Aviator is a game of chance. This is a fact that is important to accept from the start: no player, no algorithm can predict at what multiplier the plane will fly off in the next round. Every result is determined by a certified random number generator, and past rounds have no effect on future ones.
So why talk about strategies at all? Because a strategy in Aviator is not a way to predict the crash. It is a way to manage your bankroll, control risk and make decisions based on logic rather than emotion. The difference between a player with a strategy and one without is not who guesses more often, but who stays in the game longer and loses less during a bad run.
How the game’s math works
Aviator’s RTP is 97%. This means that in the long run, for every 100 units wagered, the player receives an average of 97 back. The casino holds a 3% edge — this is mathematically built into the game and no strategy changes it.
The multiplier in each round is generated randomly. Statistically, around 30–40% of rounds end at multipliers below x2.00, but rounds with x50, x100 and above also occur. The key thing to understand is that a series of low multipliers does not mean a high one is coming soon. Each round is an independent event. This is called the independence of random events, and it is precisely why strategies like “I’ll wait for a high one after a series of low ones” do not work.
Strategy 1: Conservative
The idea: cash out at low multipliers — in the range of x1.50–x2.00. The goal is not to win a lot in a single round, but to steadily accumulate small profits through a high frequency of successful withdrawals.
Example over 10 rounds with a bet of 100 units and a target of x1.70:
- 7 successful cash outs × 170 = 1,190 units
- 3 failed rounds × 100 = −300 units
- Total: +190 units on a spend of 1,000
Pros: high win frequency, low stress, good for clearing bonuses.
Cons: slow balance growth; one failed round can wipe out several successful ones at a low multiplier.
Best for: beginners, players with a small bankroll, those who want to play for a long time without big risks.
Strategy 2: Aggressive
The idea: wait for high multipliers — x5.00, x10.00 and above. Bets are kept small, but when it works, the win covers all previous losses many times over.
Example: bet of 50 units, target x10.00. If just one round out of 20 hits the target, you receive 500 units against a total spend of 1,000. That is a loss. But if two rounds out of 20 reach x10.00 — the result is already positive. Everything depends on how often large multipliers appear in a given session.
Pros: potential for a large win, small loss per round.
Cons: long runs without success, high psychological pressure, risk of burning through the bankroll chasing a big multiplier.
Best for: experienced players with a sufficient bankroll who are comfortable with extended losing streaks.
Strategy 3: Double bet
Aviator allows you to place two independent bets in one round. This makes it possible to combine the conservative and aggressive approaches simultaneously.
Example:
- Bet 1: 100 units with auto cash out at x1.70 — insurance
- Bet 2: 30 units waiting for x10.00 — speculative
If the plane flies off at x1.20 — you only lose 30 units on the second bet, as the first one already triggered. If the plane reaches x10.00 — both bets are in profit. In this way the first bet partially shields the second from a total loss.
Pros: a balance between stability and the chance of a larger win in a single round.
Cons: the combined bet per round is higher, which accelerates bankroll drain during a bad run.
Strategy 4: Fixed auto cash out
The idea: set the same target multiplier via the auto cash out function before every round and never change it during play. For example, always x2.00 — regardless of what happened in previous rounds.
The main value of this strategy is psychological. The most common mistake in Aviator: a player sets auto cash out to x2.00, sees the multiplier already at x1.95, disables auto cash out and waits for x5.00 — the plane flies off at x1.97. Fixed auto cash out eliminates this scenario entirely.
Pros: discipline, no emotional decisions, predictable math.
Cons: you miss rounds with large multipliers that could have brought a significant win.
Bankroll management
Regardless of the strategy chosen, bankroll management is the foundation of responsible play. A few basic rules:
- The 1–5% rule. A single bet should not exceed 1–5% of your total balance. With a balance of 1,000 units — the maximum bet is 50 units. This lets you survive a losing streak without losing your entire bankroll.
- Set a loss limit. Decide in advance at what level of losses you stop. For example: lost 30% of the starting balance — end the session.
- Lock in your winnings. If the balance has grown by 50% — withdraw part of it and continue playing with the remainder. That way the win stays a win and does not go back into the game entirely.
- Do not increase bets after a loss. The urge to “win it back” with a doubled bet is the quickest way to lose the entire bankroll.
Common mistakes
- Chasing losses. After a losing streak, a player raises the bet to win back quickly. This leads to even greater losses.
- Disabling auto cash out at the last moment. The most costly mistake. The multiplier has already reached the target, but the player decides to wait a little longer — and the plane flies away.
- Playing without a set limit. Without a clear stop signal, a session continues until the balance is completely depleted.
- Believing in “hot” and “cold” streaks. Aviator has no memory of previous rounds. Ten low multipliers in a row do not increase the probability of a high one in the next round.
- Playing on emotion. After a big win — excitement, after a loss — frustration. In both cases decisions are made irrationally. This is the best moment to take a break.
Conclusion
None of the strategies described here guarantee a win — that is impossible in a game driven by a random number generator. But each one serves a specific purpose: the conservative approach extends play time, the aggressive one offers a shot at a big win, the double bet balances between the two, and fixed auto cash out removes emotion from the equation.
Use demo mode to try each approach without risk. Choose the one that fits your playing style and bankroll size. And always set your limits before the session starts — not during it.
⚠️ Aviator is a gambling game. Play responsibly and only with funds you can afford to lose. The game is intended for players aged 18 and over.
