
Discover One-Roll bets in craps. Learn the payouts for Big Red, Any Craps, Yo, and the massive 30 to 1 odds on Aces and Twelve.
Last Updated: 25 June 2026If you want high-risk, high-reward action, look right at the centre of the craps table. The Proposition bets located here are mostly ‘One-Roll Bets’. This means exactly what it sounds like: the wager is settled in a single throw of the dice. You either win instantly, or you lose instantly.
Key Takeaways: One-Roll Proposition Bets
- Immediate Action: Wagers located in the centre of the layout that are completely resolved on the very next throw.
- High Risk, High Reward: These proposition bets offer massive payouts but carry the highest house edge in the entire casino.
- Any Seven (Big Red): Pays 4 to 1 if a 7 lands immediately, but it comes with a punishing 16.67% house edge.
- Exact Pairs: Betting on Snake Eyes (two 1s) or Midnight (two 6s) rewards you with a massive 30 to 1 payout if you guess correctly.
Any Seven (Big Red)
This is a simple bet that the very next roll will be a 7. It pays out at 4 to 1. Since players hate the number 7 once a Point is established, it is considered terribly bad luck to say it out loud. Instead, everyone at the table calls this bet ‘Big Red’.

Any Craps
This is a wager that the next roll will be a 2, 3, or 12. It pays out at a handsome 7 to 1. Smart players often use the Any Craps bet as a ‘hedge’ (a quick insurance policy) to protect their Pass Line money during the initial Comeout Roll.

Yo (Eleven)
In a noisy casino, the word ‘eleven’ sounds dangerously close to ‘seven’. To avoid causing a panic at the table, players shout ‘Yo’ when betting on the 11. A winning bet here pays out a brilliant 15 to 1.

Aces (Two) and Twelve
Aces (Two)
Known traditionally at the tables as “Snake Eyes”, this is one of the rarest results on the layout. There is only a single mathematical combination to trigger this win: a double one (1-1). Because the probability is so slim, placing a straight-up wager on this single number rewards you with massive 30 to 1 payout odds.

Twelve
Commonly referred to by players as “Boxcars” or “Midnight”, this wager sits on the exact opposite end of the dice scale. Just like the two, there is only one specific way to hit a twelve: a double six (6-6). It is an incredibly tough outcome to land, which is why a successful straight bet here returns the same premium 30 to 1 payout.

How Horn Bets Work
If you cannot decide between the highest-paying numbers on the table, the Horn Bet allows you to cover all of them simultaneously.
A Horn Bet is a single-roll wager that splits your stake equally across four specific high-risk numbers: 2, 3, 11, and 12.
- The Mechanics: When you place a Horn Bet, your total stake must be a multiple of four (e.g., a £4 bet puts £1 on each of the four numbers).
- Winning Outright: If the shooter rolls a 2 or a 12, you are paid out at 30 to 1 for that specific portion of your wager. If the shooter rolls a 3 or an 11 (known as Yo), you are paid at 15 to 1.
- The Catch: Because it functions as four separate bets grouped together, the three losing numbers are cleared from the table. The dealer will deduct those three losing units from your single winning payout before handing over your chips. If any other number is rolled, the entire stake is lost.
Tired of throwing individual chips all over the centre of the table? Group your high-risk wagers easily using Craps Multi-Bets.
❓ One-Roll Bets FAQ
Why is the Any Seven bet called Big Red?
How do players use the Any Craps bet as insurance?
Why do craps players shout ‘Yo’ when betting on the eleven?
Author:
Lucas Portela
Owner, BoldGambler • Avanhandava/SP
Oddsmaker, affiliate and content creator in the iGaming industry.
