Blackjack Hand Calculator

Posted : admin On 4/5/2022
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The Blackjack house edge calculator will help you see your and the casino odds in the specific game you are playing. Select the Rules of the game; 2. Press 'Calculate' button; In the first table you can see your odds according to dealer up card. Blackjack odds calculator. See -help for an overview of options. When printing strategy tables, the columns are the dealer's first card and go 2-9,J,A. Rows are your cards; 1 represents ace and 0 represents 10,J,Q,K (sometimes collectively referred to as Js in the rest of these docs/code). House Edge Calculator The easiest way for you to calculate the odds in blackjack is by using our free House Edge Calculator. This tool will help you to count player odds and the probabilities of dealer going bust on various dealer's up cards. After you have your next card, input the card you've been dealt into the calculator. Stand - Stand on your Blackjack game and you're done with the hand. Split - Select split on the Blackjack game you're playing, then click Deal Again on our Strategy Calculator. You can then start again with your two new hands you have after splitting. Blackjack Odds - Casino Advantage Calculator. There is a problem with all Blackjack advantage calculators (prior to this one). They're inaccurate. They provide what is called top of the deck basic strategy advantage. That is the advantage for the first hand after a.

The Blackjack house edge calculator will help you see your and the casino odds in the specific game you are playing.

  • 1. Select the Rules of the game
  • 2. Press 'Calculate' button

Blackjack Odds Chart

Hand

In the first table you can see your odds according to dealer up card. The second table demonstrates the dealer probability of having a different outcome depending on the first card.

You may also try our other blackjack tools created for counting odds, generating strategies and training players.

Dealer upcardPlayer Odds
29.027 %
312.215 %
415.682 %
519.393 %
622.713 %
714.318 %
85.741 %
9-4.118 %
10-17.331 %
A-37.161 %
Total-0.886 %

Blackjack Hand Calculator

Probability of outcome of dealer's hand

Dealer
upcard
Probability of outcome of dealer's hand
Bust1718192021Blackjack
235.4 %13.1 %13.7 %13.2 %12.6 %12 %0 %
337.5 %12.6 %13.3 %12.7 %12.3 %11.7 %0 %
439.6 %12.3 %12.6 %12.3 %11.8 %11.3 %0 %
541.7 %11.9 %12.4 %11.9 %11.3 %10.9 %0 %
643.7 %11.5 %11.5 %11.5 %11.1 %10.6 %0 %
726.2 %36.6 %13.9 %7.9 %7.9 %7.4 %0 %
824.4 %13 %35.7 %13 %7 %7 %0 %
922.9 %12.1 %11.9 %34.9 %12.1 %6.1 %0 %
1021.2 %11.3 %11.2 %11.3 %33.8 %3.5 %7.7 %
A13.9 %5.7 %14.4 %14.4 %14.4 %6.7 %30.5 %
Total28.5 %13.4 %14.2 %13.6 %18 %7.5 %4.7 %

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I vaguely remember trying this out and, as Gordon has said, it's easier to start with vs 10 and vs 9. Personally I worked out all the possible hands a player could make (initially ignoring splits) and then worked out their chances against the dealer's upcard. I then looked at whether each hand should draw, stand or double. (As I'm based in the UK I initially didn't look at peeking, but that's a factor you need to consider, e.g. when looking at the probabilities when drawing the next card.)
I didn't get this far but for splitting I guess you'd then look at say (8-8) and rework the calculation assuming a number of 8's (i.e. resplits) have already been removed from the deck. I doubt if anyone then looks at the second hand being split knowing what cards the first hand used! Spltting Aces is obviously easier as they can either get another Ace (which resplits) or one card only.