Old metal casino chips

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It doesn’t seem like an issue that any government takes all that seriously. I can’t find a single example of a person prosecuted for using a casino chip as legal tender or in place of currency. These days, Federal law prohibits the use of casino chips as “instruments of currency.” In layman’s terms, which means you can’t use a casino chip to pay for a good or service. Old-timers tell stories about gamblers putting chips in the collection plate at their churches on Sunday mornings, with priests and nuns trudging up and down the Strip redeeming them for cash on Monday mornings. Once upon a time, casino chips and other gambling tokens were legal tender in Nevada.

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You can’t use chips as cash – that means no tipping your waitress with casino chips. It’s important to check and make sure you know the values of the various chips at the casino where you gamble since there’s no legal standard or requirement that casinos use a particular color scheme. I know that the Wynn has $3 chips that are a sort of peach color, and I remember seeing chips worth $2.50 (for blackjack play) that were a unique shade of hot pink in different parts of Vegas.

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You’ll sometimes find casinos that use their own color scheme. With some exceptions, the chip colors and values below are standard across the American gambling industry: Chips are color-coded to help dealers and floor staff calculate value at a glance.

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