

If you've spent any time reading about slot machines β whether on a casino site, a forum, or a review page β you've almost certainly come across the term RTP. It gets mentioned constantly, often without much explanation, as if everyone already knows what it means and why it matters.
Most players have a rough idea. Something to do with how much a slot pays back. Higher is better. Beyond that, it gets fuzzy.
This guide gives you the complete picture: what RTP actually means, how it's calculated, what it tells you about a slot, and β just as importantly β what it doesn't tell you. By the end, you'll know exactly how to use RTP when choosing which slots to play, and why it's only one piece of the puzzle.
RTP stands for Return to Player. It's expressed as a percentage and represents the theoretical amount a slot machine pays back to players over an extremely large number of spins.
A slot with an RTP of 96% will, in theory, return Β£96 for every Β£100 wagered across its lifetime of play.
The key word is theoretical. RTP is a long-run statistical average, not a guarantee for any individual session. We'll come back to why that distinction matters enormously in practice.
RTP is calculated by game developers during the design and testing phase of a slot. It's built into the game's mathematics β the symbol frequencies, win combinations, and payout values are all set so that the game returns a specific percentage over millions of simulated spins.
The formula itself is straightforward:
RTP = (Total returned to players Γ· Total wagered by players) Γ 100
So if a slot pays out Β£96,000,000 over Β£100,000,000 in total wagers, its RTP is 96%.
The inverse of RTP is the house edge β the percentage the casino keeps. A 96% RTP slot has a 4% house edge. A 94% RTP slot has a 6% house edge. The lower the RTP, the more the house takes on every spin on average.
Slot RTPs typically range from around 92% to 99%, with most mainstream titles sitting between 94% and 97%.
Here's a rough guide to how different RTP ranges compare:
| RTP Range | Rating | What It Means |
| 98%+ | Excellent | Rare β usually video poker or specific low-variance slots |
| 96β97.99% | Very good | Above average β look for slots in this range |
| 94β95.99% | Average | Most mainstream slots sit here |
| 92β93.99% | Below average | Higher house edge β approach with caution |
| Below 92% | Poor | Avoid unless you have a specific reason |
For slots specifically, 96% is generally considered a solid benchmark. Slots at or above this figure are giving you better long-run value than those sitting at 94% or below.
Some well-known high-RTP slots include:
Here's where most explanations of RTP fall short. They tell you what RTP is, but not why it often feels meaningless in practice.
The reason is sample size.
RTP is calculated over millions β sometimes hundreds of millions β of spins. In any individual session of a few hundred or even a few thousand spins, the actual return can vary wildly from the theoretical figure. A 96% RTP slot might return 150% in one session and 20% in the next. Both outcomes are entirely normal.
Think of it like this: if you flip a fair coin 10 times, you might get 8 heads and 2 tails. That doesn't mean the coin is biased β it means 10 flips isn't enough to see the 50/50 split. The same logic applies to slots. Your session is a tiny sample of a game that has been played millions of times.
This is why RTP alone cannot predict your results in any given session. It tells you about the long-run mathematical expectation of the game β not what will happen to you today.
To fully understand how a slot will actually behave in a session, you need to consider RTP alongside variance (sometimes called volatility).
Variance describes how a slot distributes its payouts:
Low variance slots pay out frequently but in smaller amounts. Your balance stays relatively stable, wins come regularly, but big hits are rare. These games grind along close to their RTP even in short sessions.
High variance slots pay out less frequently but in larger amounts. You can go many spins without a meaningful win, then hit something significant. Your actual return in any given session can be far above or far below the theoretical RTP.
Why this matters for RTP:
Two slots can both have 96% RTP but behave completely differently. A low variance 96% slot will feel consistent β you'll win regularly, lose slowly, and your session results will be reasonably predictable. A high variance 96% slot can be brutal for long stretches and then deliver an enormous hit. Same RTP, completely different experience.
When you're choosing a slot, always check both the RTP and the variance. RTP tells you the long-run mathematical expectation. Variance tells you what the ride there looks and feels like.
If you buy bonuses on slots, there's an important nuance to be aware of: many slots have a different RTP for the bonus buy feature compared to the base game.
Some developers set the bonus buy RTP higher than the base game β meaning you're getting better long-run value when you buy directly into the feature. Others set it lower, meaning you're paying a premium for the convenience of skipping the base game.
The difference isn't always large, but it can be meaningful. A slot with a base game RTP of 96.5% might have a bonus buy RTP of 94% β a 2.5 percentage point difference that adds up significantly over a large number of buys.
Always check the specific bonus buy RTP before making regular buys on a game. This information is usually in the game's paytable or help section, and sometimes on the developer's official site.
Yes β and this surprises many players.
Most slot developers allow casinos to configure the RTP of their games within a set range. A game might have a default RTP of 96.5%, but the casino could set it to 94% or even lower within the developer's permitted range.
This means the same slot can have a different RTP at different casinos. A game that pays 96.5% at one site might pay 94% at another β same name, same graphics, different maths.
How to check:
The RTP of a specific game at a specific casino is usually available in the game's paytable when you open it on that site. Look for the "i" button, the help section, or the paytable β the RTP should be stated there. If it's not, check the casino's game information page.
When comparing slots across casinos, always check the RTP in the game itself rather than relying on a review site's figure β which may reflect the default, not what your casino is running.
Now that you understand what RTP means and what its limits are, here's how to use it practically when deciding what to play.
RTP is a useful filter for eliminating poor-value games. All else being equal, a 96.5% RTP slot is better long-run value than a 94% RTP slot. Use it to rule out low-RTP games and narrow your choices, but don't treat it as a predictor of your session results.
If you're playing on a limited session budget and want it to last, look for lower variance games with a strong RTP. If you're chasing a big win and are comfortable with swings, high variance at a solid RTP is the combination to look for.
If you're a bonus buyer, always verify the specific RTP for that feature. Don't assume the base game RTP applies to the buy.
If you play regularly at one or two casinos, check the RTP in the game itself rather than using generic review figures. You want to know what your casino is running, not the developer's default.
Here's the thing RTP can't tell you: how a specific slot is performing for you, at your stake level, on your sessions. That's your personal data, and it's the most relevant figure you have.
After 30β50 sessions on a game, your tracked results give you a real-world picture of how it's performing in practice. That's more actionable than any theoretical RTP figure.
SlotEssentials tracks your session results automatically β profit/loss, average multiplier, and performance by game and provider. Over time, your dashboard becomes your personal RTP record, specific to your play.
Track your sessions for free β SlotEssentials.com
False. Slots use a Random Number Generator (RNG) that produces a completely independent result on every spin. The game has no memory of previous spins. A cold run does not increase the probability of a win on the next spin. This is called the gambler's fallacy, and it's one of the most persistent misconceptions in gambling.
Also false, for the same reason. Each spin is independent. A game that just hit a jackpot has exactly the same probability of hitting again on the very next spin as it did before the jackpot.
Not in any given session. Higher RTP means better long-run value, but in a short session the variance of the game has far more influence on your results than the RTP percentage.
Licensed and regulated casinos cannot change the RTP of a game mid-session. RTP is set at the server level and regulated by the gaming authority that licenses the casino. The configured RTP stays consistent. What changes is the natural variance of individual spins β which is random, not manipulated.
Not always. Some casinos run demo mode on a different RTP setting to real money play. Always check the paytable when switching from demo to real money to confirm the RTP is consistent.
Anything at 96% or above is generally considered good. Look for slots at 96β97% for solid long-run value. Some slots exceed 98%, though these are less common in the bonus-buy, high-variance category that most players prefer.
The theoretical RTP of a game doesn't change unless the casino actively reconfigures it (within the developer's permitted range). Day-to-day, the game runs at a consistent RTP setting.
Yes. Open the game and look in the paytable or help section β the RTP should be stated there. If it isn't, check the casino's game information page or the developer's website.
It's below average compared to the best available slots. A 94% RTP means the house edge is 6%, compared to 4% on a 96% slot. Over a large number of sessions, this difference accumulates significantly. Where better alternatives are available, a 94% RTP slot isn't the best choice.
Does RTP apply to bonus rounds?
Yes β but the bonus round may have a different RTP to the base game, especially on bonus buy slots. Always check the specific RTP for any feature you're accessing regularly.
RTP is a useful tool, not a crystal ball. Here's the short version of everything above:
Use RTP as a filter when choosing slots. Combine it with variance to understand how a game will feel. Track your actual results to build a picture that's specific to you.
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