ToolsGambling
TG
Crazy Time CalculatorMath updated: July 2026

Crazy Time Stats, Odds & RTP Calculator 2026

Pick a bet, a stake and a number of spins, and this calculator returns the exact wheel odds, the base payout, the RTP and house edge, and the honest chance of a bonus over N spins. It is real math from the fixed 54-segment wheel, not a live feed and not an overdue counter.

Built and reviewed byEvgeniy Volkov· iGaming analyst

Crazy Time odds calculator

Pick your bet(s)

Tap one spot for a single bet, or several to cover more of the wheel. The odds update instantly.

Used for the chance of at least one hit across several spins.

Strategy presets

Your odds and payout

Single-spin chance

38.89%

About 1 in 3 spins

Strategy coverage

38.9%

Segments covered: 21/54 · Cost per round: 1.00

Per bet
BetChancePayout
Number 138.89%1 to 1
Base-game value (number bets)

0.389

Expected base return

96.08%

RTP (approx)

3.92%

House edge

On a 1.00 stake, the base-game return averages 0.39.

Payout times chance, per unit staked. This excludes Top Slot multipliers, so real RTP is higher.

Chance of at least one hit in N spins

This is the honest replacement for an "overdue" counter. It rises only because you take more spins, never because a result is due.

99.99%

Over 20 spins, the chance of at least one hit is 99.99%.

More likely than not (50%)

2 spins

Very likely (90%)

5 spins

Almost certain (99%)

10 spins

Formula: 1 minus (1 minus 38.89%) to the power 20.

Number of spins151020305075100
Single-spin chance38.9%91.5%99.3%100.0%100.0%100.0%100.0%100.0%

Covering more of the wheel raises how often you win and lowers the swings, but it does not change the RTP. Every covered segment still carries the house edge.

Every spin is independent. The wheel has no memory, so no result is ever "due". These numbers are fixed probabilities, not predictions.

The full 54-segment breakdown

The whole wheel, spot by spot. This is the fixed layout every probability on this page comes from.

Crazy Time wheel: segments, single-spin probability and base payout for each of the eight spots.
SpotSegmentsProbabilityBase payout
Number 12138.89%1 to 1
Number 21324.07%2 to 1
Number 5712.96%5 to 1
Number 1047.41%10 to 1
Coin Flip47.41%Bonus
Cash Hunt23.70%Bonus
Pachinko23.70%Bonus
Crazy Time11.85%Bonus
Total54100.00%

RTP by bet (approximate)

Evolution does not publish an exact per-bet table, so the number bets below the 96.08% ceiling are the commonly-cited figures. Treat the decimals as approximate.

BetRTPHouse edge
Number 196.08%3.92%
Number 295.96%4.04%
Number 595.73%4.27%
Number 1095.73%4.27%
Coin Flip95.70%4.30%
Cash Hunt95.27%4.73%
Pachinko94.33%5.67%
Crazy Time94.41%5.59%

The number 1 at 96.08% is the firm ceiling. Bonus RTPs depend on the multiplier spread, so they vary spin to spin.

The real math behind Crazy Time odds

I have watched enough Crazy Time to know the two questions every player asks: what are my odds on this bet, and is a bonus "due" yet. This calculator answers the first honestly and puts the second to rest. As of the wheel still has 54 segments, the best bet still returns 96.08%, and every spin is still independent. That last fact is the whole point. A tracker can show you what already landed, but it cannot tell you what lands next, because the wheel has no memory. What follows is the fixed math, the same numbers the tool uses, with nothing invented and no overdue myth.

How many segments are on the Crazy Time wheel

Fifty-four. That single number answers the most common Crazy Time search and drives every probability on this page. The wheel is split into 45 number segments and 9 bonus segments, and the split never changes between spins. Because the segments are fixed, a bet's chance is just its segment count divided by 54, which is exactly what the calculator computes.

The full 54-segment breakdown

The number 1 owns 21 of the 54 segments, so it lands about 38.9% of spins. The 2 has 13 segments (24.1%), the 5 has 7 (13.0%), and the 10 has 4 (7.4%). The four bonuses share the remaining 9 segments: Coin Flip has 4, Cash Hunt and Pachinko have 2 each, and Crazy Time itself has just 1. The table above lists every spot, and you can sort your own reasoning by segment count instead of by gut feeling.

Why small numbers hit more often

It looks unfair that the 1 shows up eleven times more than the Crazy Time bonus, until you count segments. The 1 has 21 slices, the Crazy Time bonus has 1, so of course the 1 wins far more rounds. The trade-off is baked in: the more often a bet lands, the smaller it pays. The 1 pays 1 to 1, while landing the Crazy Time bonus can pay thousands. High hit rate and high payout are opposite ends of the same wheel, and no bet gives you both.

Crazy Time RTP and house edge

RTP is the share of every wagered dollar the game pays back over the long run. Crazy Time runs from about 94.41% up to 96.08% depending on the bet, averaging near 95.4%. Evolution does not publish an exact per-bet table, so any per-spot decimal you see, here included, is a close estimate rather than an official figure.

RTP by bet, and why 96.08% is the ceiling

The number 1 has the best RTP at 96.08%, which is also the highest the game offers. It is the safest bet because it lands most often and the Top Slot can still multiply it. The catch is that it pays only 1 to 1, so your best-return bet is also your smallest-upside bet. As you move to rarer spots the RTP drifts down a little and the variance climbs a lot. If you want to see how any edge turns into an hourly cost, run it through our house edge calculator. house edge calculator.

What the house edge really costs you

House edge is simply 100% minus the RTP. On the number 1 that is about 3.92%, so for every 100 dollars you cycle through that bet, you lose roughly 3.92 on average, before variance. On the bonus spots the edge is a touch higher and the swings are far wider. The edge is small per spin and relentless over a session, which is why bankroll and pace matter more than bet selection. Our session simulator shows how that slow bleed plays out across a real evening. session simulator.

How the Top Slot lifts the RTP

If you multiply a number bet's base payout by its raw chance, the return looks far worse than 96.08%. The gap is the Top Slot. Before every spin a double reel pairs one spot with a multiplier from 2x to 50x, and if the wheel then lands on that spot the multiplier applies to the round. Those occasional boosted rounds are what pull the real RTP up to the published figures, which is why the calculator labels the base-game return as a lower bound rather than the RTP. You cannot bet on the Top Slot directly, and you cannot predict which spot it will pick, so it is upside you receive but never control.

The real math behind "trackers" and "stats"

Search "crazy time tracker" and you get pages of live feeds, hot-and-cold gauges and overdue counters. They are fun to watch and useless as a predictor. Here is the honest version of what a stats page can and cannot do, because this is exactly where most Crazy Time sites quietly mislead you.

Fixed probability versus observed frequency

There are two different numbers people confuse. The fixed probability of the Crazy Time bonus is 1 in 54 every single spin, forever. The observed frequency is how often it actually landed in the last hundred spins, which bounces around by luck. A tracker shows the second and dresses it up to look like it predicts the first. It does not. Over a huge sample the observed frequency drifts toward the fixed probability, but on any given spin only the fixed number applies.

Why signals and overdue counters do not work

An "overdue" counter says the Crazy Time bonus has not hit in 60 spins, implying it is now more likely. It is not. The chance on spin 61 is the same 1 in 54 it was on spin 1, because the wheel cannot remember the drought. This is the gambler's fallacy, and it is the single most expensive mistake on any wheel game.

The gambler's fallacy in one line

A long streak of misses does not build up pressure that has to release. The wheel does not owe you a bonus. Our gambler's fallacy demonstration lets you watch this break down in real time so it stops feeling true. gambler's fallacy demonstration.

What a stats page can and cannot tell you

A stats page is genuinely useful for one thing: confirming the wheel behaves as advertised over a large sample. If the 1 lands near 38.9% and the bonuses near 16.7% across thousands of spins, the game is fair. What a stats page cannot do is tell you the next result, shorten a drought, or find a pattern, because there is no pattern to find. Use it to check fairness, not to place bets.

Bonus games and their odds

Four bonus rounds share 9 of the 54 segments, so together they hit about 16.7% of spins, roughly one bonus every six to seven spins on average. Each plays differently, and each is where the big multipliers live.

Odds of each bonus per spin

Coin Flip is the most common bonus with 4 segments (7.4%). Cash Hunt and Pachinko each have 2 segments (3.7%). Crazy Time, the flapper wheel, has just 1 segment (1.85%), which is why it is the rarest and most hyped round. Back a single bonus and you are waiting for that exact slice. Back all four and you are covering the full 9 segments, which the coverage tool works out for you. Notice how the odds line up with the payouts: the bonus you see most often is the one with the smallest ceiling, and the one you almost never see is the one that can pay 25,000x. Red Door Roulette bonus rounds.

Coin Flip

Coin Flip is the entry-level bonus and the one you will trigger most, roughly once every fourteen spins on its own. A red side and a blue side each get a multiplier from the Top Slot, then a machine flips the coin and pays whichever side lands up. The multipliers are usually modest, often single or low double digits, so it is the steady earner of the four rather than the jackpot round. Because both sides are set before the flip, there is nothing to decide once it starts, and no way to nudge the result.

Cash Hunt

Cash Hunt puts a wall of 108 symbols on screen, each hiding a random multiplier, then a cannon shuffles them so nobody can memorise a layout. You aim and fire at one symbol, and every player picks independently, so two people in the same round can win very different amounts. This is the bonus that has produced the game's biggest publicised hits, including the 25,000x. Since the multipliers behind the symbols are random, your aim does not change your expected value, only which random cell you happen to reveal.

Pachinko

Pachinko drops a puck down a pegged wall toward a row of multiplier slots at the bottom. Where it lands is the multiplier you win, and a DOUBLE slot doubles every value on the board and drops the puck again, which is how Pachinko can chain into a large result. The physical bounce means the outcome is genuinely unpredictable, and no camera angle or timing gives you an edge. It sits in the middle of the four bonuses for both frequency and ceiling.

Crazy Time (the flapper wheel)

The Crazy Time bonus is the headline round and the rarest, at 1 in 54. The host opens a giant virtual wheel of 64 segments with three flappers coloured green, blue and yellow, and you pick a colour before the spin. The flapper that lands on the biggest multiplier can trigger DOUBLE or TRIPLE, which respins the wheel with every value boosted. This stacking is why the top prizes live here, but remember the colour you pick is a blind guess with no information behind it.

Max win and the 25,000x cap

The headline number is 25,000x your bet, and it is real: it has been hit inside the Cash Hunt bonus. Some older guides still print 2,500x or 20,000x, which are simply out of date. The multipliers stack through the Top Slot and in-round doubles, but there is a hard ceiling on any single round. Red Door Roulette multipliers.

The 500,000 euro round cap

Even at 25,000x, a single round pays no more than 500,000 euro. If your multiplier and stake would exceed that, the win is capped at the limit. It is a rare edge case for most players, but it is worth knowing before you dream on a large stake.

How to use the Crazy Time calculator on ToolsGambling

Enter your bet and spins

Start by tapping the spot or spots you want to back. Pick one for a single bet, or several to cover more of the wheel. Set your stake per spot and, if you are planning a session, the number of spins. Everything updates instantly because the whole thing is computed from segment counts, not pulled from a feed.

How betting rounds and the Top Slot fit in

In the live game you get a short betting window, around fifteen seconds, to place chips on any of the eight spots before the host spins. The Top Slot reel spins at the same time and locks in its spot-and-multiplier pairing, so by the time the wheel starts, the only random thing left is where it stops. The calculator models that stopping point, which is the part that actually decides your bet. It does not try to model the Top Slot pairing, because you cannot bet on it and it changes every spin, so folding it into a single number would be false precision.

Read the probability and payout

The results panel shows your single-spin chance, the base payout, and for number bets the RTP and house edge. The 1 in X readout turns an abstract percentage into something you can feel: a 1 in 54 shot is very different from a 1 in 2.6 shot. This is the free, honest version of what the tracker sites charge attention for on ToolsGambling.com.

Check strategy coverage before you bet

Switch to Pro mode and the coverage panel shows what share of the wheel your selection covers and what a full round costs. Try the 10-5-2-1 preset to cover all the numbers, or Bonus Hunter to cover all four bonuses. It makes the real trade-off obvious: wide coverage wins more often but never beats the house edge. Red Door Roulette versus Crazy Time.

Common Crazy Time misconceptions

Chasing overdue bonuses

The most common mistake is piling onto a bonus because it has not hit in a while. A bonus that is 50 spins "overdue" is exactly as likely on the next spin as it was on the first, 1 in its segment count. Chasing a drought just means betting more into the same fixed edge. The wait chance in the tool shows the honest math instead.

Treating a system as an edge

Betting progressions and "strategies" move your stake around, but they cannot change the RTP of a single spin. No sequence of bet sizes turns a 95% game into a winning one. A system can change how your session feels and how fast you win or lose, and that is all. For the deeper reasons this fails, read our guide to how to play Crazy Time. how to play Crazy Time.

Mistaking coverage for an edge

The 10-5-2-1 approach covers 45 of the 54 segments, so you win something on roughly five spins in six, and that feels like a system that works. It is not. Covering more of the wheel only smooths the ride: you win small and often instead of rarely and big, but the blended house edge across those spots is the same as backing them separately. Bonus Hunter is the mirror image, covering only the 9 bonus segments for the swings, not a better return. Coverage is a preference for how variance feels, never a way to beat the math, and the calculator shows both the covered share and the unchanged edge side by side.

Crazy Time terms

Segment
One of the 54 slices on the wheel. A bet's probability is its segment count divided by 54.
RTP
Return to player: the share of wagered money paid back over the long run. Crazy Time runs 94.41% to 96.08% by bet.
House edge
The casino's long-run cut, equal to 100% minus the RTP. About 3.92% on the number 1 bet.
Top Slot
The double reel above the wheel. Before each spin it pairs one spot with a random 2x to 50x multiplier, applied if the wheel lands on that spot.
Bonus round
One of Coin Flip, Cash Hunt, Pachinko or Crazy Time, triggered when the wheel lands on that bonus segment.
Overdue
A myth. The idea that a result not seen recently is more likely next spin. The wheel has no memory, so it never is.
Flapper
A pointer on the virtual Crazy Time wheel. Three flappers land on multipliers of 64 segments in that bonus round.

Free casino tools on ToolsGambling.com

The Crazy Time calculator is free, like every tool here. Pair it with these to see what a game costs and how a session swings.

Play responsibly

This calculator shows the odds honestly, it does not make Crazy Time a way to earn. The house edge is real and permanent. Bet only money you can afford to lose, set limits, never chase a losing streak, and get free confidential help at BeGambleAware.org.

FAQ

Crazy Time calculator FAQ

There are 54 segments: 45 number segments (twenty-one 1s, thirteen 2s, seven 5s and four 10s) and 9 bonus segments (Coin Flip has 4, Cash Hunt and Pachinko have 2 each, and Crazy Time has 1). The layout is fixed and never changes between spins.
The best RTP is 96.08% on the number 1 bet. Across all bets it runs from about 94.41% to 96.08%, averaging near 95.4%. Evolution does not publish an exact per-bet table, so treat any per-spot decimal as approximate.
All four bonuses together cover 9 of the 54 segments, so the chance is 16.67% per spin, roughly one bonus every six to seven spins on average. A single bonus is rarer: Crazy Time itself is just 1 in 54.
No. Every spin is independent. A bonus being 50 spins "overdue" does not raise its next-spin odds. The chance stays 16.67% every single spin. Overdue counters are entertainment, not an edge.
The maximum is 25,000x your bet, capped at 500,000 euro per round. It has been hit inside the Cash Hunt bonus. Older guides that show 2,500x or 20,000x are out of date.
The number 1 bet at 96.08%. It also pays only 1 to 1, so the trade-off for the best return is the smallest upside. Rarer spots pay far more but return a little less over time.
Use 1 minus (1 minus its probability) to the power N. Crazy Time is 1 of 54 segments, about 1.85%, so over 50 spins the chance of at least one is about 61%. The calculator does this for any bet and spin count.
No. The wheel has no memory, so past results carry no signal about the next spin. Trackers show history, not predictions, and no pattern changes the fixed house edge. Use a stats page to check fairness, not to place bets.
Before each spin the Top Slot pairs one bet spot with a random multiplier from 2x to 50x. If the wheel lands on that same spot, the multiplier applies to that round. It is the main reason the real RTP sits above the base payouts.
No. The wheel is physical, spun on a live stream, licensed and audited. It is not rigged, but the RTP is below 100%, so the house holds a long-run edge. That is math, not manipulation.

Related casino tools

Reviewed by
Evgeniy Volkov

Evgeniy Volkov

Verified Expert
Fullstack Developer

Fullstack developer with a background in mathematics. I build the calculators and game-style tools on ToolsGambling with Pixi.js and modern web tech, and every result uses transparent probability formulas you can verify yourself.

EducationMathematics
SpecializationiGaming
StatusActive