DOUBLE DOUBLE BONUS PAYOUT TABLE EXPLAINED: 9/6 VS 8/5 AND MORE

By Pure Video Poker • Payout Analysis • March 12, 2026

Double Double Bonus (DDB) is one of the most popular video poker games because of its massive kicker bonuses — Four Aces with a low kicker pays 400-for-1, which is the biggest standard payout outside of a Royal Flush. But DDB also has one of the steepest penalties for playing on a short-pay machine, and the Two Pair paying only even money makes it far more volatile than Jacks or Better.

How the Kicker Bonuses Work

DDB splits Four of a Kind into multiple payout tiers based on the rank of the quads and the fifth card (the "kicker"):

Four of a KindWith Kicker (A/2/3/4)Without Kicker
Four Aces400-for-1160-for-1
Four 2s, 3s, or 4s160-for-180-for-1
Four 5s through Kings50-for-150-for-1

The kicker bonuses are what make DDB exciting — and volatile. Hitting Four Aces with a 2, 3, or 4 on a max-bet quarter machine pays $500. But because Two Pair only pays 1-for-1 instead of the 2-for-1 you get in JoB, you'll burn through your bankroll faster between big hits.

Pay Table Comparison (Per Coin, Max Bet)

Hand10/69/68/57/56/5
Royal Flush800800800800800
Straight Flush5050505050
Four Aces + 2/3/4400400400400400
Four 2s-4s + A/2/3/4160160160160160
Four Aces160160160160160
Four 2s-4s8080808080
Four 5s-Ks5050505050
Full House109876
Flush66555
Straight44444
Three of a Kind33333
Two Pair11111
Jacks or Better11111
RTP100.07%98.98%96.79%95.71%94.66%

The 10/6 version is extremely rare — it actually gives players a small edge over the house. The standard "full pay" that most players hunt for is the 9/6 at 98.98%.

Hourly Cost by Pay Table

At $0.25 denomination (5-coin max bet = $1.25/hand), 600 hands per hour:

Pay TableRTPHouse EdgeHourly Cost
10/6100.07%-0.07%+$0.53 (player edge)
9/698.98%1.02%$7.65
8/596.79%3.21%$24.08
7/595.71%4.29%$32.18
6/594.66%5.34%$40.05

The jump from 9/6 to 8/5 costs you an extra $16.43 per hour at quarters. At dollar denomination, that gap becomes $65.70 per hour.

Why DDB Is More Volatile Than JoB

Two Pair is the most common paying hand in video poker — you'll hit it roughly once every five hands. In JoB, Two Pair pays 2-for-1, giving you a steady stream of returns. In DDB, Two Pair pays only 1-for-1 (even money), so you're just getting your bet back.

This means DDB players need a larger bankroll to survive the gaps between Four of a Kind hits. A reasonable session bankroll for 9/6 DDB is 400 to 500 max bets, about double what you'd need for 9/6 Jacks or Better.

Strategy Differences from Jacks or Better

DDB strategy involves holds that would be wrong in JoB. The kicker bonuses change the math:

Using JoB strategy on a DDB machine costs you about 0.3% in return. Always use the correct strategy for the game you're playing.

Bottom Line

DDB rewards players who hit the kicker bonuses, but it punishes everyone else harder than most games. Find a 9/6 machine (or the unicorn 10/6), use DDB-specific strategy, and bring a bankroll that can handle the swings.

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