Quick Answer

Use this page as a pre-heist calculator: estimate the job value, subtract crew cuts, then adjust for first-clear risk. The cheapest crew is not always the best payout choice if they drop money, die, shorten the time window, or make the escape harder.

Payout Planning Formula

StepWhat To CheckWhy It Changes Your Take
1Pick the heist and approachSome approaches put more pressure on driving, combat, or timing
2Mark hacker, driver, and gunman cutsCrew cut is the visible cost before risk
3Add a first-clear risk scoreBlind runs punish weak crew more than replays
4Estimate failure or dropped-loot costLost bags and restarts can erase a cheap crew saving
5Plan where the cash goes nextHeist money is also stock and property capital

Crew Risk Calculator

RoleLow-Risk Pick WhenCheap Pick Is Safer WhenRed Flag
HackerThe heist has a tight store, vault, or pressure timerYou already know the route and can move fastShort windows make the whole job sloppy
DriverEscape route, vehicles, or route knowledge matterThe route is simple or you are replayingWeak vehicles or bad directions cost time
GunmanCombat or bag protection can reduce lossesThe job has low combat pressureDropped loot or death costs more than the cut saved

Heist Planning Table

Heist SituationRecommended Calculator ChoiceNext Step
First Jewel Store JobPay for stability, especially if you do not know the escapeLearn where time and bags are lost before optimizing
Crew training runUse a cheaper member only where the failure cost is manageableTreat the saving as practice value, not guaranteed profit
Big Score planningDo not over-cheap the final money spikeManual save, prep armor/ammo, and compare approach comfort
Replay optimizationTrim crew cost after you understand the routeCompare crew cut against real mistakes from the first run
Post-heist money routeKeep enough cash for stocks and propertiesLink heist gains to assassination timing and property order

First-Clear Checklist

  • Save before locking an approach or crew.
  • Buy armor and ammo for the characters involved.
  • Check whether the job stresses hacking time, driving, gunfights, or all three.
  • Use a reliable crew member where the role can lose bags or force restarts.
  • Save cheap-crew experiments for lower-risk jobs or replays.
  • Keep heist gains available for assassination stocks and high-value property decisions.

FAQ

Should I always choose the cheapest crew?

No. Cheap crew can be good, but only when the route is stable enough that their weakness does not create a bigger loss than their lower cut saves.

Is the calculator for first clears or replays?

Use conservative choices on a first clear. Use the table to trim costs on replays once you know where the heist actually puts pressure on you.

Why did my payout feel lower than expected?

The usual causes are dropped loot, weak crew performance, restarts, or spending money immediately before a better stock or property route.

Should I do stock missions right after heists?

Only the story-required assassination must happen early. For the optional assassination missions, larger late-game capital usually produces better returns.