 plays two opposite roles. On the come-out roll it wins your Pass line bet at 1 to 1. Once a point is set, that identical 7 becomes the seven-out that ends your point and takes your line bet. Nothing about the dice changed; only which side of the bet you are on did. That flip is the heartbeat of the game and the reason a fresh come-out feels so different from a long point.
How to use the craps calculator on ToolsGambling
Enter your bet and stake
Tap the bet you want from the grouped list, then set your stake. Everything updates instantly because it is all computed from the 36-outcome dice space, not pulled from a feed. Change the stake and the dollar payout scales with it, so you can size a bet before you ever put a chip down.
Read the four numbers together
Never read the payout on its own. The four numbers only make sense together: payout, true odds, house edge and win probability. A bet with a huge payout and a huge edge is worse than a small payout with a tiny edge, every time. The verdict line on ToolsGambling reads the house edge for you and tells you plainly whether a bet is worth playing.
Use the free-odds section
Once you understand the line bets, the free-odds calculator is the most useful part of the page. Set a point and a multiple to see exactly what your odds bet pays at true odds. It is the one place where a bigger bet actually lowers your overall edge, so it is worth getting comfortable with before your next session on ToolsGambling.com.
Craps myths: systems and dice control
Do betting systems change the edge?
No. The Martingale, the Iron Cross, the 3-Point Molly and every other craps system move your money around the board, but not one of them changes the house edge on a single roll. A system can change how your session feels and how fast you win or lose, and that is all. Stacking low-edge bets on top of each other still leaves you with the blended edge of those bets, never a positive expectation. For the deeper reason this always fails, read our gambler's fallacy demonstration. gambler's fallacy demonstration.
Is dice control real?
There is no proven, repeatable edge from dice setting or a controlled throw in a real casino. The dice must hit the back wall, they bounce off pyramid-studded rubber, and every roll is a fresh 36-outcome event. Some players enjoy the ritual of setting the dice, and there is no harm in it, but treating it as a way to beat the house is a myth. The honest thesis of this whole page is simple: every roll is independent, the dice have no memory, and no number is ever due. bubble craps odds explained.
Is a number ever "due"?
A point that has not hit in twenty rolls is exactly as likely on the next roll as it was on the first. The dice cannot remember a drought. Chasing an "overdue" number just means feeding more money into the same fixed edge. Trackers and hot-and-cold boards are entertainment, not information, because there is no pattern in independent rolls to find. best bubble craps strategy.
Free casino tools on ToolsGambling.com
The craps payout calculator is free, like every tool here. Pair it with these to see what any game really costs.
- RTP calculator
- wagering calculator
- session simulator
- Monopoly Big Baller stats
- house edge across casino games
- how to play craps: rules, bets and odds
- all casino tools
Play responsibly
This calculator shows the odds honestly, it does not make craps a way to earn. The house edge is real and permanent on every bet except the free Odds bet. Bet only money you can afford to lose, set limits, never chase a losing streak, and get free confidential help at BeGambleAware.org.
