Classic heads or tails
The familiar fifty-fifty decision. Tap the coin, press the button or use the space bar for a quick heads or tails result.
cointoss.uk
Automatic uses your country when available and stores your choice locally.
Press Space to flip. The flip runs in your browser.
A simple coin toss for football, cricket and everyday decisions.
These counters stay with you. You get a running total, per-coin counts and a short log of recent flips.
Use the classic flip, settle a best of three, enter your own choices or run a sports toss.
The familiar fifty-fifty decision. Tap the coin, press the button or use the space bar for a quick heads or tails result.
Three automatic flips with a clear winner. Useful when one toss feels too abrupt and you want a stronger tie-break.
Replace heads and tails with any two options: tea or coffee, pub or home, call or text, the choice is yours.
Choose kick-off or ends before a match, training session or five-a-side game.
Decide who bats or bowls first without needing a physical coin nearby or a separate toss app.
Heads or tails has a long history as a simple way to settle a choice fairly. It still shows up in the UK, especially in sport, where a coin toss can decide who starts first.
In Britain, tossing a coin has been used for generations to break ties, choose sides and settle small disputes. The tradition is familiar in football, cricket and pub debates.
Different places often prefer different coins. People in the United States may use a quarter, Canadians a loonie, and many users in Europe, Australia and New Zealand choose their local currency when they flip a coin online.
Today, an online coin toss gives the same quick result without needing cash in your pocket. That makes it useful for split decisions, sports calls, classroom activities and anyone looking for a fast random coin flip on desktop or mobile.
Here at Cointoss, we recognise that tossing coins—specifically monetary coins—could be a dying art. It's fun, it's an easy way to remedy a dispute or settle a score, and it's completely random. It puts something up to chance. That was a way to imply randomness and fairness before we ever had computers guessing or telling us what's random, or how something must be distributed.
The reality is that as we progress into a digital economy, even paper money may one day disappear in lieu of digital currencies. We'll keep the art alive, offering the simple ability to toss a coin in the virtual ether and get results.
Yes. Each result is created in your browser using crypto.getRandomValues(), which provides stronger randomness than the usual Math.random(). The animation follows the result; it does not choose it.
Each new toss is independent. A run of heads does not make tails “due”.
Only session totals and preferences are stored locally on your device. They are not sent to a server.
Yes. Choose the dedicated mode above. For organised competition, follow the rules of the relevant governing body.
Yes. Select Custom and type any two short options. The tool updates the coin and session statistics automatically.
Yes. The site can use a country code from the host as a default coin set, and you can override it with the selector. The preference is stored locally in your browser.
No money, prizes or wagers are handled here. It is just a straight coin toss page.