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S6B 429: Super 6 Baccarat Table Procedure

A casino-floor procedure guide for Super 6 Baccarat, covering betting, dealing, Banker 6 settlement, side bets, and dispute points.

S6B 429: Super 6 Baccarat Table Procedure
Point Value
House Edge Procedure guide
Difficulty Medium
Skill Ceiling Low

Super 6 Baccarat table procedure is normal baccarat procedure with one critical settlement step: Banker commission is not charged, but Banker winning with 6 usually pays half. The dealer must close betting, deal by baccarat rules, announce the result, settle main bets correctly, then settle any side bets according to the posted paytable.

Quick Facts

  • Betting closes before cards are exposed.
  • Banker wins usually pay 1:1 unless Banker wins with 6.
  • Banker winning with 6 usually pays 1:2.
  • Player wins usually pay 1:1.
  • Tie usually pushes Banker and Player bets.
  • Side bets are settled separately.
  • Dealer, inspector, floor, and surveillance all care about Banker 6 accuracy.

Plain Talk

Super 6 is not a different dealing game. It is a different settlement game.

The dealer still follows baccarat drawing rules. Players still choose Banker, Player, Tie, or optional side bets. The procedure changes at payout time.

Standard commission baccarat asks the dealer to handle commission on Banker wins.

Super 6 removes that routine commission, but adds one special check:

Did Banker win with 6?

If yes, Banker pays half. If no, Banker usually pays full.

The Nevada live baccarat rules of play provides a public example of this no-commission payout structure.

How It Works

Basic Super 6 table flow:

StepProcedureStaff focus
1Accept Banker, Player, Tie, and optional side betsChips in correct betting areas
2Close bettingNo late bets after call
3Deal Player and Banker handsCorrect card order
4Apply drawing rulesNo player decision
5Announce final totalsClear Banker/Player/Tie result
6Identify Banker 6 if relevantCritical Super 6 check
7Settle main betsBanker 6 half-pay if applicable
8Settle side betsUse posted paytable
9Clear losing chipsMaintain clean layout
10Prepare next decisionReset table pace

Settlement reference:

ResultExample final scoreMain bet settlement
Banker wins with 9Banker 9, Player 4Banker pays 1:1
Banker wins with 7Banker 7, Player 3Banker pays 1:1
Banker wins with 6Banker 6, Player 2Banker pays 1:2
Player winsPlayer 8, Banker 5Player pays 1:1
TieBanker 6, Player 6Banker/Player usually push

Baccarat Table Example

A full table has these bets:

  • Seat 1: $100 Banker
  • Seat 2: $50 Player
  • Seat 3: $25 Banker plus $5 Super 6 side bet
  • Seat 4: $200 Banker
  • Seat 5: $10 Tie

Final result:

  • Banker: 6
  • Player: 4

Correct main-bet procedure:

  • Banker bets win half.
  • Player bet loses.
  • Tie bet loses unless the posted rules say otherwise.
  • Side bet is settled by the side-bet paytable.

The dealer must not pay Banker bets full by habit. That is the main procedure risk.

From the Casino Side:

Super 6 is attractive because it speeds up routine Banker payouts, but it requires sharp control on one result.

RoleWhat they watch
DealerCorrect layout, no late bets, Banker 6 half-pay
InspectorPayout accuracy and table pace
Floor supervisorDisputes, rule explanation, dealer correction
SurveillanceBanker 6 hands, side-bet payouts, late bets
Pit managerGame speed, error rate, player complaints
Casino managerTheoretical performance and rule consistency

Procedure is not only about fairness. It is also about game protection. A repeated full payout on Banker 6 can cost the table quickly.

Common Mistakes

Procedure mistakeCorrect procedureWhy it matters
Paying Banker 6 fullPay 1:2Prevents overpayment
Half-paying Tie at 6Main bets usually pushBanker must win with 6
Applying Banker 6 rule to PlayerPlayer wins usually pay 1:1Banker-specific rule
Settling side bets before main clarityConfirm main result firstAvoids confusion
Accepting late side betsClose betting before exposureGame protection
Mixing EZ rules into Super 6Use current table rules onlyAvoids wrong settlement

Hard Truth

Super 6 procedure is easy until the exact hand that pays differently appears. That is the hand that proves whether the table is trained.

FAQ

Is Super 6 dealt differently from normal baccarat?

Usually no. The dealing and drawing rules are baccarat rules. The main difference is Banker payout settlement.

When does the dealer check for Banker 6?

After final totals are known and before paying Banker bets.

Who settles side bets?

The dealer settles them, usually after confirming the main result, using the posted side-bet paytable.

What if the dealer pays Banker 6 full by mistake?

The floor may be called to correct the payout, depending on timing, jurisdiction, and house procedure.

Does the player need to know drawing rules?

Not to bet. The dealer handles drawing rules. But knowing procedure helps you understand disputes.

Can players touch cards?

That depends on the table format. Some baccarat games allow squeezing cards; others are fully dealer-controlled or electronic.

What is the most important procedure sentence?

Banker wins with 6 pays half.

Deeper Insight

A good Super 6 table needs two kinds of speed:

  • fast ordinary settlement
  • slow enough recognition on Banker 6

That sounds contradictory, but it is the real procedure balance. The table should move quickly on normal outcomes, then pause just enough when Banker wins with 6 to avoid paying incorrectly.

The Wizard of Odds commission-free baccarat analysis separates Banker wins with six because it changes return. The Wizard of Odds Super Baccarat page separates main game and Lucky 6 style side-bet analysis. Rules documents such as the Massachusetts baccarat rules show why casinos document wagers, settlements, and approved procedures clearly.

From the floor, the goal is not fancy language. It is clean repetition:

Announce. Confirm. Pay. Clear.

Formula / Calculation

Correct Banker 6 Profit = Stake × 0.5

Normal Banker Win Profit = Stake × 1

Potential Banker 6 Overpayment = Stake × 1 - Stake × 0.5

Potential Banker 6 Overpayment = Stake × 0.5

Total Potential Table Overpayment = Total Banker 6 Stakes × 0.5

Formula Explanation in Plain English

If total Banker action is $2,000 and Banker wins with 6, the correct total profit paid on Banker bets is $1,000. If the dealer pays full even money, the table pays $2,000 profit. The overpayment is $1,000.

That is why procedure focuses so heavily on one result. The game is simple, but the error can be large.

For payout accuracy, read Super 6 Baccarat dealer errors and Banker 6 rule explained. For signs and player checks, use Super 6 Baccarat table signs and Super 6 Baccarat house rules checklist.

For examples, continue with Super 6 Baccarat payout examples.

Play smart. Gambling involves real financial risk. If the game stops being entertainment, it's time to stop playing.