6 Deck Blackjack Strategy Charts

Blackjack is the only casino game where the correct mathematical decision can be known with certainty on every single hand. That's what basic strategy provides: a complete chart of every possible hand situation, your cards, the dealer's upcard, and the exact action that minimises the house edge.

In 6 deck blackjack, the most common format in online casinos, following basic strategy perfectly reduces the house edge to approximately 0.40% to 0.65%. Playing by gut feel instead can push that figure to 2-4% or higher. The difference, over thousands of hands, is enormous.

This guide gives you every chart you need for 6 deck blackjack, explains the logic behind the most important decisions, and covers how to apply the strategy at the Duelbits Blackjack tables.

Understanding the Blackjack Strategy Charts

Before reading the charts, you need to understand three terms:

Hard Total

A hand with no ace, or a hand where the ace must be counted as 1 to avoid busting.

  • 8 + 9 = hard 17
  • A + 6 + King = hard 17 (ace = 1, because 11 + 6 + 10 = 27)

Soft Total

A hand containing an ace counted as 11, the hand can still improve without risk of busting.

  • A + 6 = soft 17 (can be played as 17 or 7)
  • A + 3 = soft 14

Pair

Two cards of identical rank. Pairs can be split into two separate hands under standard blackjack rules.

  • 8 + 8 = pair of 8s
  • A + A = pair of Aces

The Strategy Chart Actions

SymbolActionMeaning
HHitTake another card
SStandTake no more cards
DDoubleDouble your bet and take exactly one more card
PSplitSplit the pair into two separate hands, each with its own bet
RSurrenderForfeit half your bet and end the hand immediately (if available)
DhDouble if allowed, else HitDouble if the table rule permits; otherwise Hit
DsDouble if allowed, else StandDouble if the table rule permits; otherwise Stand

Chart 1: Hard Totals - 6 Deck Blackjack

Dealer's upcard across the top. Your hand total down the left.

Your Total2345678910A
Hard 8 or lessHHHHHHHHHH
Hard 9HDDDDHHHHH
Hard 10DDDDDDDDHH
Hard 11DDDDDDDDDH
Hard 12HHSSSHHHHH
Hard 13SSSSSHHHHH
Hard 14SSSSSHHHHH
Hard 15SSSSSHHHRH
Hard 16SSSSSHHRRR
Hard 17+SSSSSSSSSS

Key hard total rules to memorise:

  • Always hit hard 8 or less, you cannot bust
  • Double hard 10 and 11 against most dealer upcards
  • Stand hard 12 through 16 against dealer 2-6; hit against dealer 7-Ace
  • Always stand hard 17 or higher (except surrender opportunities)

Chart 2: Soft Totals - 6 Deck Blackjack

Soft totals involve an ace counted as 11. These hands allow more aggressive doubling because you cannot bust.

Your Hand2345678910A
Soft 13 (A+2)HHHDDHHHHH
Soft 14 (A+3)HHHDDHHHHH
Soft 15 (A+4)HHDDDHHHHH
Soft 16 (A+5)HHDDDHHHHH
Soft 17 (A+6)HDDDDHHHHH
Soft 18 (A+7)SDsDsDsDsSSHHH
Soft 19 (A+8)SSSSDsSSSSS
Soft 20 (A+9)SSSSSSSSSS
Soft 21 (A+10)SSSSSSSSSS

Key soft total rules to memorise:

  • Double soft 13-17 against dealer 4-6 (dealer's weakest upcards)
  • Soft 18 is the most misplayed hand in blackjack, stand against 2, 7, 8; hit against 9, 10, Ace; double against 3-6
  • Never hit soft 19 or higher

Chart 3: Pairs - 6 Deck Blackjack

Assuming Doubling After Split (DAS) is allowed, which is standard in most online blackjack games.

Your Pair2345678910A
2sPPPPPPHHHH
3sPPPPPPHHHH
4sHHHPPHHHHH
5sDDDDDDDDHH
6sPPPPPHHHHH
7sPPPPPPHHHH
8sPPPPPPPPPP
9sPPPPPSPPSS
10sSSSSSSSSSS
AcesPPPPPPPPPP

Key pair rules to memorise:

  • Always split Aces and 8s, no exceptions
  • Never split 5s or 10s
  • Split 9s against everything except dealer 7, 10, and Ace
  • Split 2s, 3s, and 7s against dealer 2 through 7

The Most Important Decisions in 6 Deck Blackjack

Never Split 5s or 10s

5s: Two 5s = 10 - one of the best starting totals in the game. You should double down, not split. Never separate a hard 10 into two weak hands starting at 5.

10s: Two 10s = 20 - the second-strongest hand in blackjack, losing only to 21. No rational strategy splits a 20.

Always Split Aces and 8s

Aces: Starting two hands with a potential 21 is mathematically dominant over playing a hard 12. Always split Aces, even against dealer Aces.

8s: Hard 16 is the worst starting total in blackjack. You win it less often than any other total. Splitting 8s gives you two chances to improve against even a strong dealer upcard, even though you'll still be an underdog against dealer 9, 10, or Ace, you lose less money over time by splitting than by playing hard 16.

Soft 18 vs Dealer - The Most Misplayed Hand

Soft 18 (Ace + 7) should be:

  • Stood against dealer 2, 7, 8
  • Hit against dealer 9, 10, Ace
  • Doubled against dealer 3, 4, 5, 6

The intuitive mistake is to always stand on 18, since 18 feels like a strong hand. But against dealer 9, 10, or Ace, the dealer makes 19 or higher often enough that your 18 is frequently a losing hand, hitting to try to improve is the correct long-run decision. Against dealer 3-6, the dealer is weak enough that you should exploit the soft hand by doubling.

Hard 16 vs Dealer 8, 9, 10, Ace

Hard 16 is the most uncomfortable hand in blackjack, you're likely to lose whether you hit or stand. The chart tells you to:

  • Surrender hard 16 against dealer 9, 10, or Ace (if surrender is available)
  • Hit against dealer 8 (surrender not offered here in most charts)
  • Stand against dealer 2-6

The temptation is to stand with 16 to avoid busting. But against a dealer showing 9 or 10, they make 19 or 20 so frequently that surrendering and recovering half your bet is mathematically better than playing to the end and losing the full bet at a higher rate.

Double 11 vs Nearly Everything

Hard 11 is one of the strongest doubling opportunities in blackjack. Double 11 against every dealer upcard except an Ace in 6 deck (where hitting is marginal). The logic: you have a high probability of landing a 10-value card (there are 16 in every deck), creating 21 from a doubled bet. Even against strong dealer upcards, your probability of winning a doubled bet exceeds the risk.

6 Deck vs Single Deck vs Double Deck Blackjack

Rule SetApprox. House Edge (with basic strategy)
Single deck (S17, DAS, No Surrender)~0.15%
Double deck (S17, DAS, Surrender)~0.20%
6 deck (S17, DAS, Surrender)~0.40%
6 deck (H17, No DAS, No Surrender)~0.65%

More decks slightly increase the house edge because card counting becomes less effective and some dealer-favourable outcomes become slightly more likely. However, the difference between single and 6 deck with basic strategy is small, well under 1% of every stake. With consistent basic strategy, 6 deck blackjack remains one of the best expected-value games in any casino.

Rule Variations That Affect Basic Strategy

Dealer Hits Soft 17 (H17) vs Stands on Soft 17 (S17)

When the dealer must hit soft 17 (most common online), they have a slightly higher chance of improving a borderline hand. This makes the game marginally worse for players and changes a few strategy decisions, specifically, you should double soft 18 (A+7) against dealer Ace under H17 rules (rather than standing under S17 rules).

Doubling After Split (DAS)

When DAS is allowed (standard in most online games), you can double down on hands formed after splitting, enabling more aggressive pair splitting. The pair chart in this guide assumes DAS is available.

Surrender

Late surrender allows you to forfeit half your bet after seeing your hand and the dealer's upcard. It is mathematically correct to surrender:

  • Hard 16 vs dealer 9, 10, Ace
  • Hard 15 vs dealer 10 (and vs Ace under H17 rules)

If surrender is not available, hit these hands instead.

Blackjack Pays 3:2 vs 6:5

This is the most important rule to check. Traditional blackjack pays 3:2 on a natural (an Ace and a 10-value card). Some games, particularly single-deck games at physical casinos and some online variants, pay only 6:5, which adds approximately 1.4% to the house edge. Always verify this before playing.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Never "mimic the dealer": standing on 17+ and hitting until you reach 17 feels logical but ignores the fundamental advantage of acting before the dealer and the strategic value of doubling and splitting.
  • Never take insurance: insurance is a side bet on the dealer having blackjack when showing an Ace. The house edge on insurance in a 6-deck game is approximately 7.4%, dramatically higher than the main game.
  • Don't let gut feeling override the chart: the most common amateur mistake is deviating from basic strategy based on "feel" or superstition (standing on a pair of 8s against a dealer 10 to "avoid losing double"). The chart is derived from billions of simulated hands. Feelings are not.
  • Don't adjust strategy based on other players' cards: in online blackjack with a shuffled shoe, other players' visible cards should not alter your decisions. Basic strategy assumes no knowledge of other dealt cards.

Play Blackjack at Duelbits

Duelbits Casino offers a full blackjack lobby across our own Duelbits Originals blackjack game, and a wide selection of live dealer blackjack tables from top providers. Navigate to Casino → Blackjack to find tables with the full range of betting limits, rule sets, and table types.

For a complete overview of online blackjack formats, betting limits, and how to navigate the Duelbits casino lobby, see our blackjack guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is basic strategy in blackjack? The mathematically optimal decision for every possible hand, derived from computer simulation of billions of hands. Followed perfectly in 6 deck blackjack, it reduces the house edge to approximately 0.40-0.65%.

What is the house edge in 6 deck blackjack with basic strategy? Approximately 0.40-0.65% depending on specific table rules. Without basic strategy, playing by feel can push the house edge to 2-4% or more.

What is a hard total? A hand with no ace, or where the ace must be counted as 1. Hard 17 = 8+9, or A+6+King. Use the hard totals chart.

What is a soft total? A hand where the ace is counted as 11. Soft 17 = A+6 (can be treated as 7 or 17). Use the soft totals chart.

Should you always split Aces and 8s? Yes, no exceptions in 6 deck basic strategy. Aces are split for two chances at 21. 8s are split because hard 16 is the worst hand in blackjack.

Should you ever take insurance? No. Insurance has a house edge of approximately 7.4% in a 6-deck game. Always decline.

Does the number of decks change basic strategy? The core strategy is similar but there are meaningful differences in some doubling decisions. More decks slightly favour the dealer, the charts in this guide apply to the standard 6-deck game.

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