Keno: Probabilities, Catch Rates & House Edge Guide
Keno is a lottery-style game built on a simple combinatorial foundation: choose numbers from 1 to 80, then 20 are drawn at random. Every catch rate, payout, and house edge reduces to hypergeometric probability.
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What is Keno?
Keno is a casino number-drawing game where you pick numbers and hope they match a random draw.
You choose between 1 and 10 numbers (sometimes up to 15 or 20, depending on the game) from a pool of 80. The casino then draws 20 numbers at random. Payouts depend on how many of your numbers appear in the draw โ these matches are called โcatches.โ
Keno is one of the oldest casino games and one of the simplest to play. There are no decisions after number selection โ the outcome is entirely determined by the random draw.
The educational value of keno is exceptional because the game is a direct application of combinatorial mathematics. Every probability can be computed exactly using the hypergeometric distribution.
CasinoMath framing
Keno has one of the highest house edges in the casino โ typically 20% to 35%. We cover it here because it is an excellent teaching tool for combinatorics, hit frequency, and the relationship between payout distortion and house edge.
History of Keno
Keno traces its roots to an ancient Chinese lottery game and evolved into the modern casino format in the 20th century.
The game is loosely descended from a Chinese lottery called baige piao, which used characters rather than numbers. Chinese immigrants brought the concept to the United States in the 19th century, and casinos eventually standardized the 80-number, 20-draw format. Today keno exists in live lounges, video machines, and online platforms โ all governed by the same underlying combinatorial math.
How Keno Works
Each round follows a simple pick-draw-pay cycle.
Pick
Choose your numbers (spots) from the 1โ80 grid. More spots means bigger potential payouts but dramatically lower odds.
Draw
The casino draws 20 numbers at random from the pool of 80. In live keno, numbered balls are drawn from a hopper; in video keno, a random number generator is used.
Pay
Payouts are determined by how many of your spots appear in the 20-number draw. The paytable varies by casino and by the number of spots played.
Picking Numbers
You choose how many spots to play, then select that many numbers from 1 to 80.
The number of spots you play is the most important structural decision in keno. It determines the probability distribution of catches, the payout schedule, and the volatility profile of your ticket.
Which specific numbers you pick does not matter mathematically. Every number from 1 to 80 has exactly the same probability of appearing in the draw: 20 out of 80, or 25%. The common belief that certain numbers are โhotโ or โcoldโ is a misunderstanding of independent random events.
Drawing Process
Twenty numbers are drawn without replacement from the pool of 80.
The draw is without replacement โ once a number is drawn, it cannot appear again in the same round. This is why the math uses combinations (choosing k from n) rather than simple multiplication.
In live keno, 80 numbered balls are loaded into a bubble or hopper, and 20 are extracted. In video keno and online keno, a pseudorandom number generator selects 20 distinct numbers from the 1โ80 pool.
Keno Ticket Explained
The ticket records your chosen numbers, the number of spots played, and the wager amount.
Catch Rates Explained
A catch is a match between one of your chosen numbers and one of the 20 drawn numbers.
The number of catches determines your payout. On a 6-spot ticket, catching 3 out of 6 is common; catching 6 out of 6 is extremely rare. The catch rate distribution follows the hypergeometric probability formula.
4-Spot Catch Distribution
Most common outcome โ no matches at all.
One match is the single most likely result, but usually pays nothing.
Typical paytable returns the wager โ a push, not a profit.
First meaningful win on most 4-spot paytables.
Top payout varies heavily by casino. Roughly 1 in 326 draws.
6-Spot Catch Distribution
Typically returns the wager.
Roughly 1 in 7,753 draws. The flagship prize for a 6-spot ticket.
How Keno Payouts Work
Payouts increase with catches, but the paytable always pays less than true combinatorial odds.
Roughly 1 in 326 draws. Top prize for a 4-spot ticket.
Roughly 1 in 7,753 draws. The signature win for popular 6-spot play.
Approximately 1 in 8.9 million. True lottery-level odds.
Paytable warning
Keno paytables vary enormously by casino and format (live, video, online). The payouts shown here are representative ranges, not guarantees. Always check the specific paytable before playing.
Keno Probabilities
Every keno probability is computed exactly using the hypergeometric distribution.
1-spot: catch 1
25.0000%4-spot: catch 4
0.3063%6-spot: catch 6
0.0129%8-spot: catch 8
4.35e-4%10-spot: catch 10
1.12e-5%10-spot: catch 0
4.5791%Some paytables pay a consolation prize for catching 0/10.
Why Keno Is a Combinatorics Game
The hypergeometric distribution โ not intuition โ governs every keno outcome.
The probability of catching exactly k numbers when you pick s spots from 80 and 20 are drawn is:
C(80, 20) โ the total number of ways to choose 20 numbers from 80 โ equals approximately 3.54 ร 1018. This enormous denominator is why high-catch probabilities are so small: the number of favorable outcomes is a tiny fraction of total possible draws.
This is the hypergeometric distribution. Unlike a coin flip or dice roll, keno draws are without replacement, which is why simple multiplication of independent probabilities gives the wrong answer.
Why without-replacement matters
After the first ball is drawn, there are 79 remaining. After the second, 78. This dependency between draws means keno probabilities must account for the shrinking pool โ exactly what the hypergeometric formula does.
Hit Frequency Explained
Hit frequency measures how often a particular catch level occurs across many draws.
1-Spot
Pick one number. Wins 1 in 4 draws on average. Payouts are small, typically 3:1.
2-Spot
Must match both numbers. Moderate hit rate but low payouts keep variance low.
3-Spot
Catching all three is uncommon. Partial catches (2/3) often pay small amounts.
4-Spot
Top catch is rare. Most returns come from catching 2 or 3 out of 4.
RTP Explained
Keno RTP is the long-run percentage of wagered money returned to players.
RTP note
Keno RTP varies widely โ from roughly 65% to 80% depending on the paytable and number of spots.
RTP note
Video keno machines in casinos typically return 70% to 80%. This is much lower than video poker (95%+) or blackjack (99%+).
RTP note
Live keno lounges often have even lower RTP because games run slowly and the per-draw cost is higher relative to potential payouts.
RTP note
RTP is not a per-session prediction. It is the long-run mathematical average return on all money wagered.
RTP note
Always check the specific paytable. Two keno games sitting side by side can have very different returns.
House Edge Explained
Keno's house edge is among the highest in the casino โ typically 20% to 35%.
Where the edge comes from
The casino sets payouts below the true combinatorial odds for each catch level. The gap between true odds and actual payout is the house edge.
For example, catching 4 out of 4 has true odds of roughly 326:1, but a typical paytable might pay only 75:1 to 120:1.
Expected loss
$100 of keno action at 25% house edge = $25.00 expected loss.
$1,000 of keno action = $250.00 expected loss.
Compare this to blackjack at ~0.5% ($0.50 per $100) or video poker at ~0.46%.
Variance Explained
Keno variance scales with spots played. More spots means higher highs and more frequent zeros.
1โ3 spots
Frequent small wins or pushes. You hit something often, but the payouts are modest.
4โ5 spots
Partial catches keep results from being all-or-nothing, but top prizes are uncommon.
6โ7 spots
Long stretches of nothing punctuated by occasional meaningful wins.
8โ10+ spots
Most draws return nothing. The rare large catch is what pulls the RTP closer to advertised levels.
Expected Value Explained
Expected value converts the house edge into a concrete cost per dollar wagered.
Formula
Expected loss = amount wagered ร house edge
At 25% house edge, every $1 bet costs $0.25 on average. Every $100 costs $25.
This is the most important number in keno. It tells you that regardless of catch patterns or lucky streaks, the long-run cost of playing is large.
Why keno EV is harsh
Kenoโs house edge is 10ร to 50ร higher than most table games. The simplicity and entertainment of the game come at a steep mathematical price. This does not mean you cannot enjoy keno โ it means you should understand the cost.
Bankroll Considerations
Keno's high house edge means bankrolls erode faster than in most casino games.
$50
At $1 per draw, 50 draws. With 20โ35% house edge, expected loss is $10โ$18 over the full session. Variance means you could lose it all quickly or get lucky on a catch.
$200
Enough for 200 draws at $1. Low-spot play (1โ4) stretches the bankroll further; high-spot play (8โ10) creates jackpot-or-bust dynamics.
$500
Longer sessions are possible, but the high house edge means the bankroll erodes meaningfully over hundreds of draws. Side games and multi-card play accelerate the cost.
Common Keno Myths
Keno's simplicity invites pattern-seeking narratives that the math does not support.
Each draw is independent. The 20 balls are drawn from all 80 every time. Past results do not change future probabilities.
Every combination of 20 numbers from 80 has the same probability. The visual pattern of your chosen numbers does not affect the math.
More spots means more possible catches, but the probability of catching all of them drops dramatically. The paytable is adjusted accordingly.
No selection pattern, bet progression, or number-tracking system changes the underlying hypergeometric probabilities.
Video keno often has better RTP (70โ80%) than live keno lounges (65โ75%), but both maintain a substantial house edge.
The jackpot probability is fixed per draw. Playing more draws costs more money without improving any single draw's odds.
High Volatility vs Low Volatility Keno
The number of spots you choose determines whether keno behaves like a low-risk pastime or a high-risk lottery.
2-Spot
Low VolatilityMust match both numbers. Moderate hit rate but low payouts keep variance low.
10-Spot
Very High VolatilityCatching all 10 is approximately 1 in 8.9 million. Extremely long-shot territory.
Multi-Card Keno
Multi-card keno lets you play several different number selections on the same draw.
Video keno machines often allow 4, 10, or 20 cards simultaneously. Each card has its own set of numbers and pays independently against the same 20-number draw.
Multi-card play does not change the probability of any individual card winning. It increases total action per draw, which means the house edge applies to a larger total wager. The entertainment value is higher, but so is the per-draw cost.
Cost implication
Playing 4 cards at $1 each means $4 per draw. At 25% house edge, the expected cost is $1.00 per draw instead of $0.25. Multi-card play accelerates bankroll erosion proportionally.
Progressive Keno
Some keno games contribute a portion of each wager to a growing jackpot.
Progressive keno jackpots grow with each draw until someone hits the qualifying catch (usually catching all 8, 9, or 10 on a high-spot ticket). The jackpot contribution typically comes out of the RTP, meaning the base paytable is even worse than standard keno.
In theory, a progressive jackpot could grow large enough that the expected value of the ticket becomes less negative. In practice, this almost never happens because the qualifying catch is so rare and the jackpot is usually hit before reaching that threshold.
Progressive warning
Do not treat progressive keno as a positive-expectation opportunity. The jackpot makes the game exciting, but the base RTP is typically worse than standard keno to fund the progressive pool.
Why Systems Do Not Beat Keno
No number selection pattern or betting system changes the hypergeometric probabilities.
Number patterns
Every combination of numbers from the 1โ80 pool has identical probability of being drawn. Birthdays, anniversaries, and โluckyโ numbers perform exactly the same as random selections.
Bet progressions
Doubling your bet after a loss does not change the probability of the next draw. It increases exposure and accelerates the house edgeโs effect on your bankroll.
Tracking systems
Recording which numbers appeared in previous draws provides zero predictive power. Each draw is independent โ the 80-ball pool is fully reset every round.
Keno vs Lottery
Both are random number-drawing games, but they differ in house edge, speed, and draw frequency.
Keno
Highest house edge of common casino games. Appeal is in simplicity and lottery-style payouts.
Lottery
Even higher edge than keno. Keno draws happen continuously, which means the cost accumulates faster.
Keno vs Slots
Slots offer similar entertainment with significantly better RTP in most cases.
Keno
Highest house edge of common casino games. Appeal is in simplicity and lottery-style payouts.
Slots
Much lower house edge than keno in most cases. Slots are the closest game in feel but with better RTP.
Keno vs Video Poker
Video poker offers dramatically lower house edge with optimal strategy โ keno is pure chance.
Keno
Highest house edge of common casino games. Appeal is in simplicity and lottery-style payouts.
Video Poker (Jacks or Better 9/6)
Dramatically lower house edge with optimal play. Strategy matters; keno is pure chance.
Responsible Play
CasinoMath treats Keno as a combinatorics lesson, not as a prompt to gamble.
Responsible Gaming
This content is for educational purposes only. Gambling involves real financial risk and can be addictive. The house always has a mathematical advantageโthere is no guaranteed winning strategy.
Use the Keno Calculator
Model hit probabilities for any spot count, compute expected loss over multiple draws, and compare kenoโs cost against other casino games.
Launch CalculatorRelated CasinoMath Resources
Connect Keno with wider house-edge, probability, and bankroll concepts.
Keno FAQ
Short answers to the most common Keno questions.
What is Keno?
Keno is a lottery-style casino game where you choose numbers from 1 to 80, and 20 numbers are drawn at random. Payouts depend on how many of your chosen numbers match the draw.
How many numbers can you pick in Keno?
Most keno games allow you to pick 1 to 10 numbers (called spots), though some games allow up to 15 or 20. The number of spots you choose affects both the probability of winning and the payout structure.
What are the odds of hitting all numbers in Keno?
It depends on how many spots you play. Catching all 4 on a 4-spot ticket is about 1 in 326. Catching all 10 on a 10-spot ticket is approximately 1 in 8.9 million. More spots means dramatically longer odds.
Is Keno similar to a lottery?
Yes. Both are random number drawings where you select numbers and hope for matches. Keno typically has a lower house edge than state lotteries (~20โ35% vs ~50%) and draws happen continuously rather than weekly.
What is hit frequency in Keno?
Hit frequency is how often a particular catch level occurs. For example, catching at least 3 on a 6-spot ticket happens about 16% of the time. Higher spot counts have lower hit frequencies for top catches.
Can betting systems beat Keno?
No. Keno is a pure chance game governed by combinatorics. No number selection pattern, bet progression, or tracking system changes the hypergeometric probabilities that determine outcomes.
What is the house edge in Keno?
Keno has one of the highest house edges in the casino, typically 20% to 35%. This means for every $100 wagered, the expected return is only $65 to $80 on average.
Is Keno a high-volatility game?
It depends on spots played. Low-spot keno (1โ3) is relatively low volatility. High-spot keno (8โ10+) is extremely high volatility โ most draws return nothing, but rare catches pay large multiples.