Successful card counters or should I say potentially successful card counters have a huge problem if they card count inside the same casino through a lack of options. Let us say that you are a very successful player and you are making $1000/week. This is based around you cashing out an average of $4500/week while only buying in for an average of $3500/week. These are long term averages of course and it doesn’t matter how much you disguise your actual play, results don’t lie.

If the casino starts to measure your buy-ins and cash outs which they will if they are considerable then you will not be allowed to play beyond about the three month mark at the outside. Any player who had made $13k over three months after logging a substantial number of hours would get noticed just for the dollar figure alone. So you need to make the casino believe that you are losing money and not winning money.

So you need to be buying in for more money and cashing out less money. Buying in for more money is the easy part but you are going to need other people to cash out amounts of money for you. Ideally you are looking to reverse your buy-in and cash out figure so it looks to the casino that you are losing $1000/week or in the region of that figure rather than winning $1000/week.

There are numerous techniques for doing this but they all involve using second and third parties to do your cashing out for you. A card counter may not be able to keep this up indefinitely but you will certainly prolong your playing time by doing this. The downside of playing in too many casinos is that you do not ever get to know other punters well enough to ask people to do this for you.