Blackjack Betting Systems: Martingale, Paroli, and Flat Betting Compared
Betting systems are popular because they feel like strategy. They provide structure, make sessions more engaging, and occasionally produce dramatic recoveries. None of them change the mathematical edge.
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The Core Fact: Betting Systems Don't Change EV
Every blackjack hand is an independent event. The outcome of hand 47 has no relationship to the outcome of hand 46 or hand 48. The house edge applies to each individual bet, regardless of what happened previously. There is no mathematical mechanism by which varying bet size based on previous results changes your expected win or loss per unit wagered.
This is not a philosophical position — it is a consequence of how probability works. The gambler's fallacy (the belief that past outcomes influence future independent events) is the foundation of most betting systems. It feels true; it is not.
What betting systems do change: variance, bankroll requirements, session feel, and maximum win potential in favorable short-run sequences. Those are real tradeoffs worth understanding.
System Comparison
Bet the same amount every hand, regardless of wins or losses.
Lowest variance. Simplest to execute. Maximum playing time per bankroll unit.
No mechanism for recovering from losing streaks faster. Returns track the house edge precisely.
Double your bet after every loss. Return to the base bet after a win.
Recovers all losses plus one unit of profit on the next win. Short sessions often show profit.
Requires exponentially growing bankroll. Table maximums terminate the progression. One bad streak wipes many sessions of profit.
Double your bet after every win, up to 3 consecutive wins. Return to base bet after a loss or 3 wins.
Capitalizes on winning streaks. Limits downside — you only lose your base bet on losses. Psychologically sustainable.
Most winning streaks end before 3 wins. Profit depends on catching a streak.
Increase bet by one unit after a loss; decrease by one unit after a win.
Slower progression than Martingale — more bankroll-friendly. Losses recover gradually.
Assumes wins and losses will equalize — they don't on a per-session basis. Still a negative EV system.
Bet 1 unit, then 3, then 2, then 6 on consecutive wins. Reset to 1 after a loss or completing the sequence.
Defined sequence caps risk. If streak breaks at step 2 or 3, still profitable or near break-even. Max profit if all 4 wins hit.
Complex to track mid-game. Profit requires specific win sequences.
The Martingale Problem in Detail
The Martingale is the most seductive system because its logic seems airtight: double after every loss, and eventually you win back everything plus one unit. The issue is bankroll and table limits.
Starting with a $10 bet, a 7-loss streak requires a bet of $1,280 to continue the progression. If the table maximum is $500, the system terminates at loss 6 — and you cannot recover. Here is the sequence:
| Loss # | Required Bet | Cumulative Loss |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | $10 | $10 |
| 2 | $20 | $30 |
| 3 | $40 | $70 |
| 4 | $80 | $150 |
| 5 | $160 | $310 |
| 6 | $320 | $630 |
| 7 | $640 | $1,270 |
| 8 | $1,280 | $2,550 |
A 7-loss streak has roughly a 1% probability per session at blackjack. Over 100 sessions, you'd expect it once. One incident wipes the profit from many good sessions. The system works most of the time and fails catastrophically the rest.
Positive vs Negative Progressions
Negative progressions (Martingale, D'Alembert) increase bets after losses. They aim to recover losses quickly but require more bankroll and carry tail risk.
Positive progressions (Paroli, 1-3-2-6) increase bets after wins. They capitalize on streaks and limit downside — you only lose your base bet when the streak ends. They're more bankroll-friendly and psychologically easier to sustain, but their profit depends on catching winning runs.
Neither changes EV. Positive progressions are generally preferred for recreation because the downside is bounded and the upside is occasionally dramatic — more entertainment value per dollar wagered.
The One Betting System That Works: Counting
Card counting is the only bet-sizing approach that demonstrably improves expected value. By tracking the ratio of tens to non-tens in the remaining shoe, a counter knows when the deck is favorable and raises their bet. When the count is neutral or negative, they bet minimum.
This is not a betting "system" in the progression sense — it is a bet-sizing strategy informed by actual information about the remaining deck composition. The advantage comes from information, not from the pattern of prior hands. See the card counting guide for the full methodology.
What Betting Systems Are Actually Useful For
Even without EV impact, a structured betting approach can serve legitimate purposes:
- Bankroll management: Flat betting a fixed percentage of your session bankroll prevents ruin from a single bad streak.
- Session discipline: Defined win and loss limits combined with flat betting ensure you leave with money.
- Entertainment calibration: A Paroli or 1-3-2-6 system creates structured excitement in winning streaks without the catastrophic tail risk of the Martingale.
The best bankroll approach for a basic strategy player: flat bet 1–2% of session bankroll per hand, set a stop-loss at 50% of buy-in, and walk when you've doubled or reached your time limit.