The Complete Guide to Back-Counting (Wonging)
Back-counting, named after Stanford Wong who documented the technique in Professional Blackjack, is the practice of counting cards while standing behind a blackjack table without playing, then entering the game only when the count reaches a pre-determined positive threshold. The mathematical advantage is significant: by skipping all neutral and negative-count portions of the shoe and playing only positive-count hands, a back-counter can achieve a player edge two to three times higher per hand played than a counter who plays through the entire shoe. A player sitting through every hand might earn 0.6% on all hands including negative-count losers. A back-counter playing only TC +2 or higher hands in the same shoe earns a much higher rate on every hand played because every hand starts at an advantage.

What Back-Counting Is and Why Stanford Wong Popularized It
- Full-shoe counter (plays all hands)~0.6% overall edge
- Back-counter enters at TC +2~1.2–1.5% edge per hand played
- Back-counter enters at TC +3~1.8–2.2% edge per hand played
- Hands played as % of total shoe~30–40% at TC +2 threshold
What Are the Mechanics of Entry and Exit?
Effective back-counting requires smooth, undetectable entry and exit. The entry procedure: stand within sight of the discard tray and the dealt cards, count every hand from behind the table, and when the true count hits your threshold, wait for a shuffle or a natural break in play a player joining mid-shoe or an empty seat opening. Announce your buy-in casually and post your bet as if you have simply been walking past. The less attention your arrival draws, the longer you will be tolerated.
The exit is harder to disguise than the entry. When the count drops to neutral or below, you need to leave the table. Common cover methods: cash out and mention a dinner reservation, step away claiming a phone call, or leave chips at the table saying you will return after a quick walk. Any of these is plausible for a single exit. Repeated sudden departures from the same table build a surveillance profile quickly. Rotate tables and rotate exit excuses across sessions.
Advantages
- Edge per hand played is 2-3x higher than full-shoe counting
- Eliminates all negative-count hand exposure
- Requires no bet spreading you only play when large bets are correct
- Ideal for games with no-mid-shoe entry rule workarounds
Disadvantages
- Many casinos now post no-mid-shoe entry signs at favorable tables
- Standing behind a table counting is obvious to experienced pit staff
- Fewer total hands played lower hourly volume than full-shoe play
- Requires more physical mobility cannot sit for long sessions
What Is No-Mid-Shoe Entry Rules?
The primary casino response to back-counting is the no-mid-shoe entry rule: a posted policy that new players may not join a game in progress and must wait for the next shuffle. This rule is now standard at most favorable 6-deck tables in Las Vegas and Atlantic City. It does not eliminate back-counting entirely a counter can still watch the shoe to decide whether to play the entire next shoe based on historical count patterns, or can target tables where the rule is not enforced but it eliminates the core technique of entering only at positive counts.
Casinos that allow mid-shoe entry are increasingly rare at high-quality games. When you find one, it is a significant opportunity but also a signal that the casino has either not noticed the exploitation or is running a counter-strategy of its own. Proceed with calibrated caution at any favorable table that also permits mid-shoe entry.
Dealer Shows
Your Hand
You enter mid-shoe at TC +4. This is your first hand. Dealer has 5 upcard. Do you double soft 20?
Back-counters sometimes over-deviate on first hands after entry, mistaking a high positive count for a license to double any promising hand. Index plays remain fixed regardless of entry timing. The count is +4, not +7 stand.
How Do You Wong vs. Playing Through: Which Produces More Per Hour?
Wonging produces a higher edge per hand played, but playing through produces more hands per hour. A full-shoe counter at a 6-person table plays 60–80 hands per hour. A back-counter on the same floor might play 30–40 hands per hour (fewer entered shoes, more standing time). The hourly earnings comparison depends on bet size and edge. A back-counter at $100 minimum with 1.8% edge earns $54–72 per hour. A full-shoe counter at $25 minimum with 0.6% edge and 1-to-8 spread earns roughly $40–60 per hour at a different risk profile. In most modern casino environments where favorable tables increasingly enforce no-mid-shoe entry, full-shoe counting with effective camouflage produces more total hours of play and higher lifetime earnings than Wonging, which burns casino goodwill faster.
Rehearse Your Entry and Exit Timing Before the Casino
Back-counting entry and exit must be rehearsed until they are natural and unhurried. Rushed entries or abrupt departures read as mechanical. The put this count to work with real stakes this week platform allows you to practice the full count-entry sequence tracking a shoe from start to positive count threshold, then playing the high-count portion in a real-money setting that creates the actual pressure of commitment without the stakes of a land-based casino. Real money is in play there, so scale your practice bets to amounts you can genuinely afford to lose.
Frequently Asked Questions
Back-counting, also called Wonging, is counting cards while standing behind a table without playing, then entering the game only when the count reaches a positive threshold. It produces a higher edge per hand played by eliminating all negative-count hands from your session.
A no-mid-shoe entry rule requires new players to wait for the next shuffle before joining a game in progress. It is the primary casino defense against back-counting. Most favorable 6-deck tables in major casinos now enforce this rule, significantly limiting the practical application of Wonging.
Wonging produces a higher edge per hand played but fewer hands per hour and faster casino detection. In casinos without no-mid-shoe entry rules, Wonging generates more edge per unit of time. In most modern casinos where the rule is enforced, full-shoe counting with good camouflage produces better lifetime results by extending access to games.
Before you test these plays at a real table, run them through our free blackjack simulator practice unlimited hands at zero cost until every move becomes automatic.
Mathematical Risk Warning
Back-counting's higher edge per hand comes with higher variance per session fewer hands means wider result swings relative to expected value. Bankroll requirements for Wonging are similar to full-shoe play despite the higher edge, because session hand counts are lower and standard deviation per session is proportionally higher.
Blackjack Academy is an educational resource. All strategy is based on mathematical expectation. Always play within your means.

Written by
Mark AnurakProfessional card counter since 2009 · 500,000+ hands logged · Former Macau advantage player. Studied under Thorp, Griffin & Wong methodology. Full bio →
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