Blackjack FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions
1. What is the objective of blackjack?
The objective of blackjack is to beat the dealer by achieving a hand value closer to 21 than the dealer without exceeding 21. You do not need to reach exactly 21; you simply need a higher total than the dealer without busting. If both you and the dealer bust, the dealer wins because you busted first.
2. How are card values determined in blackjack?
Card values in blackjack are straightforward. Number cards (2 through 10) are worth their face value. Face cards (Jack, Queen, King) are each worth 10. Aces are special: they count as either 1 or 11, whichever is more favorable for your hand. For example, an Ace with a 7 can be counted as 8 or 18. If you draw a 10 next, the Ace counts as 1, giving you 18 instead of busting at 28.
3. What is a natural blackjack?
A natural blackjack (also called a "natural 21") is achieved when your first two cards are an Ace and any 10-value card (10, Jack, Queen, or King). This hand typically pays 3:2, meaning a $10 bet wins $15. Some casinos have shifted to 6:5 payouts on natural blackjacks, which significantly increases the house edge and should be avoided when possible.
4. What does the dealer do after players finish their hands?
In standard blackjack, the dealer follows strict rules with no decisions. The dealer must continue drawing cards (hitting) until reaching a total of 17 or higher. Some casinos require the dealer to hit on soft 17 (an Ace counted as 11 plus 6), while others require standing on all 17s. The "hit soft 17" rule adds approximately 0.2% to the house edge.
5. What does it mean to "bust" in blackjack?
Busting means your hand total exceeds 21. When you bust, you lose immediately regardless of what the dealer has. This is the key asymmetry in blackjack: players act first, so busting means an automatic loss even if the dealer subsequently busts as well. This is why disciplined hitting and standing decisions matter so much.
6. When should I hit and when should I stand?
The general framework for hitting and standing depends on your hand total and the dealer upcard. Against a weak dealer upcard (2 through 6), you should generally stand on totals of 12 or higher because the dealer is likely to bust. Against a strong dealer upcard (7 through Ace), you should generally hit totals below 17 because the dealer is likely to make a strong hand. However, the exact optimal decisions are given by basic strategy charts, which account for every possible combination.
7. What is doubling down and when should I do it?
Doubling down means doubling your original bet and receiving exactly one additional card. You should double down when your initial two-card hand has a strong probability of beating the dealer with just one more card. The most common doubling situations are: totals of 11 against any dealer upcard (except Ace in some variants), totals of 10 against dealer 2-9, and soft 16-18 against dealer weakness. You should avoid doubling when you might need multiple cards to build a winning hand.
8. How does splitting pairs work?
When your first two cards form a pair (same rank), you can split them into two separate hands by placing an additional bet equal to your original wager. Each card becomes the first card of a new hand, and you receive one additional card on each. You then play each hand independently. Important splitting rules: always split Aces and 8s, never split 10s or 5s. When splitting Aces, most casinos only allow one additional card per Ace hand.
9. What is insurance in blackjack?
Insurance is a side bet offered when the dealer shows an Ace. You can wager up to half your original bet that the dealer has a 10-value card in the hole (giving them a natural blackjack). Insurance pays 2:1 if the dealer has blackjack. However, the house edge on insurance is approximately 7%, making it a poor bet for players who are not counting cards. The only time insurance is mathematically justified is when the true count (for card counters) is +3 or higher.
10. What is the surrender option?
Surrender allows you to give up your hand and recover half your bet before the dealer checks for blackjack. Early surrender (available before the dealer checks for blackjack) is very favorable for players but rare. Late surrender (available after the dealer checks for blackjack) is more common. Good surrender situations include hard 16 against dealer 9, 10, or Ace, and hard 15 against dealer 10.
11. What are side bets in blackjack?
Side bets are optional wagers placed alongside your main blackjack bet. Common side bets include Perfect Pairs (betting your first two cards will be a pair), 21+3 (combining your two cards with the dealer upcard for poker-style combinations), and Insurance. Side bets typically have a much higher house edge (5-15%) compared to the main game and should generally be avoided by strategic players.
12. How many decks are used in blackjack?
Blackjack can be played with 1 to 8 decks. Single-deck games offer the best odds for players (house edge approximately 0.17% with perfect basic strategy), while 8-deck games have a slightly higher house edge (approximately 0.66%). However, single-deck games often have compensating rules like 6:5 blackjack payouts that increase the house edge. The number of decks affects card counting effectiveness: fewer decks make counting easier and more profitable.
13. What is the house edge in blackjack?
The house edge in blackjack varies based on the specific rules of the table. With standard rules and perfect basic strategy, the house edge is approximately 0.5%. Without basic strategy, the house edge rises to 2-5%. Favorable rules (stand on soft 17, double after split, late surrender) can reduce the edge further, while unfavorable rules (6:5 blackjack, dealer hits soft 17, no doubling after split) increase it.
14. Can blackjack be beaten consistently?
Blackjack can be beaten in the long run with a combination of perfect basic strategy, card counting, adequate bankroll, and favorable rules. However, the edge is small (typically 1-2% with counting), and variance is high. Most players do not beat blackjack consistently because they lack the discipline, bankroll, or accuracy required. Even professional card counters experience losing sessions and sometimes losing months.
15. What is the difference between hard and soft hands?
A hard hand is any hand where the Ace must count as 1 (or has no Ace) to avoid busting. Examples include 10-7 (hard 17) or A-6-10 (hard 17, where the Ace counts as 1). A soft hand contains an Ace counted as 11 without busting. Examples include A-6 (soft 17) or A-3-3 (soft 17). Soft hands are more flexible because you cannot bust by drawing an additional card.
16. What happens if the dealer busts?
If the dealer busts (exceeds 21), all remaining players who have not bust win their bets at 1:1 odds. The key word is "remaining" — if you bust before the dealer, you lose even if the dealer subsequently busts. This is why the order of play matters and why playing too aggressively (hitting when you should stand) is costly.
17. Is card counting illegal?
Card counting is not illegal in most jurisdictions because it uses only mental skill rather than external devices or collusion. However, casinos are private businesses and can refuse service to anyone. Casinos may ask suspected card counters to leave, switch dealers, increase the frequency of shuffles, or impose betting restrictions. Using electronic devices to assist counting is illegal everywhere.
18. What is the best blackjack table to play at?
The best blackjack table has these characteristics: pays 3:2 on natural blackjack (not 6:5), uses fewer decks, dealer stands on soft 17, allows doubling after splitting, offers late surrender, and allows re-splitting of Aces. Before sitting down, check the table rules displayed on the felt and confirm the blackjack payout. A 3:2 table with good rules can have a house edge below 0.4% with basic strategy.