Blackjack
How to Deal Blackjack
22 Single Deck Rules NOW PLAYING
Table of Contents
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01 Cutting Cheques02 Blackjack House Shuffle
03 Card Value
04 Object of the Game
05 6 to 5 Pay Ratio (2 Methods)
06 Plucking
07 Card Placement Part 1
08 Card Placement Part 2
09 Card Placement Part 3
10 Entering and Leaving a Game
11 Rack Maintenance
12 Dealer-Hand Rules
13 Shoe Shuffle Procedure
14 Insurance
15 Casing the Layout
16 Stack Values
17 Playing Back Hands
18 Buy-Ins & Cheque-Change
19 3 to 2 Pay Ratio Tutorial
20 Double Deck Procedure
21 How to Hold and Pitch Double Deck
22 Single Deck Rules
23 Foreign Cheques
24 Conversions
25 Surrender
26 Closing a Table
27 Opening a Table
28 No Peek Blackjack
29 Fills and Credits
30 Markers
31 Call Bets
32 Color-Ups
When dealing single-deck 21 or single-deck blackjack, it can be dealt out of a shoe or out of your hand. It can be dealt as a pitch-style face-down game or where you lay all cards face up. Traditionally, it is a pitch-style game. This also applies to double-deck as well.
Single-deck usually follows the same dealing style as double-deck depending on your house rules. It is more important to focus on what exactly is different over double-deck rather than to look at the similarities.
Rules to pay attention to in Single-Deck blackjack include:
- Only 1 cut-card (number of empty spots tells you how many rounds to deal)
- Double-downs are limited to only 10 or 11 and sometimes only 9, 10, and 11
- Mid-Entry is not allowed even if a player backs out and a new player enters
- Even money for blackjacks during insurance is typically not allowed
- Single-deck is usually a 6:5 pay ratio on blackjacks
As long as you memorize these rules, single-deck is no harder to deal than double-deck.
0:00 Intro
0:32 Shuffle Procedure
1:43 When to Shuffle
3:16 Double Down Rules
5:56 Pay Ratio
6:28 Mid-Entry Rule
8:32 Even Money Rule
9:43 Outro