Table games procedures
Table opening and closing, fills and credits, chip movement, disputes, dealer rotation, game protection notes, pit supervision, and shift handover.
Clear SOPs, checklists, forms, logs, and manual structures for land-based casino departments that need stronger control, cleaner handovers, better training, and more consistent follow-up.
A casino procedure is useful only when people can follow it during a real shift, under real pressure, with clear ownership and records.
Casino procedures protect cash, chips, machines, guests, staff, licenses, and management decisions. They also protect the casino when something goes wrong and everyone needs to know what was done, who approved it, and where the record is kept.
Many manuals fail because they are too generic. They describe the task, but not the control. They name the department, but not the person responsible. They say “record the issue,” but do not explain which log, which evidence, which review, and which escalation path should be used.
SOP support helps turn casino knowledge into practical written procedures, checklists, forms, logs, and review structures that managers can approve and staff can use.
Give your casino clearer procedures, stronger control points, and practical documents that support daily operation, training, audit review, and management follow-up.
Most SOP problems are not only writing problems. They are control problems, training problems, handover problems, and audit problems.
Many casinos have procedures that were written years ago, copied from another property, or updated only after something went wrong.
A task may be performed every day, but the reason for the step, the approval point, and the record trail may not be clear enough.
A cage variance, table dispute, jackpot issue, incident, or surveillance review can look different depending on who writes the report.
Supervisors and department heads should not have to rebuild the same instructions, checklists, and handover notes every week.
A procedure should show who performs the task, who checks it, who approves it, who records it, and who escalates the exception.
A thick policy book is not enough. Casino staff need clear steps, forms, logs, and quick references that fit the real work.
Procedures should match the department, the risk, the record trail, and the staff who will actually use them.
Table opening and closing, fills and credits, chip movement, disputes, dealer rotation, game protection notes, pit supervision, and shift handover.
Cashier banks, chip redemption, ticket redemption, jackpots, variances, front money, markers, approvals, escorts, and dual-control tasks.
Machine access, hand pays, hopper fills, ticket issues, jackpot verification, floor inspections, machine moves, out-of-service notes, and technical escalation.
Incident review, camera checks, video export, evidence handling, chain of custody, retention, room access, monitoring notes, and report consistency.
Guest issues, removals, escorts, emergency response, staff safety, report writing, handover notes, and coordination with surveillance and management.
Policy review, AML support documents, responsible gambling steps, approval matrices, audit checklists, escalation lines, and management sign-off.
AI is useful for structure, clarity, consistency, and draft preparation. Final approval still belongs to experienced casino managers and compliance owners.
A good SOP project should create documents that help the department operate, train, review, and prove that the control was followed.
The work can start with one department, one control area, one procedure set, or one manual cleanup. It does not need to begin with a full property-wide manual.
A practical SOP deliverable may include the written procedure, related forms, control points, staff checklists, supervisor notes, audit questions, and a version that managers can use for training or review.
Start with one focused department package before committing to a full casino manual. Each package has a clear scope, practical management value, and deliverables that can be reviewed, approved, and expanded across the operation.
Cashier banks, chip redemption, ticket redemption, jackpots, variances, escorts, dual control, approvals, and shift handover.
Table opening, dealer procedures, fills and credits, chip movement, disputes, game protection notes, and pit supervision.
Room access, monitoring duties, incident review, video export, retention, evidence handling, camera failure, and chain of custody.
Hand pays, machine access, ticket problems, jackpot verification, technical call-outs, floor checks, and out-of-service controls.
Daily review, handovers, open issues, incident escalation, department coordination, manager approvals, and end-of-shift summaries.
A practical checklist set linked to the procedures, so managers can review whether the control is actually being followed.
The safest first step is to choose one clear area, understand how the work is really done, then write the procedure around roles, records, approvals, and exceptions.
Start with one area: cage, tables, slots, surveillance, security, compliance, shift management, or another department with a clear control need.
Use existing procedures, forms, reports, sample checklists, department notes, and manager explanations to understand what happens in practice.
Define the purpose, steps, roles, approvals, records, exceptions, escalation points, and related forms before writing the final version.
The final SOP should be clear enough for staff, strong enough for managers, and structured enough for audit or training use.
A focused SOP package gives casino management a visible deliverable: a clearer procedure, stronger checklist, better record trail, or cleaner manual section.
A broad AI project can feel hard to approve because the result is unclear. A focused SOP project is different. The casino knows which department is being covered, what documents will be produced, and how management will review the work.
That makes the first step practical. The casino can start with cage controls, table games procedures, surveillance incident review, slots jackpot procedures, or shift handover documents before expanding to a wider manual.
The result is not a promise about AI. It is a useful operating document that the casino can check, edit, approve, and put into use.
The service is for casinos that want practical procedures written around the way departments actually work.
Use this section to choose the department where clearer procedures, forms, logs, or checklist support would create the most value first.
authority levels, daily control, crisis response, regulatory communication, approvals, and department accountability
View policy and procedure list → 02floor opening, shift control, guest disputes, escalation, floor supervision, and gaming-floor coordination
View policy and procedure list → 03table opening and closing, dealer procedures, fills and credits, chip movement, disputes, game protection, and pit supervision
View policy and procedure list → 04slot floor control, TITO, jackpots, abandoned credits, machine status, handpays, and player assistance
View policy and procedure list → 05seat control, buy-ins, rake, tournaments, dealer rotation, player conduct, and poker disputes
View policy and procedure list → 06bet acceptance, voids, payouts, limits, suspicious betting, event settlement, and system exceptions
View policy and procedure list → 07ticket sales, draws, results, prize claims, cancellations, system failure, and reconciliation
View policy and procedure list → 08cashier banks, chip redemption, ticket redemption, jackpots, foreign exchange, variances, escorts, and dual control
View policy and procedure list → 09chip inventory, fills, credits, high-denomination chips, counterfeit chips, storage, and destruction controls
View policy and procedure list → 10credit applications, marker issue and redemption, credit limits, collections, approvals, and AML review
View policy and procedure list → 11bulk cash, bank deposits, cash orders, vault access, cash transfers, treasury reconciliation, and dual control
View policy and procedure list → 12drop box receipt, count-room access, currency count, ticket count, table revenue count, variances, and cash transfer
View policy and procedure list → 13coin or token count, machine bucket control, seal verification, equipment issues, and count reconciliation
View policy and procedure list → 14table drop, slot cash box removal, bill validator boxes, box transfer, keys, escorts, and missed-box exceptions
View policy and procedure list → 15jackpot verification, handpay approvals, ID checks, tax forms, progressive jackpot checks, disputes, and excluded-player wins
View policy and procedure list → 16room access, monitoring, video review, incident timelines, evidence export, retention, camera failure, and chain of custody
View policy and procedure list → 17entrance control, ID checks, patrols, ejections, cash escorts, incident response, exclusions, emergency response, and lost property
View policy and procedure list → 18license conditions, regulatory reporting, inspections, internal control changes, breach escalation, and record retention
View policy and procedure list → 19customer due diligence, transaction monitoring, suspicious activity, sanctions screening, high-risk players, and case files
View policy and procedure list → 20self-exclusion, staff intervention, vulnerable-player escalation, marketing suppression, breach handling, and reinstatement
View policy and procedure list → 21risk-based audits, surprise checks, control testing, findings, corrective actions, and evidence retention
View policy and procedure list → 22table revenue, slot revenue, cage transactions, jackpot audit, TITO, fills and credits, exceptions, and tax support
View policy and procedure list → 23daily postings, bank reconciliation, payroll, accounts payable, tax reporting, budgeting, financial close, and audit support
View policy and procedure list → 24helpdesk, user access, cybersecurity, backups, patching, change control, vendor access, and system incidents
View policy and procedure list → 25slot system, TITO, player tracking, table ratings, jackpot settings, free play setup, access rights, and outages
View policy and procedure list → 26machine access, logic area control, RAM clear, repairs, conversions, software verification, meters, and progressive setup
View policy and procedure list → 27campaigns, promotions, prize draws, free play, advertising approvals, offer rules, and excluded-player suppression
View policy and procedure list → 28host assignment, VIP contact, comp approvals, trips, loss rebates, player follow-up, and AML/RG escalation
View policy and procedure list → 29member registration, ID checks, duplicate accounts, card replacement, points, redemptions, adjustments, and privacy requests
View policy and procedure list → 30guest inquiries, complaints, service recovery, event registration, lost cards, lost property support, and escalation
View policy and procedure list → 31recruitment, onboarding, licensing, conduct, discipline, attendance, leave, employee files, and staff gambling controls
View policy and procedure list → 32role training, dealer training, cage training, compliance training, testing, refresher training, and training records
View policy and procedure list → 33work orders, preventive maintenance, contractors, power, HVAC, fire systems, emergency repairs, and hazards
View policy and procedure list → 34casino-floor cleaning, restrooms, spills, biohazards, waste, chemicals, broken glass, and public-area presentation
View policy and procedure list → 35bar and restaurant opening, alcohol service, age checks, intoxication, food safety, stock control, POS, comps, and voids
View policy and procedure list → 36purchase requests, POs, vendor approval, quote comparison, emergency purchases, contracts, and controlled casino supplies
View policy and procedure list → 37receiving, stock issue, restricted inventory, gaming supplies, uniforms, F&B stock, counts, adjustments, and disposal
View policy and procedure list → 38contracts, claims, litigation holds, guest injuries, evidence preservation, risk register, insurance claims, and legal referrals
View policy and procedure list → 39accidents, hazards, first aid, evacuation, fire drills, emergency communication, crowd control, and post-incident review
View policy and procedure list → 40check-in, reservations, casino comp rooms, VIP arrivals, night audit, room disputes, guest privacy, and security referrals
View policy and procedure list → 41event planning, prize control, ticketing, security staffing, crowd flow, promotion rules, and event incident response
View policy and procedure list → 42parking patrol, valet keys, vehicle damage, shuttle checks, traffic flow, exterior incidents, and accident response
View policy and procedure list → 43daily dashboards, performance reports, report distribution, data access, data correction, AI controls, and privacy protection
View policy and procedure list →SOP work often connects naturally with analytics, department AI planning, custom apps, and staff-support tools.
Map where AI can support one department before expanding into a wider implementation program.
→Turn casino reports and KPIs into clearer management summaries and follow-up questions.
→Create focused internal tools for checklists, handovers, trackers, forms, and repeated management tasks.
→The work can begin with one department, one procedure set, or one control problem before expanding to a larger manual.
A casino SOP is a written procedure that explains how a task should be performed, checked, approved, recorded, and escalated. A useful SOP is practical enough for staff and clear enough for management review.
Yes. One department is usually the best way to start. A cage package, table games package, surveillance package, slots package, or shift manager package gives the casino a clear deliverable before expanding.
Yes. Existing procedures can be cleaned, restructured, clarified, and turned into a stronger manual with better headings, steps, responsibilities, forms, and control points.
No. Casino management, compliance, legal advisers, and local regulatory requirements must still review and approve the final procedure. The service supports writing and operational structure.
Yes. A procedure is often stronger when it includes the forms, logs, checklists, approval notes, and review points that staff will actually use.
A strong first project is one controlled department package, such as cage cash controls, table games fills and credits, surveillance incident review, slots jackpot procedures, or shift manager handover procedures.
Choose one department, one control point, one checklist, or one manual section. Build a practical SOP package your managers can review before expanding.
Send me the department, the report, or the workflow that keeps creating friction. I will tell you where AI can help safely — and where it should stay away.