A Coin Flip and Dice Roll in One Tab
This is a free online coin flip and dice roller that lives entirely in your browser. Toggle between the two-sided gold coin and the classic six-sided red die, tap once, and let chance decide. It's built for the dozens of small moments where you just need a fair, instant yes or no — who pays for lunch, which team kicks off, what number your token moves — without digging a real coin out of your pocket or hunting for the dice that fell behind the couch.
How to Play
The two tabs at the top switch between the games. Each remembers its own running tally for the session:
- Flip the coin — tap the coin itself or the gold Flip It! button. It spins for a moment, then settles on a big HEADS or TAILS with an even 50/50 chance.
- Roll the die — tap the red die or the Roll It! button. It shakes, then shows a number from 1 to 6, each equally likely.
- Read your stats — the coin tracks total heads, flips, and tails with a live percentage bar; the die tracks total rolls, your last value, and your streak.
- Watch for streaks — land the same side or number twice or more in a row and a badge pops up counting your run.
- Reset anytime — the Reset button clears that game's totals so you can start a fresh count.
Tips for Getting the Most Out of It
- Decide the meaning before you flip. Call which option is heads and which is tails out loud first — that way the result is binding and nobody argues afterward.
- Use the percentage bar as a fairness check. Over many flips the heads and tails percentages drift toward 50/50. A wild streak early on is normal; it evens out the more you play.
- Map the die to more than two choices. Have six people? Assign each a number. Need a one-to-three pick? Treat 4, 5, and 6 as re-rolls.
- Chase a streak for fun. Try to beat your longest run of the same result — it turns a simple flip into a quick game of its own.
In the mood for something with a little more action afterward? Try our Flappy Fish game, or browse all Tooldit games.
When People Reach for It
- Settling a tie at home — heads does the dishes, tails takes out the trash, and the debate ends in one tap.
- Family game night rescue — a board game is missing its die, so the roller fills in without slowing down the table.
- Classroom probability lessons — teachers flip dozens of times and use the live percentage bar to show how randomness trends toward 50/50.
- Picking who goes first — at trivia, sports, or a meeting, a neutral coin toss decides the order with no hard feelings.
Frequently Asked Questions
+Is the coin flip and dice roll really fair?
Yes. Both the coin and the dice use your browser's built-in random number generator. The coin lands heads or tails with an even 50/50 chance, and the die returns 1 through 6 with equal odds. The spinning and shaking you see is just animation — the outcome is locked in the moment you tap, so a long streak of the same result is pure luck, not a glitch.
+What do the heads, tails, streak, and percentage numbers mean?
Every flip and roll is tallied for your current session. On the coin tab you see total heads, total flips, and total tails, plus a live percentage bar once you have at least two flips. On the dice tab you see total rolls, your last result, and your current streak. A streak counts how many times in a row the same side or number came up, and a fire badge appears at two or more in a row.
+Does this coin flip tool work offline and on my phone?
Yes. Everything runs inside your browser with no server calls, so once the page has loaded it keeps working even if your connection drops. The layout is built for touch — tap the coin or die, or use the big Flip It and Roll It buttons — and it works on iPhone Safari, Android Chrome, tablets, and desktop alike.
+How do I reset my heads-and-tails count?
Tap the Reset button that appears next to Flip It or Roll It after your first result. It clears the session totals, the streak, and the percentage bar so you can start a fresh tally. Switching between the Coin Flip and Dice Roll tabs keeps each game's own running count.
+Can I use this to settle a decision or pick a random number?
Absolutely. Assign one choice to heads and the other to tails, then flip once. For more than two options, roll the die and map each number to a choice, or roll repeatedly for board-game style turns. Because the result is unbiased, it is a genuinely neutral way to break a tie or pick who goes first.