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Las Vegas Keno Odds

Las Vegas Keno Odds Rating: 3,6/5 3571 votes

This video keno survey was done by testing randomly selected 25-cent video keno machines at each casino with a hotel component. Keno games included in the survey were standard keno, Cleopatra keno, Caveman Keno, Caveman Keno Plus, Extra Draw Keno, Power Keno, Top Bottom Keno, Triple Power, and Super Keno. In Vegas’s casinos, keno odds are varying all the time: at the beginning, keno odds were worse (20% to 35%) in 2001, then increased in 2008 up to 89-95%. Again, in 2012 they have changed and lower again at 50% to 74%. Better keep playing keno online, where odds are bigger, up to 95-98%. It is very important to know the rules.

Even though there are a number of casinos in Las Vegas, you will find most of the table games are the same. What varies are the betting limits and odds.

There are a total of 22 different table games spread in Las Vegas. Some games are only available at one casino. Others, like blackjack, are spread at all casinos that have table games. Below is a list of all Las Vegas table games. The link provided in each section shows which Las Vegas casinos offer the game.

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Vegas

Las Vegas Casino Games

Baccarat

Cajun Stud

Casino War

Las Vegas Keno Odds

Asia Poker – Asia Poker is a Pai Gow Poker variant. It is only found at Gold Coast and Paris Las Vegas. Gold Coast spreads for $10 and Paris for $25.
Baccarat – Baccarat is one of the most profitable games spread by Las Vegas casinos. Nearly all Strip, downtown, and off-strip casinos spread this game.
Big Wheel – Big Wheel is a game of pure luck. It often has a $1 minimum. The game is available in video and live formats; found at casino entrances.
Cajun Stud – Cajun Stud is Mississippi Stud with side bets. It’s no longer available at any Las Vegas venue.
Caribbean Stud – Caribbean Stud is a five-card game that is nearly extinct. Monte Carlo, Palazzo, and Venetian offer Caribbean Stud.
Casino War – Casino War is exactly like the game that kids play; except money is wagered. The minimum bet is usually $10 or $15.

Craps

Deuces Joker Wild

Double Ball Roulette

Chase the Flush – Chase the Flush combines the rules of High Card Flush and Ultimate Texas Hold’em. It is available at Luxor and Silverton.
Craps – Craps is a Vegas casino favorite. Minimum bets start at $1 on Boulder Highway and run up to $50 at Wynn and Encore for the tables with favorable odds. The Cromwell offers 100 times odds, the highest in Las Vegas. Our data includes the odds at each casino in Las Vegas.
Crazy4Poker – Nine Las Vegas casinos spread Crazy4Poker. The minimum bet is $5 or $10. Crazy4Poker lost more tables than any other game last year.
DJ Wild – DJ Wild is a game spread at Harrah’s. It includes four wild deuces and a joker. The minimum bet is $10. Harrah’s spreads two tables of the game.
Deuces Wild Hold’em – Deuces Wild Hold’em is more like a stud game. It can only be found at The D in downtown Las Vegas. It has a $5 minimum bet.
Double Ball Roulette – Double Ball Roulette is offered at Binion’s in downtown Las Vegas. There are two balls on every spin and has a $2 minimum bet.

Let It Ride

Pai Gow Poker

Roulette

High Card Flush – High Card Flush uses flush hands to decide the winner. It is the hottest new game in Las Vegas casinos. The minimum bet is $5 or $10.

What Are The Odds Of Winning At Keno

Let it Ride – Let it Ride is a classic game; plays like five card stud. The minimum bet is either $5 or $10. NY-NY offers a video version with a $1.25 bet.
Mississippi Stud – Players raise in hopes of making at least a pair of 6’s in Mississippi Stud. Has a $5 minimum bet, high-end casinos require $10 to play.
Pai Gow Poker – Pai Gow Poker is a favorite among Las Vegas gamblers. Pai Gow can have a $5 minimum bet and can go up as high as $25 or $50.
Pai Gow Tiles – Pai Gow Tiles uses tiles instead of cards. The minimum bet is $10 at Palace Station and $100 at Wynn. Other casinos have a $25 min bet.
Roulette – Roulette at Las Vegas casinos offers: heads up and multi-player video versions, single zero games, double zero, and triple zero. Triple zero is only spread at Venetian and Palazzo. Minimum bets range from $1 at El Cortez up to $100 for some European Roulette games at MGM properties.

Texas Hold’em Bonus

Ultimate Texas Hold’em

River Hold’em – River Hold’em is similar to Ultimate Texas Hold’em. Club Fortune in Henderson offers it. The minimum bet is $5.

Las Vegas Keno Odds

Texas Hold’em Bonus – Texas Hold’em Bonus has a $5 minimum bet at Caesars and Boyd casinos. It has a $10 minimum at MGM Resorts casinos.
Three Card Poker – Three Card Poker is the most popular poker table game in Las Vegas. Players will find the game with a $2 minimum at Jokers Wild and $3 minimum at Railroad Pass. Most Vegas casinos have a $5 minimum, with some luxury resorts requiring $10.
Ultimate Texas Hold’em – Ultimate Texas Hold’em was the most popular table game to come out of the poker boom. The lowest Ultimate Texas Hold’em minimum bet in Las Vegas is at Jerry’s Nugget at $2. Most Las Vegas casinos have a $5 minimum, with some luxury resorts going up to $15.

KENO

Keno Payoffs/Odds to $1

CATCH

ODDS

PAYOFF

3/6

7.7

1

4/9

8.76

1

3/5

11.9

1

4/8

12.3

2

4/7

19.2

2

5/10

19.5

5

5/9

30.7

5

4/6

35

4

5/8

54.6

12

4/5

82.7

14

6/10

87.1

24

5/7

115

21

6/9

175

45

5/6

323

90

6/8

422

90

7/10

620

140

6/7

1,365

400

5/5

1,550

810

7/9

1,690

335

7/8

6,230

1,650

8/10

7,384

1,000

6/6

7,752

1,600

8/9

30,681

4,700

7/7

40,970

7,000

9/10

163,000

4,500

8/8

230,000

25,000

9/9

1,380,000

25,000

10/10

8,911,000

25,000

Keno is played on a ticket that looks like a bingo card, which you obtain at the keno parlor, restaurant tabletops or from keno runners. A player selects from one to 15 numbers out of a possible 80, and marks them on the ticket. The marks are called 'spots' and the number of spots determine how much you will be trying to win.
The operator of the game turns on a machine that randomly selects 20 numbered balls out of the 80 and calls out the numbers. If your numbers match most or all of the numbers selected, you win a payoff based on how many spots you marked, how many spots you hit or 'catch,' and how much you bet.
Most casinos offer keno at the rate of $1 per ticket. Some hotels in downtown Las Vegas offer lower prices while some Strip resorts have a $2 minimum. Typical payoffs and their probability odds are shown in accompanying chart.
You may use the chart to help you decide how many numbers to play. For example, note that the chance of hitting 5-out-of-5 is slightly better than hitting 7-out-of-9, yet the payoff for 5/5 is more than double.
If you have a winning ticket, you must cash it before the next game begins. Failure to do so voids your winning ticket. The only exception to this rule is multi-race tickets, which are explained below.
Multi-race tickets allow you to bet more than one game on your keno ticket. This way you can play several consecutive games of keno without having to resubmit each ticket. Some casinos allow you to play as many as 1000 games in advance. If you win a game on a multi-race ticket, you must cash your ticket after the final game is called.
For instance, if you play a 10-game ticket and you have a winner on the third game, you may cash your ticket only after the 10th game is called.
BASIC STRATEGY
The most common keno ticket played is the straight ticket, on which a player marks from one to 15 numbers and bets $1 or a multiple of $1. Little thinking and planning is necessary to play a straight ticket.
Seasoned players often play a 'Way' ticket. It is called a way ticket because you place your numbers in groups that give you various combinations or 'ways' of winning. With way tickets you can have more numbers working for you and you don't have to catch all of them to hit a good payoff.
Basically, a way ticket consists of three or more groups of equal numbers. Each group of numbers is circled and they are counted in different combinations, which increase the possibility of winning.
For instance, suppose you wanted to play 12 numbers. If you marked the numbers on a straight $1 ticket and caught 8 of them, you'd win $250. Now let's see what happens when you mark the same 12 numbers on a way ticket.
Because all way tickets require three or more groups of equal numbers, we will divide the 12 numbers into three groups of four. We could have also divided the 12 into four groups of three or six groups of two. The choice is yours. We do this on the ticket by marking the numbers, as we did on the straight ticket, then circling the three groups.
What we now have is something different from the original 12-spot straight ticket. Counting two groups of numbers at a time, we now have three groups of eight numbers, or the equivalent of three 8-spot tickets.
Because you now have three chances of winning, the cost of the ticket is three times a straight ticket, or $3, but the potential payoffs, as you will soon discover, far outweigh the additional cost.
Now if your same eight numbers hit, you are paid on the 8-out-of-8 payoff scale, or a whopping $25,000, instead of the $250 the 8 out of 12 ticket would have paid.
This system of betting way tickets may sound complicated, but all casinos that offer the game supply booklets and schedules that can help you mark your tickets. Also, payoffs will vary from casino to casino. So, if you plan to play a lot of keno, compare the casinos' payoff schedules and play where you get a better payoff.