One of the biggest mistakes that penny slots players make is to gamble without a budget. They assume that since they’re playing for such low stakes, they don’t have to worry about how much they’re spending. But even if you’re playing for a penny a spin, the losses can add up quickly.
Here’s the way a casino looks at a slot machine—it’s a gambling device that takes up a certain amount of space on the casino floor. There’s a limited amount of space in a casino, and the manager’s job is to maximize how much money they make per square foot. If you’re the manager in that situation, and you have a game that costs a penny to play per spin taking up the same amount of space as a game that costs a dollar to play per spin, how do you make up for the big difference in stakes?
The answer is that you lower the payout percentage on the lower stakes machine. In Las Vegas, the law requires that all slot machines have at least a 75% payout percentage, but higher stakes machines often have a payout percentage of 93% or more. What does that mean in actual dollars and cents though?
An average slot machine player makes 600 spins per hour. If that player is betting a penny per spin, then she’s wagering £6.00 per hour. If that player is betting a dollar a spin, she’s wagering £600.00 per hour.
The payback percentage is the theoretical amount that the player will get back over that hour. So if you’re playing a penny game with a 75% payout rate, you’ll get £4.50 back, which means you’ll see a net loss of £1.50 per hour. If you’re playing a dollar game with a 93% payout rate, you’ll get £558 back, or lose £42.
Of course, these are theoretical amounts that apply to an infinite number of spins. In the short term, anything can happen, but the casino has a mathematical edge that’s hard to beat. They could set the payout percentage for the dollar machine at 99%, and it would still be more profitable to the casino than the penny machine.
But the average slot machine player doesn’t go in and wager a single penny per spin. The average player is going to place the max bet, which might be 5 cents per line, and it might (probably) be a multi pay line machine, with 9 pay lines. Now that gambler is putting 45 cents into action on every spin, which amounts to a total amount wagered per hour of £270. With a 75% payout rate, that player can expect to lose £67.50 per hour.
So the penny slots player is losing more on average per hour than the dollar slots player, even though she’s playing for lower stakes.
Smart penny slots players pay attention to this sort of thing and don’t fall for the psychological tricks involved in penny games.
The best strategy is to figure out how long you want to play and how much you can afford to lose, and then set your stakes according to that budget. Use a reasonable assumption about the payout percentage for the games. You know that at worst the payout percentage is going to be 75%, but at a reputable, busy casino, the payout percentage should be at least 85% or more.