Blackjack Card Counting Basics: A Beginner's Guide
Card counting is a legal, skill-based technique that gives blackjack players a mathematical edge over the casino. It does not require a photographic memory or superhuman arithmetic — it requires a simple running total and disciplined bet variation. Here is what beginners need to know.
21simulator.com simulates full shoes so you can observe how count-adjusted betting shifts your long-run results.
What Card Counting Actually Is
Card counting tracks whether the remaining shoe is rich in high cards (tens and aces) or low cards (2–6). High-card-rich shoes favor the player; low-card-rich shoes favor the dealer. Because cards are dealt without replacement, each hand changes the composition of what remains.
A counter assigns a numerical tag to each card as it's played, maintains a running total, and bets more when the total indicates a favorable shoe. The running total is not memorizing specific cards — it's a single number that summarizes the overall shoe composition.
Card counting is entirely legal. It requires no device and no assistance. Casinos may ask skilled counters to leave or restrict their bets, but counting itself is not cheating.
Why a Rich Shoe Helps the Player
Three mechanics explain why high-card density benefits the player:
- Blackjacks pay 3:2. In a ten-rich shoe, both player and dealer hit blackjack more often — but only the player collects 3:2. Dealer blackjack just takes the player's flat bet.
- Doubling down becomes more profitable. Doubling on 10 or 11 and receiving a ten-value card is a strong outcome. That card is more likely in a high-card-rich shoe.
- The dealer busts more frequently. The dealer must draw on stiff hands (12–16). In a ten-rich shoe, those draws are more likely to produce a bust — which wins for the player even with a poor hand total.
The Hi-Lo System: Where to Start
Most beginners should learn Hi-Lo. It is the most widely used counting system — balanced, single-level, and accurate enough for professional play. Every card in the deck gets one of three tag values:
- Low cards (2–6): +1. These cards hurt the player when they're in the shoe — so their removal is good news. Count up.
- Middle cards (7–9): 0. Neutral. Ignore them as they're played.
- High cards (10, J, Q, K, A): −1. These benefit the player when in the shoe. Their removal is bad. Count down.
As each card is revealed — from your hand, the dealer's hand, or any other player's hand — adjust your running total by the card's tag. After a full deck or shoe is dealt, a correct Hi-Lo count returns to exactly 0. That's how you check your accuracy at home.
Running Count vs. True Count
The
The
True Count = Running Count ÷ Decks Remaining
A running count of +8 with 2 decks left gives a true count of +4. The same running count with 4 decks left gives only +2. The true count is the number that drives both bet sizing and strategy adjustments.
Estimating decks remaining takes practice. Watch the discard tray — in a standard 6-deck shoe (roughly 5 inches of cards), the proportion in the tray tells you what's been played. If 2.5 inches are in the tray, about 3 decks remain.
Bet Variation: How the Edge Materializes
Tracking the count without changing your bet produces virtually no edge. The advantage comes from systematically betting large in favorable shoes and small in unfavorable ones. A simple beginner bet ramp at a $25-minimum table:
- True count 0 or lower: $25 (table minimum)
- True count +1: $25–$50
- True count +2: $75–$100
- True count +3: $150
- True count +4 or higher: $200 (or max comfortable bet)
The goal is a wide spread — ideally 1:8 or greater — between your minimum and maximum bet. A narrow spread (1:2 or 1:3) produces only a marginal edge. Casinos watch bet spread as a primary counter-detection signal, so increasing spread gradually and inconsistently is part of practical cover.
Realistic Advantage Numbers
Under realistic casino conditions — 6-deck shoe, 75–80% penetration, Hi-Lo with 1:8 bet spread, basic strategy plus top strategy deviations — a competent counter can achieve a long-run edge of roughly 0.5% to 1.0% over the house.
That translates to expected profit of $5–$10 per $1,000 wagered. With a $50 average bet and 100 hands per hour, that's an expected rate of $2.50–$5.00 per hour. The edge is real, but it requires thousands of hands to manifest past normal variance.
Short sessions — a weekend trip — will be dominated almost entirely by luck. Counters measure their results in units-per-100-hands across months and years, not dollars-per-session.
Common Beginner Mistakes
- Starting before basic strategy is automatic. Every strategy error costs more EV than counting can recover. The chart must come first.
- Practicing in silence. Casino environments are loud and distracting. Practice counting while watching TV or holding a conversation before playing live.
- Skipping true-count conversion. Using only the running count is inaccurate in multi-deck games. The true count is not optional.
- Betting too aggressively too early. A 1:10 spread at a $100 table with inconsistent cover draws attention fast. Scale up after you have the mechanics automated.
- Expecting short-term results. A competent counter can lose money across hundreds of hours due to variance. Only long-run data reveals whether the technique is working.
The Learning Path
- Learn basic strategy first. Card counting only adds value on top of correct base decisions. Every strategy mistake erases more EV than counting can recover.
- Memorize Hi-Lo tag values. Cards 2–6 are +1; 10s, face cards, and aces are −1; 7–9 are 0. Practice until assigning tags is effortless.
- Practice the running count. Flip through a deck one card at a time, adjusting your count for each. Aim for zero at deck end, under 30 seconds.
- Add true-count conversion. Divide running count by decks remaining. A running count of +6 with 2 decks left = true count +3.
- Practice bet variation. Bet minimum at neutral or negative counts. Increase bets as true count rises — this is where the edge actually lives.
Running large simulations in 21simulator.com lets you stress-test your strategy and observe how count-adjusted bet ramps affect your long-run results before any real money is at risk.