Coin Flip
Flip a fair coin with one tap. When you can’t decide, toss the coin in the air and let chance settle it.
The result is decided in your browser with cryptographic randomness — 50% heads, 50% tails.
Other Draw & Raffle Tools
Flip a coin online — fast and fair
For any moment you can’t decide: toss the coin with one tap and let chance choose. Online Coin Flip gives a real coin-toss feel with a 3D spinning-coin animation and a flip sound. The result is produced with cryptographic randomness — exactly fifty-fifty, 50% heads and 50% tails.
Where can you use it?
Every moment you need a quick, fair decision between two options:
- Sports kick-off decisions: Five-a-side football, cricket toss, rugby side selection — a digital coin when there's none in your pocket.
- Two-option decisions: Cinema or takeaway? Curry or fish and chips? Red or blue car?
- Household disputes: "Who does the washing up?", "Who takes the bins out?", "Whose turn to drive?" — settle it fairly.
- Board game starts: Who goes first at Cluedo, Monopoly, Scrabble or Ludo.
- Meeting and presentation order: Who presents first, who takes notes, who leads the client call.
- Kids' games: Who bats first, who's it in tag, who picks the film tonight.
A short history of coin flipping
Coin flipping is one of the oldest known decision-making methods. In Ancient Rome the game was called "capita et navia" ("heads and ships") — bronze coins featured an emperor’s head on one side and a ship’s prow on the other. In medieval Europe it was known as "cross and pile". Modern sports adopted it too: the coin toss has long decided which team picks the side of the field in football, cricket and tennis matches. In American football, the coin toss is the ceremonial opening of every game. We’ve brought this centuries-old tradition to your screen.
Frequently asked questions
Is the result really fifty-fifty?
Yes. Each flip is decided by your browser’s cryptographic random number generator; heads and tails are exactly equally likely. Previous flips don’t affect the next.
What do heads and tails represent?
The two sides of the coin: “Heads” is usually the portrait/emblem side and “Tails” the side showing the value. Whichever side comes up is shown in large letters on screen.
How many times can I flip? Is there a counter?
As many times as you like. The counter under the coin shows how many heads and tails came up in this session.
Does it work on mobile?
Yes. It works on phones, tablets and computers; flip the coin with the button or by tapping directly on it.
Is the result really fair, exactly 50-50?
Yes. Each flip is decided by your browser’s Web Crypto API cryptographic random number generator. Previous flips do not influence the next; every result is independently 50% heads, 50% tails.
Are my results or game activity stored?
No. Results and game state stay in your browser and are not sent to or permanently stored on a server. Refreshing or closing the page resets the session.
Does it take up storage on my device?
No, it takes up no storage at all. Online Kura is not a downloaded app; it runs entirely in your browser and nothing is installed on your phone or computer. If you like, you can add it to your home screen and use it like an app — with none of the storage.
How do I add Online Kura to my phone’s home screen?
iPhone (Safari): open the page, tap the Share icon and choose “Add to Home Screen”. Android (Chrome): open the three-dot menu at the top right and tap “Add to Home screen” (or “Install app”). Then you can open Online Kura like an app with one tap.