Slot RTP is the percentage of money a game pays back over millions of spins. A 96 percent RTP slot pays R96 back for every R100 wagered across the long run. The other R4 is the casino’s edge. That figure is the most useful number a casino prints, and the most misread. RTP is a casino accounting figure, not a guarantee for your Tuesday night session.

This page covers what slot RTP means in plain numbers, where to find it inside an SA casino lobby, the configurable RTP trap that catches most players, and how to use the figure when you pick a game. For the variance side of the same maths, see the standalone slot volatility guide.

FieldValue
What RTP stands forReturn to Player
What it measuresTotal payouts divided by total bets, across millions of spins
Sister metricHouse edge = 100 percent minus the RTP
Typical slot RTP92% to 97%
Highest casino game RTPBlackjack with basic strategy, 99.5%
Where to find itIn-game info icon, paytable, third party audit reports
Who certifies iteCOGRA, iTech Labs, GLI
Reaches the published figure afterAbout 100,000 spins for the same player

What slot RTP actually means

RTP is a long term average set by the game studio. Pragmatic Play, Hacksaw, NetEnt, Habanero and the rest each build their slots around a target return figure. The studio runs a simulation across millions of spins, then ships the slot with the certified RTP printed on the info panel.

The math holds at the population level. A 96 percent slot returns 96 of every 100 Rand the studio sees across every player who ever spins it. Your share of that 96 percent is a different question. You might lose R200 in 50 spins. You might catch a bonus and walk with R2,000. The RTP figure is what the casino keeps over time, not what you keep tonight.

The formula has three parts.

  • Total payouts. Every Rand the slot has ever paid out, across all sessions.
  • Total bets. Every Rand the slot has ever taken in.
  • RTP percentage. Payouts divided by bets, times 100.

The house edge is the leftover. A 96 percent RTP slot has a 4 percent house edge. A 97.5 percent slot has a 2.5 percent house edge. A 92 percent slot has an 8 percent house edge. That last one is usually a branded title or a progressive jackpot, where part of every bet feeds the prize pool.

RTP by game type

RTP is not the same across game categories. The figure you should expect depends on what you are playing, and the gap between the worst and the best casino game on a single lobby is huge.

Game type Typical RTP House edge Notes
Blackjack (basic strategy) 99.5% 0.5% Highest RTP on a real money table. Drops fast without strategy.
Baccarat (banker bet) 98.94% 1.06% No decisions, dealer plays both hands.
French Roulette (La Partage) 98.65% 1.35% Even money bets refund half on a zero.
European Roulette 97.30% 2.70% Single zero wheel.
Aviator and crash games 97.00% 3.00% Spribe Aviator publishes 97. Each round one multiplier.
Online slots, average 95% to 96.5% 3.5% to 5% The big bucket. Most modern SA slots sit here.
Live dealer slots and game shows 94% to 96.5% 3.5% to 6% Crazy Time, Lightning Roulette, Dream Catcher.
American Roulette 94.74% 5.26% Double zero. Avoid where you can.
Branded jackpot slots 87% to 93% 7% to 13% Lower RTP funds the jackpot pool.

The ranking is not a recommendation. A 99.5 percent blackjack table needs you to know basic strategy by heart, and a single wrong move at R100 stake costs more than a bad slot session. A 96 percent slot needs nothing but a tap to spin. The RTP is the maths. Your skill and patience close the gap.

Where to find RTP at an SA casino

Every regulated SA online casino has to disclose RTP on the slot itself. The path is roughly the same across lobbies.

  1. Open the slot from the casino lobby.
  2. Tap the menu icon, usually three lines or a gear in the corner.
  3. Find Game Info, Paytable, or Help.
  4. Scroll to the maths section. The figure is labelled Theoretical RTP or Return to Player.

On Hollywoodbets, the RTP for every Spina Zonke slot sits in the in-game info panel. Most fall between 94 and 96.5 percent. The lobby walkthrough is in the Spina Zonke guide. Yesplay, Easybet, Playabets and Betshezi follow the same pattern. If a casino does not show RTP at all, that is a flag. Walk away.

The configurable RTP trap

Most slot studios ship more than one RTP version of the same slot. The casino licences whichever version it wants. The maths, art, paytable and gameplay are identical. Only the long term return changes.

⚠ Watch out

Sweet Bonanza ships at four different RTPs

Pragmatic Play offers Sweet Bonanza at 96.51 percent, 95.5 percent, 94 percent, and 88 percent. A casino can run the 96.51 version, or the 88 version, and the slot looks the same on the lobby tile. The 8.51 percent gap is huge over a 500 spin session at R2 a spin. R85.10 per R1,000 wagered.

96.51%
High
95.50%
Mid
94.00%
Low
88.00%
Stripped
  • Reputable SA brands run the high RTP version of a popular slot. Hollywoodbets, BitStarz and Cloudbet publish the version each title runs at.
  • Lower tier operators sometimes load the low RTP version without disclosure. The only way to check is to open the slot and read the info panel before you wager.
  • The same slot at two different casinos can return very different money over a long session. The figure on the info panel is the only one that counts.

What RTP does not tell you

RTP is not predictive. Knowing a slot runs at 96 percent does nothing for your next 50 spins. The figure smooths out across roughly 100,000 spins for a single player, and your normal Saturday session is closer to 200. Variance dominates everything until you reach the long run.

Things RTP cannot predict for tonight:

  • Whether you win or lose.
  • How long your bankroll will last.
  • When the next bonus round will trigger.
  • Whether the slot is due for a hit. It is not. Each spin is independent.

RTP and volatility are not the same thing. Two slots at 96 percent RTP can play wildly differently if one is low volatility and the other is extreme. The RTP says nothing about the path. For the full breakdown on how the shape of payouts changes a session, see the slot volatility guide.

How to use RTP when you pick a game

RTP is most useful as a filter. Three rules cover the common cases.

  1. Set a floor at 95 percent on slots. Below 95 percent the house edge starts to chew through a bankroll. Stick to 95 and above unless the game has another draw, like a progressive jackpot you want to chase.
  2. Compare versions of the same slot. Open the info panel at two casinos. If casino A runs Sweet Bonanza at 96.51 percent and casino B runs it at 94 percent, the gap is real money over a long session.
  3. Match RTP to volatility and bankroll. A 96 percent extreme volatility slot at R2 stake on a R200 bankroll will probably end at zero. The same RTP on a low volatility slot at the same stake usually stretches into a real session.

For bonus money, the picture is different. Casinos often restrict eligible games to lower RTP titles, apply a wagering requirement, or cap the cashout. Read the bonus terms before you spin. The published slot RTP does not always apply when you are playing bonus funds.

RTP and the SA licensing picture

Licensed SA online casinos run audited slots. The provincial gambling boards in Western Cape, Mpumalanga, KZN and Northern Cape regulate operators. The RNG and the published RTP on every slot get tested by an independent lab. eCOGRA and iTech Labs do most of the work. The same audited builds run on regulated European casinos, so the maths is the same.

Unlicensed offshore sites are a different story. They can run unaudited slots at any RTP they choose, with no recourse if a payout disappears. Always check the licence before you deposit.

Page FAQ

Is a higher RTP slot guaranteed to pay more on a single session?
No. RTP is a long term average across millions of spins. On a single session of 50 to 500 spins, variance dominates. A 97 percent RTP slot can pay nothing in a session and a 94 percent slot can hand you 1,000x. RTP only smooths out across roughly 100,000 spins for the same player.
What is a good RTP for online slots in SA?
96 percent or higher is a strong target. Anything from 95 to 96.5 percent is normal for modern slots at SA casinos. Below 95 percent the house edge starts to bite. Above 97 percent is rare and usually only on certain crash games (Aviator at 97 percent) or selected video slots from Hacksaw and Nolimit.
Does the time of day change a slot’s RTP?
No. RTP is hard coded in the slot’s maths model. The RNG runs the same numbers at 02:00 as it does at 22:00. Slots do not warm up, cool down, or get more generous when a casino is quiet. Each spin is independent of the last one and of the wall clock.
Does my bet size change the RTP?
On most slots, no. The RTP is the same at R1 stake as at R100. A few progressive jackpot slots only qualify you for the top prize at max bet, but the base game RTP stays flat. Check the in-game info panel to be sure if you are playing a jackpot title.
Why do two casinos run the same slot at different RTPs?
The studio ships the slot with multiple certified RTP versions. Sweet Bonanza, Big Bass Bonanza, Wolf Gold and many other Pragmatic Play titles exist at four or more RTP settings. The casino picks which version to licence. Always open the slot and read the info panel before you wager, even on a slot you have played elsewhere.
Are SA online casino RTPs audited?
Yes, at licensed sites. eCOGRA and iTech Labs test the RNG and the published RTP on every audited slot. Hollywoodbets, Yesplay, Easybet, Playabets, Betshezi and the rest of the licensed lobbies run the same audited builds as regulated European operators. Unlicensed offshore sites are not audited.
What is the highest RTP casino game in South Africa?
Blackjack with basic strategy at 99.5 percent. Baccarat banker bet at 98.94 percent is second. French Roulette with La Partage at 98.65 percent edges European Roulette at 97.30 percent. Slots top out around 97 percent and crash games like Aviator publish 97 percent.

Keep reading

RTP is one half of slot maths. Volatility is the other. Both are covered in plain English across the Games guides hub. Useful next reads: