In contrast, the Return to Player is what a slot machine is expected to pay players on average.
It won’t be a perfect, consistent process – otherwise you’d lose exactly 8 cents every time you wagered $1 – but it will reach that point over lots of play and sessions. This is a similar calculation to what the House Edge on various table game bets would be – it’s an estimate over time, mathematically worked out based on wagers over time.Ī given session may not match up with it, but taken across thousands (and more likely millions) of wagers, it will move closer and closer to the expected Hold.Ī simple math example is if a game is expected to hold 8% of wagers for the house of time, a game would, over time, be expected to keep $8 out of every $100 wagered through it. Hold is, in short, the percentage of wagers a casino is estimated to keep for itself on slot machines. how much it is expected to pay out to the player. The terms Hold and Return to Player are effectively two related terms covering an aspect of slot machines – how much a casino is expected to keep for itself over time, vs. Today’s vocabulary article will cover two sides of the same coin when it comes to the payout of slot machines.