Flat Betting
A baseline approach: stake the same amount every spin without progression.
- Roulette type
- European, French, and American roulette
- Bet focus
- any roulette bet with a fixed stake
How The Strategy Works
This guide expands the short strategy summary into a practical simulator workflow. Use it to understand the betting sequence, bankroll pressure, and failure points before risking real money.
The exact numbers can be changed, but the test should keep one fixed base unit, one roulette variant, and one stopping rule so the result remains readable.
Practical Betting Example
- 1Choose one clear bet type and one base unit.
- 2Run the first spin with the planned stake.
- 3Apply the strategy rule after a win or loss.
- 4Reset, reduce, or stop exactly where the rule says.
- 5Record the result before starting the next cycle.
Bankroll And Risk Rules
- Set a maximum session loss before the first spin.
- Track maximum drawdown, maximum stake, and total cost per cycle.
- Compare European, French, and American roulette separately.
- Never judge the system from a small lucky sample.
Common Mistakes
- Changing the rule after emotional wins or losses.
- Ignoring zero and double-zero outcomes.
- Tracking hit rate without tracking net profit.
- Increasing the base unit before the strategy is tested over a long sample.
Simulator Checklist
- Run at least 500 simulated spins.
- Repeat the same test with a different roulette variant.
- Write down the largest losing streak and largest stake.
- Compare the result with flat betting.
Key Features
- Same stake every spin.
- Works with inside or outside bets.
- Best baseline for comparing other strategies.
How This Strategy Was Created
Flat betting is not attributed to one inventor; it is the natural baseline for measuring variance and house edge.
Why This Option Is Useful
It is the cleanest way to see what roulette odds do without the noise of changing bet sizes.
How To Test It In The Simulator
- Pick one stake size.
- Run long samples.
- Use results as the benchmark for every progression.
Important Risk Note
No roulette strategy removes the house edge. Use this page for education, bankroll planning, and simulated testing only.
Choose An Online Roulette Simulator
Choose the roulette model you want to test with this strategy.
European Roulette
EuropeanSingle-zero wheel for lower house edge testing and clean baseline simulations.
- House edge
- 2.70%
- Numbers count
- 37
American Roulette
AmericanDouble-zero model for comparing volatility, drawdown, and bankroll pressure.
- House edge
- 5.26%
- Numbers count
- 38
French Roulette
FrenchSingle-zero rules with La Partage context for even-money strategy analysis.
- House edge
- 1.35%*
- Numbers count
- 37
What To Test Next
Related Reading
Jun 25, 2026 / 4 min read
Biased wheel research: when roulette becomes data analysis
Modern biased-wheel research often looks less like a casino movie and more like quantitative finance: record thousands of spins, test distributions, backtest staking rule...
Read full storyJun 27, 2026 / 4 min read
Why La Partage changes bankroll pressure in roulette
La Partage looks like a small rule, but it matters for even-money bets. When zero appears, the player gets half of the stake back instead of losing everything. In a roule...
Read full storyJun 27, 2026 / 4 min read
Hot numbers in roulette: signal or random noise?
Many players watch recent results and chase hot numbers. The problem is sample size. Ten or twenty spins can create patterns that feel meaningful but disappear in longer ...
Read full story