Casino Chip Colors And Values

  

All casinos and poker rooms worldwide utilize poker chips instead of cash. Instead of playing with paper money or coins, casinos require that individuals make their bets with chips. Individuals who host games in their homes will also need poker chips. It is possible to purchase personalized poker chips that are monogrammed or that contain certain pictures or images that are important to you. Poker chips have many great benefits. They help decrease certain problems that may occur if people used actual money.

In the past, every casino could use their own colors for the various values of the chips, but that has become fairly standard over the years. White or blue chips are $1, red chips are $5 and can. People collect all kinds of chips, and old and rare casino chips can be very valuable. If you own any casino chips, they may be highly sought after by collectors. There are many books and databases devoted to valuable casino chips. To assess the value of your chips, you need to do research.


Poker chips are available in different colors, with each color being equivalent to a certain amount of money. At one-time, instead of poker chips, games were played with gold nuggets, coins, and all sorts of materials. It wasn't until 1930 that venues wherein poker games were hosted began to require that individuals play with poker chips. They were generally made out of metal, clay, plastic, and acrylic. Today, they are the only type of money accepted in most commercial poker rooms. Chips can do double duty in a casino. They can sometimes be use to play other games, including various table games and card games.


Casino chip colors and values meaning

Most casinos will have poker chips that bear the image of their logo. Though poker chips can be valuable inside of a casino, they have no worth outside of it. Individuals need to cash in their chips for an equivalent amount of cash prior to leaving the casino.


As stated before, different colored poker chips correspond to varying monetary values. White chips normally are worth between $0.50 and $1, (at times grey, blue, and red chips may be worth this amount, as well). Pink chips usually have a value of between $2 and $2.50. Red chips are often worth $5 in most cardrooms, with the exception of California where $5 chips are yellow. Blue poker chips normally have a value of $10, again with the exception being California, where $10 chips are brown. In Atlantic City, yellow chips are worth $20. Green poker chips have a value of $25, except in California where the $25 chip is purple. A black chip has the equivalent value of $100, expect in California where white chips are worth this amount. Universally, purple poker chips are worth $500. Chips with an orange hue have a value of $1,000, and grey ones $5,000. Different states and poker rooms may not adhere to these guidelines standards.


Poker chips are a valuable part of the gaming process in casinos. It decreases the use of cash that can be problematic, specifically with regards to theft and counterfeiting. Individuals who play at home may want to purchase poker chips that are customized. This is especially true if they have a custom poker table. Purchasing a poker table and then chips is a great to start having the equipment needed to host a great poker game or tournament.

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Las Vegas Chip Denominations

silversonic2006
I'm a casual casino chip collector, and I've seen pictures of the (very) high value Aladdin chip rack (including the $10M plaque). I've seen $25K chips at the Bellagio and once at the MGM (high roller was making $10K pass line bets). Do most casinos cap their chips at $5k or $25K on the Strip, or do they go even higher? Are there any good sites with pictures of high-value chips?
Wizard
Administrator
Don't lots of high-end casinos use brown for 25K chips? I think they are fondly known as 'chocolate chips.' I've never heard of anything higher here. In Macau, they use the big European-style rectangular chips for very high values, up to the size of a pack of cigarettes.
It's not whether you win or lose; it's whether or not you had a good bet.
pacomartin
Article of interest.
There is a 1200 page list of all the historical chip tokens here .
M RESORT has a chip worth $25,000.00 PRIMARY RACK LOGO CARROT W/ DARK BROWN, FUSCHIA,&GOLD BOTH SIDES
ARIA has a $25,000.00 LOGO PRIMARY RACK WATERMELON W/SKY BLUE & CHARCOAL (with RFID)
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Round Casino Chips Replacing Rectangular Plaques
Published April 01, 2008 by:
Timothy B. Benford
$25,000 Round Chip Makes Debut in Atlantic City
We've all seen those odd-looking rectangular casino chips called 'plaques' in just about every Hollywood movie involving a casino scene. Especially if it is the Monte Carlo Casino in a James Bond or Pink Panther movie and the casino game is baccarat or roulette. Round chips will not be in sight.
Even though such rectangular casino plaques exist, and can be found in any casino worldwide, chances are most people reading this have never actually seen rectangular plaques used in play at any casino. The reason is these strange and cumbersome rectangular gaming chips have values ranging from $25,000 to $100,000, which means if you see anybody using rectangular plaques in a casino then Mister, or Madam, you are in 'High Roller' country.
Rectangular casino plaques have long been the currency of the 'Whales,' the super-spenders that a casino will bend over backwards to romance. Yet somewhere along the way even the Whales have become frustrated with the rectangular plaques and have made their feelings known. Simply put, casino players today prefer round chips.
Your writer has learned that earlier this month, March, 2008, the New Jersey Casino Commission approved a request by Caesars in Atlantic City to begin using gold colored $25,000 round chips instead of plaques. Previously the highest denomination round chip remains $20,000.
The round $25,000 chip is already in use in Las Vegas with the Bellagio's chip being the status symbol among the high rollers in Sin City.
Now Atlantic City, where one can still walk the boardwalk and buy a box of saltwater taffy for $3.99, has joined the march to retire the rectangular gambling plaque.
A number of casinos are already preparing to phase out the rectangular plaques and you can find them offered on eBay and elsewhere for $10 and up. Naturally, those being sold for less than face value are generally from casinos that no longer exist.
Rectangular bakelite 1000 Franc gambling plaques from the Monte Carlo Casino can also be bought from a 136-page coins and collectibles catalog produced by Valley View Coins, 4525-A MacArthur Blvd. Newport Beach, CA.
The obsolete Monte Carlo bakelite versions were in play up till the 1940s but were replaced by plastic plaques. Bakelite plaques have a tendency to bend or warp somewhat after long use. The plastic ones do not.
Questions? Comments? Reach me directly at: TimothyBenford 'at' aol 'dot' com

Color Of Casino Chips

silversonic2006
I'm not sure about the colors, I think Bellagio's were fuchsia or hot pink but I only got a really distant glance...but that makes a lot of sense, since it's probably an issue of supply and demand. Even with the whales in Vegas, I doubt there are enough players who wager more than $25,000 a roll or hand to make it worth the casino's while to make chips worth more and having to inventory and store them.
jpprovance
i recall on PAD they wer calling 25k's cranberrys.
pacomartin
If you look at the list I posted earlier, there were actually a lot of $25K chips from different casinos.
The Swiss have neat currency including a banknote worth roughly $900. The Swiss use them as mini savings accounts.
Lapa
In the Netherlands, the hightest value round chips are €100, anything higher is rectangular. There are pink €1000 chips called 'plakje' (meaning small plaque), that are slightly bigger than regular round chips. The €10,000 and €5,000 are a lot bigger, about 3 by 6 inch. There might be €25,000 ones as well, I'm not sure.
The rectangular chips are seldom used as a bet. I've only seen it happen in baccarat and on the even money bets in roulette. The plakjes are usually used for big payouts. The higher values are almost exclusively used by the casino's themselves. A dealer who's running low on chips will buy a stack of low value chips and 'pay' for it with a rectangular chip to keep the table balance accurate.
Las vegas chip denominations
pacomartin

Casino Chip Colors And Values 2017

There are bankroll requirements for the casino listed on NGC website. For a small casino (less than $1 million a month in revenue the requirements are $5000 per table and $15000 for a craps table. So it may be $100,000 all together for a small 16 table pit. I assume that the casinos try to keep as close as possible to the legal minimum since the cost of money can be so high. I am told in the old days the casinos might make short term loans to each other when they were running low. I doubt that they do that today.
I am assuming that a small casino like this would not issue anything higher than $100 chip. I also presume that they only issue as many chips as they have cash.
silversonic2006
Those are pretty cool bills! I actually own one of the $25K Dunes chips...it's definitely the largest casino chip I've ever seen, over-sized even relative to the 'over-size' chips used in Vegas baccarat and the $1000/$5000 chips in Atlantic City.
PaiGowFan
Are the $25K DUne chips still valid? If so, assumed you 'paid' $25K for it, but don't understand why you would not cash it in. If it is no longer used, then you probably paid much less for it.