European Roulette
Playtech
RTP 97.3%
Every title in the catalogue was played 100-500 spins by our editorial team, with RTPs verified against the certifying lab's report. We never list a game we haven't personally audited.
Sorted by popularity. Filter by provider, format, or multiplier presence. Every title was personally play-tested and the RTP cross-checked with the certifying lab.
17 games match your filters
Playtech
RTP 97.3%
Playtech
RTP 94.74%
CryptoClub
RTP 98.65%
Playtech
RTP 96.15%
Playtech
RTP 97.3%
Playtech
RTP 97.3%
Playtech
RTP 97.3%
Playtech
RTP 94.74%
Playtech
RTP 98.65%
Playtech
RTP 97.3%
Playtech
RTP 97.3%
Playtech
RTP 97.3%
Playtech
RTP 97.3%
Playtech
RTP 97.3%
NetEnt
RTP 94.74%
NetEnt
RTP 100%
Playtech One
RTP 97.3%
Although we've featured a strong lineup above, several other titles are worth a look — especially if you prefer high-limit play or specialised side-bets. Here are two we recommend exploring in addition to the main list.
| Game | Provider | Bet limits | Standout property |
|---|---|---|---|
| Premium European Roulette | Playtech | $0.10 – $2000 | European wheel with chip presets and a tighter UI — gentle on first sessions |
| Frankie Dettori's Roulette Magic | Playtech | $1 – $500 | Branded mini-jackpot bonus round triggered on consecutive lucky-number hits |
The variety of roulette games is enormous and isn't limited to this list. What can we expect from the evolution of roulette in the years ahead? To answer that, we asked Scott Roeben, founder of the Vital Vegas media project.
To help you understand how we choose the best online roulette games, here's a walk-through of the rating process. We thoroughly investigate every title that might appear on this page, running tests and collecting context. Below: how it all works.
First filter: only games from licensed, audited studios make the cut. Lets us guarantee fair gameplay and reliable withdrawals on any winnings.
Live tables get a transmission test: HD baseline, optional manual quality drop for low bandwidth, no perceived stutter at 5 Mbps.
Favourite bets, quick rebet, last-spin history, autoplay — we score every UI affordance and reject games that feel clunky after 50 rounds.
Live tables also get a studio audit: professional setup, engaged presenters who understand the game. Games that look cheap or unprofessional are eliminated automatically.
Our team plays 100-500 spins on every title under review. RTP estimates from our own session are cross-checked against the certifying lab's published number.
The wheel matters. We watch for unbalanced spins, off-axis ball drops, and clip-tested deflectors. Any visible bias and the game is dropped from the list.
Try these titles in your browser at zero risk — no deposit, no registration, no card on file. The same wheels and payouts as the real-money versions; the only thing missing is the real chips.
8 games match your filters
Playtech
RTP 97.3%
Playtech
RTP 94.74%
CryptoClub
RTP 98.65%
Playtech
RTP 96.15%
Playtech
RTP 97.3%
Playtech
RTP 97.3%
Playtech
RTP 97.3%
Playtech
RTP 97.3%
To a beginner, all the roulette variants available at online casinos may look the same or very similar, but it’s no accident there are so many varieties: there are differences between them that affect the player’s experience. This article aims to show the difference between roulettes and reveal secrets even for the experienced player, explaining the criteria (type, RTP, limits and so on) by which to choose your entertainment. The ranking is updated constantly, so the data here is always fresh.
Many gambling rankings are, unfortunately, compiled on a marketing principle: if a provider paid the compiler, then its online roulette is “the best”. However, the ranking on this site is honest: it’s based on six criteria that warrant a more detailed description to improve the transparency of the selection.
It’s not for nothing that some providers become recognisable industry leaders while others, despite years of history, never build a reputation: the creations of giants such as Evolution, Playtech, Pragmatic Play, Ezugi always stand out not only for aesthetics and ease of control but also for impeccable fairness. Incidentally, a game’s fairness isn’t a subjective notion either: the random number generator in roulette must be certified by specialist independent organisations such as GLI, eCOGRA, iTech Labs. A casino’s licence is also hugely important: MGA is better than Curaçao, while unlicensed games and venues a priori don’t make it into our rankings.
Real-money roulette always involves some house edge, but players have the right to a higher (and honestly stated!) RTP. For French roulette (but only on 1:1 bets) the bar is set very high — 98.65%; for European (the most widespread) it’s 97.3%; and in American the norm is 94.74%. The actual figure may fluctuate somewhat across sessions, but our specialists personally test all the titles in the ranking over runs of at least 500 spins to make sure the venue isn’t earning extra off users. Only those roulettes whose high stated RTP matches the real one reach the top of the ranking, and live roulette is also checked from the standpoint of the OCR system (optical recognition of results) working correctly.
Live-dealer roulettes were conceived as an imitation of the player being present at a real land-based venue, but a low-quality “picture” spoils the experience, so the top places in the ranking go to titles with 1080p and above — there are quite a lot of these now. A stream latency of more than 2 seconds is considered a serious problem with today’s internet capabilities — such tables don’t make our ranking. And both live roulette and RNG roulette today must automatically adapt to the parameters of your specific mobile display, and the game’s functionality must not degrade in the mobile version.
Niche roulettes may offer special limits, but only one that players of different categories can play will become truly successful. An economical user cares that the minimum bet is accepted at at least $1, while a generous visitor using the Martingale strategy will be glad of a maximum of $1,000 or more, so tables with the widest spread of limits rank higher.
Following the classic standard is a plus too, but there are so many “ordinary” European roulettes that singling one out is possible only for outstanding stream quality. For this reason our ranking gives some advantage to game variants with unique mechanics and special features, including multipliers, bonus rounds, two-ball play or play on several wheels at once.
Roulette that’s free and without registration inspires far more trust in a user, since it can be tried risk-free, so a demo mode (supported only by RNG games) is considered an advantage. Another useful function is autoplay: set the spin parameters once and just watch what happens. Statistics matter to many customers too: both the general stats over the last 100–500 rounds and a personal betting history, so that’s also seen as a plus. Finally, only roulettes that can be launched without loss of quality right in the browser, without downloading the casino app, make the ranking.
In roulette each user may have one main goal — this largely determines which type of game suits you personally. With the clear table below you definitely won’t get confused.
| Main goal | Best type | Top examples | RTP |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maximum win per spin | Live with multipliers | Lightning, XXXtreme, Power Up | 97.10–97.30% |
| Atmosphere of a real casino | Classic live | Immersive, Dragonara, VIP | 97.30% |
| Fast play without a croupier | Auto/Speed or any RNG | Auto Roulette, Speed Roulette | 97.30% |
| Minimum budget and practice | Live with small limits or RNG demo | Mini Roulette, 20p Roulette | 96.15–97.30% |
Knowing your priorities, a player is more likely to quickly find what they were after.
To compile an objective ranking, we tested more than 100 games and included in the final list only those that managed to score maximum (or close to maximum) marks across all six criteria. So as not to miss new releases, the site’s administration updates the ranking regularly.
If “ordinary” live roulette interests players only as an imitation of visiting a land-based venue, then the multiplier variant is good because here you can win far more than just 35:1 on a straight-up bet. Such a game usually has European roulette as its base, but with specific maths: payouts on straight-up bets are redistributed, so without a multiplier the customer collects only from 19:1 to 29:1, but with a multiplier — up to 8000×.
This variant looks almost ideal on most key parameters:
This title is good when you have a comparatively small bank (the low minimum bet helps), and when you’re willing to win less often as long as the rare payout is huge. The only downside of the entertainment can be considered the comparatively low, for European roulette, long-term RTP — just 97.1%.
In essence, this is a modification of the previous game with increased variance: the Double Strike and Chain Lightning combos let the player theoretically collect up to 2000× their bet. The flip side — such wins are funded by the players themselves in a kitty, so without multipliers a straight-up bet brings just 19:1 (almost on a par with a classic split).
With bet limits of $0.50–$500 and a maximum payout of up to 500×, Quantum Roulette seems like “another” multiplier game, but in this case the developer didn’t skimp on working out an interesting mechanic: Quantum Boost and Quantum Leap build up the multiplier after a win, and you see it happening in the process, which is what makes such a roulette interesting. Unfortunately, the RTP suffered in the course of improving the game — it was lowered to 96.1%.
Another table option with bets in the $0.20–$2,000 range and payouts up to 500×, but this game has two strengths at once: an RTP up to a full 97.3% (depends on the venue, 96.5% in places) and a high pace of play — with pauses of just 20 seconds between spins, which is rare for live roulette. For some customers this last factor may look like a drawback: there’s no show or long croupier monologues here, which is often exactly why roulette is chosen in the live format.
The Lightning category is generally chosen for maximum payouts, and the leader by this measure is Power Up Roulette, since this game offers payouts up to 8000×, and with a 97.3% RTP too! With limits from $0.10 to $5,000, the game is also interesting for its five levels of bonus rounds, and a no-multiplier straight-up bet pays not so little — 24:1, for this category of roulette. It’s definitely worth trying for anyone who in gambling seeks not regular payouts but a single solid jackpot.
In multiplier roulettes there are usually no more than five boosted numbers, but here there are six at once, and the bet can be multiplied up to 2088×! The game is also characterised positively by an unexpectedly high RTP of 97.49% (higher than standard European roulette), but with such parameters it’s no surprise that an ordinary no-multiplier straight-up bet pays just 19:1.
For some users roulette is interesting not so much for the thrill or wins as for the unique atmosphere; they’d give anything to get into a real land-based casino, but can only dream of it if there are no such venues nearby. Live-dealer roulette is precisely meant to solve this problem, and it does the job successfully given a quality stream.
At this table you’ll have the full sensation of not playing roulette yourself but watching a gorgeously shot documentary film about it. No wonder: the broadcast runs in HD at 200 frames per second, which lets the director insert slow-motion replays of the winning moment. Filming is also done with several cameras at once, letting you choose the best angle.
While competitors imitate a visit to a land-based casino for customers by streaming from a studio, this title offers a unique experience — to remotely play at the real Dragonara Casino in Malta. Your rivals will be players really present at the Maltese venue at that moment, and you’ll be transported into their company, wherever on Earth you actually are.
Live roulette is comparatively rarely aimed at genuine high rollers — it’s assumed that those with a lot of money can easily drop everything and personally head off to Las Vegas or Monaco. If you have a lot of money but not enough time for gambling travel, VIP Roulette by Evolution comes to the rescue — the limits fluctuate by casino, but overall a maximum of around $20,000 can be expected. As befits VIP customers, you can expect personal service at a separate table. Payouts are typical of classic European roulette.
An example of an unconventional strategic approach in roulette: you win a gold bar in one round and use it to increase the potential multiplier in another, at your own discretion. For live roulette, where various multipliers are generally not very characteristic, this is especially unusual — you can win up to 88× your bet per spin. A small RTP dip is noted — down to 97.1%.
Even the most interesting games can over time start to feel stale and boring, especially when it’s classic roulette known to several generations and objectively worn out. Still, developers aren’t asleep: for your attention, special roulettes with atypical game mechanics that raise the entertainment factor or broaden the choice of possible bets.
A good example of integrating a bonus round into roulette: specific multipliers aren’t fixed for each number but are drawn in a separate bonus game after it becomes clear that the player’s bet has won and is due some bonus. The game’s RTP may fluctuate by venue, but overall it’s below standard — roughly around 97.09%.
Progressive jackpots look like the norm for slots, but for live roulette this is a huge rarity. Playtech’s Mega Fire Blaze Roulette has four progressive jackpots at once — this lets you land a huge prize of up to 10,000×, though such a payout would be entirely unique of its kind. The jackpots are funded by reducing the payouts on a no-bonus straight-up bet — to 29:1, but the RTP is standard at 97.3%.
While in any other roulette version one ball decides the draw, here there are two at once. This lets you win with greater probability, but for the same reason a straight-up win means a payout of just 17:1, and outside bets count as winning only if both balls show your win. But the unique situation where both balls land on the number you called means a cosmic payout of 1300×! Although the rules seem very unusual and complicate quickly calculating the game’s value, the RTP shows the mathematical outcome hasn’t changed, staying at 97.3%.
A niche development that may seem odd to those indifferent to football, but should appeal to fans of the world’s number one sport. Before each bet the player additionally chooses the home or away team, which will also affect the win or loss. While the roulette spins, the action is commentated in the style of a football match.
We’ve already described this game in this article as an example of well-implemented classic live roulette — it falls into the special-features section because of the gold bars that let you potentially activate additional multipliers on future spins. Purely theoretically, thanks to the bars Gold Vault Roulette can deliver a one-time payout of 500,000×, but such a chance comes once in a lifetime at most. Even a single payout of that size, shared across all customers, causes some RTP dip — 97.1%, unlike all the best roulettes in this section with the European-standard 97.3%.
Many players don’t want long pauses between spins: on the contrary, they value their time and want to get through the whole session faster. Even when it comes to live roulette with a real wheel, there’s often no live dealer here — the balls are launched automatically. On average this solution delivers roughly 50–60% higher pace of play.
Effectively a benchmark solution: in speed it’s close to RNG roulette (and available 24/7), in “picture” quality it’s full-blown live. The pace is steady — the ball is launched every 30–35 seconds. Exact limits depend on the policy of the casino where the player tries Auto Roulette, but overall the provider is ready to accept bets from $0.10 to $10,000, which is impressive.
Another fast-roulette modification from the same renowned provider — now with a croupier, but a silent one, able to perform 80 or more spins per hour. The spread of bets remains huge ($0.50–$10,000). This title is worth choosing for strategies that inherently assume a drawn-out session.
For those chasing maximum speed of getting a result in live roulette, this solution looks the most promising: the customer bets on all 12 wheels in the interface, and the win is determined by whichever one stops first. The win chance doesn’t suffer at all from the large number of wheels, but this solution means that counting on the “hot” numbers of one specific wheel is no longer possible.
Most truly top roulettes are live games, but RNG titles have their audience too, and although there are many times more such developments, the public isn’t always scattered among them so much that you can’t single out clear leaders. The random number generator gives a number of advantages:
We’ll also include mini roulettes here — they’re rarely live.
Visually it still resembles roulette, but the maths is fundamentally different: the wheel has only 13 cells (0 and 1–12) instead of 37, and when the ball lands on zero the bet is returned to the player. The “minimalism” also touched the bet range (from $0.10 to $200, which is favourable for economical users) and even the RTP — 96.15%, which is already not very good.
This game’s name fairly accurately describes what the developer considered an advantage: the minimum bet equals 20 pence, which means even a minimum deposit can be stretched over a fairly long session. In fact this is far from a record for minimum bets among RNG roulettes, but it is a benchmark European roulette with a 97.3% RTP and nice graphics.
Although our ranking leaves the player a small distillation of the most successful titles, it’s still hard to get your bearings among them quickly without a clear table.
| Game | Provider | Limits ($) | RTP | Max multiplier | Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lightning Roulette | Evolution | 0.2–50,000 | 97.10% | ×500 | Live |
| XXXtreme Lightning | Evolution | 0.2–1,000 | 97.10% | ×2000 | Live |
| Power Up Roulette | Pragmatic | 0.1–5,000 | 97.30% | ×8000 | Live |
| Lucky 6 Roulette | Pragmatic | 0.1–5,000 | 97.49% | ×2088 | Live |
| Mega Roulette | Pragmatic | 0.2–2,000 | 96.50% | ×500 | Live |
| Quantum Roulette | Playtech | 0.5–500 | 96.10% | ×500 | Live |
| Immersive Roulette | Evolution | 0.1–5,000 | 97.30% | — | Live |
| VIP Roulette | Evolution | 2–20,000 | 97.30% | — | Live |
| Dragonara Roulette | Evolution | 10–50,000 | 97.30% | — | Live |
| Auto Roulette | Evolution | 0.5–10,000 | 97.30% | — | Auto |
| Speed Roulette | Evolution | 2.5–10,000 | 97.30% | — | Auto |
| Instant Roulette | Evolution | 0.2–5,000 | 97.30% | — | Auto |
| Red Door Roulette | Evolution | 0.5–10,000 | 97.09% | ×4000 | Live |
| Double Ball Roulette | Evolution | 0.2–1,000 | 97.30% | ×1300 | Live |
| Mega Fire Blaze | Playtech | 0.5–10,000 | 97.30% | ×10,000 | Live |
| Gold Vault Roulette | Evolution | 1–5,000 | 97.10% | ×88/×500,000 | Live |
| Mini Roulette | Playtech | 0.1–200 | 96.15% | — | RNG |
| 20p Roulette | Inspired | 0.2–5,000 | 97.30% | — | RNG |
If your priority is the highest RTP, then the choice obviously falls on Lucky 6, where the house edge is even lower than in standard European roulette. Those chasing the maximum payout should choose Mega Fire Blaze (×10,000), and if you believe in the gold bar, then Gold Vault Roulette (up to ×500,000). As for the limits (both minimum and maximum), they’re given in the table more as a guide — check them at your favourite casino, because they’ll surely differ across venues. In terms of combining high RTP and interesting multipliers, we’d recommend, above all, Lightning Roulette.
Getting acquainted with previously unfamiliar roulette variants will be carefree if you play free and without registration — for virtual credits. This option is available only for RNG roulettes — if a game has a live dealer, it’s guaranteed to have no demo mode.
For a roulette to be available in demo mode, the following requirements must be met:
Just hover the cursor over the title that caught your eye and click the pop-up “Play for free” so you don’t risk your own bank.
Even if you’re not a beginner at roulette overall, demo mode lets you precisely choose the optimal table at an online casino:
Roulette has existed for many generations, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t changing at all — just look at the game’s varieties with features not native to classic roulette. Today a creative approach to wheel-and-pocket games offers products that remain niche (like three-zero solutions or zodiac signs as another betting option), but their further popularisation isn’t ruled out.
If we don’t peer too far into the future or build fantastical theories, the real current trends in roulette look like this:
So roulette, even if some players find it a little stale, will still surprise the wider public, and in the near future at that.
To further simplify choosing a roulette for a casino visitor, here are step-by-step tips.
Here’s what a player who has barely played roulette before should do:
These three steps will let you get your bearings fully, and after that choose roulette variants depending on the priorities you now clearly recognise.
Standard-rules roulette doesn’t allow payouts bigger than 35:1 — unless the player luckily places two or more bets on a single number. Meanwhile, there are specific roulette variants with multipliers — in them you can win far more, for example:
Huge one-time payouts are funded by all players via reduced regular payouts, so don’t be surprised if the payout for an “ordinary” (no-multiplier) straight-up win can drop as low as 19:1.
The highest RTP is delivered by French roulette with the La Partage and En Prison rules — even-money (1:1) bets will deliver 98.65% RTP in the long run; at the opposite pole sits American roulette, a priori unprofitable with its 94.74% RTP. Among live roulettes Lucky 6 Roulette is of particular interest — its RTP reaches 97.49%, i.e. even higher than standard European rules. A roulette’s stated RTP may be adjusted downward by individual casinos.
Choosing the best roulette game isn't easy — but with as much information as we've put on this page, finding one that suits you isn't all that hard either. To recap: first, make sure the provider is a well-known studio with a public track record. Second, don't forget to check the bet limits offered by each individual game — they'll affect both your budget and the strategies you can run. Third, think about what makes a particular game stand out. Is it a vanilla single-zero wheel, or has the studio added something innovative like multipliers, bonus rounds, or side-bets? It comes down to personal preference, but these three filters will get you to a shortlist quickly.