In this form of Baccarat rather than paying 5% for every Bank win, you receive full value on all wagers, but receive only 50% on any Bank 6 win. Essentially, it comes down to how often Bank wins on 6, as far as calculating the house edge. The house edge, over all, comes in virtually the same for Banker as it does on regular Baccarat, but the analysis doesn't really stop there.

Besides the house edge, a player needs to consider whether at the end of the day, the money he pays for "commission" (Bank 6 wins) will be greater at this version of Baccarat, than at a regular table. What it comes down to, is how high the player's wagers are at that table. If he's just playing 100 - 300, at a minimum 100 table, probably in the end there isn't much difference as far as net winnings between a commissionless and regular Baccarat table. Win the occasional hundred or couple hundred dollar win, no big deal, you've given the house a hundred or so dollars. Win a $20,000. win, now the house has ten THOUSAND of your dollars, and unless you're constantly playing ten or twenty thousand a hand, there's no way the casino would have snagged that much from, at the usual 5% per banker win.

My rule of thumb is that if I'm intending on playing big, I play only the regular Baccarat tables. If not so big or small, I don't mind playing commissionless Bacc.