Blackjack For Dummies
We’ll offer detailed advice about card counting throughout
the site, but this introduction to card counting page is where
you should start if you’re a beginner.
We include the broad overview information here—stuff like how
and why counting cards works. We also look at the legality of
counting cards. Finally, we include a simple count that anyone
can master quickly, along with some advice about how to practice
at home before trying to get an edge at the casino.
Continue reading to find out more about card counting, and find
further information on where you should go after mastering the
basics.
Blackjack begins by selecting a seat at the table. Typically, a blackjack table allows for five to seven players. Whenever you see an empty seat at a blackjack table, you may assume it’s for your taking (unless chips or a coat are holding the spot for a player who just stepped away for a moment or unless some player is playing two hands). Blackjack can be played with a traditional 52 card deck and can be played using a single deck of cards or 2, 4, 5, 6 and up to 8 decks of cards. When a single or double deck is used the dealer would shuffle it and present it to a player who will cut the deck using a ‘cut card’.
How and Why Card Counting Works
Blackjack is a card game played in casinos. You play against the dealer, not the other players. Since this page is for beginners, we’re going to go into a little bit of detail about card games in general and how they work to star this off. How a Traditional Deck of Cards Works. Hit on 12-16 against dealer 7 or more. Hit on 8 or below. Double on soft 13-18 if dealer has 4, 5 or 6. Double on 11 (except if dealer has Ace) Double on 10 (especially if dealer has 9 or less) Double. Counting cards in blackjack is tough, and though not illegal, it's frowned upon and can get you booted from casinos. But if you already have a firm grasp of the game, it's a great way to help you understand when the odds are in your favor.
In most casino games, the odds are the same every time you
place a wager. That’s because every event is an independent
trial.
When you’re playing roulette, you have 38 possible outcomes.
All 38 of those outcomes are possible on every spin. So your
odds of winning a single number bet are always the same—1 in 38.
But what if every time a number got hit, it was no longer
available? Suppose they filled in that slot for a while?
The odds would change, right? Instead of having a 1 in 38
chance to win a single number bet, you’d have a 1 in 37 chance
of winning most of the single bets available. But one of those
bets would have a 0% chance of paying off’the one that got
blacked out when you hit it before.
If you continued to black out slots on the wheel as those
numbers got hit, the odds of all the other numbers hitting would
continue to rise.
That’s a good illustration of how and why card counting
works. In most casinos, the deck gets used multiple times before
being reshuffled. The cards that have already been used are
gone, and that changes the odds that certain things will happen.
Here’s an easy to understand example:
Suppose you’re playing in a single deck blackjack game, and
all 4 aces are dealt during the first round. What are your odds
of being dealt a blackjack during the 2nd round?
Since a natural is made up of an ace and a ten, you’d have a
0% chance of getting a blackjack. This would increase the
house’s edge against you, because a natural pays off at 3 to 2.
Since that’s now impossible, the house gains a slight percentage
over you.
Of course, that kind of situation is going to happen rarely,
but it illustrates why the composition of the deck affects the
player’s advantage or disadvantage in relation to the house. A
deck of cards that has a relatively large number of high cards
(tens and aces) is better for the player than a deck that has a
relatively large number of low cards.
That’s because your chances of being dealt a natural go up
when there are a lot of tens and aces in the deck. They go down
when there are more low cards in the deck. And since a natural
pays off at 3 to 2, you’re hoping for that outcome on every
hand.
What card counters do is track the ratio of high cards to low
cards in the deck so that they can raise their bets when they
have an edge and lower their bets when they don’t. They do this
by assigning a value to the high cards and the low cards in the
deck and keeping a running count.
Notice that we didn’t say anything about having
to memorize which cards have already been played. That’s a
common myth about counting cards that writers have been trying
to dispel for years. You don’t have to be some kind of idiot
savant with a perfect memory to count cards. If you can add or
subtract by one or two, you can learn to count cards.
Card counting systems assign a positive value (usually +1 or
+2) to the lower valued cards in the deck. They assign a
negative value (usually -1 or -2) to the higher valued cards
(the tens and aces) in the deck. So the count goes up as the low
value cards disappear from the deck, and it goes down as the
high value cards disappear from the deck.
Card counting systems can be balanced or unbalanced, and they
can also be single level or multi level.
- Balanced
A balanced card counting system has an equal
number of positive values as negative. If you were to count
through an entire deck, your count would end where it
started—at 0. - Unbalanced
An unbalanced system, on the other hand,
might start with a number other than 0. It has an unequal
number of values on each side. - Single Level
A single level system only has you moving
the count up or down by one unit for each card. - Multi Level
Multi level systems might have different
values for different cards. Aces might count as -2, while
tens might count as -1.
Our advice to beginners is to go with the simplest system you
can—at least at first. Eventually, once you get the hang of it,
you can move on and try harder systems.
Is Card Counting Illegal?
Card counting isn’t cheating because it doesn’t violate any
of the laws or regulations related to running gambling games.
You’re not mis-representing the size of your bets. You’re not
physically changing the conditions of the game by marking the
cards. And you’re not trying to bribe the dealer.
It would be hard to outlaw thinking during a game, wouldn’t
it?
Casinos, on the other hand, frown on the practice. This is
understandable, since casinos are in the business of offering
games to the public where the casinos—not the players—have a
mathematical edge. In fact, if the casinos didn’t have a
mathematical edge, they wouldn’t be able to stay in business.
Some people might consider these games “rigged”, but not in the
sense that the casino is cheating. They just have an edge over
the player.
As a result, casinos try to reserve the right to bar players
from blackjack games if they suspect them of counting cards.
Some players even get banned from a casino for life.
And if you’re smart about how and when you do it, you can
even avoid getting “heat” from the casino management. We’ll
cover more on that subject later on this page.
The Ace Five Count – Counting Cards for Dummies
The easiest card counting system we’re familiar with is
called the ace five count. As the name of the system might seem
to indicate, you’re going to track the aces and the fives as
they’re dealt. Since there are four aces in the deck and four
fives, this is a balanced system.
- The aces count as -1. Every time you see an ace, you
subtract 1 from your running count. - The fives count as +1. Every time you see a five, you
add 1 from your running count.
You start off by betting 1 unit per hand. Every subsequent
hand, based on the count, you raise your bet accordingly. If the
count is negative, you continue to bet a unit per hand. But
every point the count is positive raises the amount you bet by 1
more unit.
So if the count is +2, you’ll be 3 units on that hand instead
of just one.
It should be easy to see why this system makes sense. Every
ace in the deck increases your chances of getting a blackjack.
The fives are doubly bad, because they reduce your chances of
getting a blackjack. They’re also the one card in the deck
that’s most disadvantageous to the player.
Think about it this way. More of the cards in the deck have a
value of 10 than any other value. So if you get dealt a five and
a ten, you have a total of 15. You have no good options in that
situation. You can hit, but you stand a good chance of going
bust. You can stand, but the chances of winning if you don’t hit
are pretty small, too.
The trick when using this count is to do so without
letting the casino know that this is what you’re up to. So don’t
move your lips while counting. Don’t look like you’re
concentrating.
Also, you want to avoid “casino heat”. This means you
probably shouldn’t play for more than an hour at any given
casino at any given time. Try to hit the casinos during
different shifts. Eventually, you’ll get caught counting cards.
That’s just part of the experience.
How to Practice Counting Cards
Learning how to count these cards without looking like you’re
doing so is the biggest trick. You can’t learn how to do that in
a casino environment. It’s just too hard.
So you have to learn how to practice counting cards.
The first step is to get a deck of cards, then count through
it, one card at a time, at your kitchen table. Since the ace
five count is a balanced count, you should have a total of 0
once you’ve counted through.
Once you can do that quickly, learn to keep count while
dealing the cards two at a time.
Once you can do that quickly, turn on the television and make
things as noisy and distracting as possible while you practice.
That’s the kind of environment a casino is, and that’s the kind
of environment you need to be comfortable counting cards in.
Then, once you’re ready, give it a shot at the casino.
Moving on to More Advanced Counting Techniques
The next step is to learn a more advanced card counting
system. We recommend the “hi lo system”. That system is a
balanced single level system which is more accurate than the ace
five count. You’ll be counting tens AND aces. The low cards
included in the tally include the 5s but also several other
cards surrounding it.
Blackjack For Dummies Book
Card Counting Systems
Blackjack For Dummies
You can find detailed instructions for the hi lo system and
other card counting systems here on our site. The following are
just some of the systems we cover in our section on advanced
blackjack, which also includes a more detailed look at card
counting in general.
You can also find a lot of different blackjack books which
explain various card counting systems in detail.
Here’s our recommendation about more advanced strategies:
Don’t get too stressed out trying to find the perfect card
counting system. The hi lo system is advanced enough to play
blackjack as a professional. It’s not as accurate as it could
be, but smart bankroll management and avoiding heat are just as
important—if not more important—than having an accurate count.
Eventually you’ll need to be able to convert a running count
into a true count, too. This is how you take into account the
dilutive effect of having multiple decks in play. It’s one thing
to have all the fives gone from a single deck blackjack game.
But in a game with eight decks, having four of the fives gone
isn’t nearly as much of an advantage for the player.
You’ll find more details about converting running counts to
true counts on other pages of the site as well.
Summary
Counting cards for dummies has been the theme of this page.
This introduction to card counting offers some simple advice to
help anyone, even an idiot, get started winning at blackjack
with a minimal amount of effort.
You can and probably will learn more advanced strategies, but
good bankroll management and being able to avoid casino heat are
two skills that are probably at least as important as being able
to count well.
Counting Cards Blackjack For Dummies
The ace five count is the best starting system for a newbie
to learn. You’re only tracking cards of two different values, so
it’s a lot easier than most counting systems. And since those
two cards are so important to the odds, you’ll be surprised at
how much of an effect it has on your profitability.
Counting Cards In Blackjack For Dummies
Keep in mind, though, that this system is inherently
volatile. You’ll see big winning streaks and big losing streaks.
This is true of any kind of advantage gambling, but it’s
especially true of this system.