The whole point of playing craps is that it is the only place in the casino where you can find a bet where the house has no advantage at all. Which is why that particular bet is not indicated on the table.
The house has a slight advantage on a pass line bet (or a don't pass bet), but no advantage on an odds bet. So the rational thing to do is get as many maximum odds bets (or 5X or 10X or whatever your tolerance is) as you can on the table and hope some Vietnamese kid in an oversized throwback jersey hits fifteen numbers in a row.
If you're looking to hang out and not lose too much money you can play anywhere making a minimum pass line bet and hope that the waitress service is reasonably brisk. If you're trying to make money, and the craps table is, in my experience, the only table in the casino where that is reliably possible, you need to play correctly and, crucially, play only at tables that offer 5X odds or, better, 10X odds (or more), and a $5 minimum.
If you play 3-4-5X odds tables you will never, ever win any money. All of the big Strip casinos are 3-4-5, and their minimums are equally ludicrous. There's some shithole across from the Mirage that has always offered good odds, 100X if I'm not mistaken, with a $5 minimum. But you could get lung cancer just standing in there. The Cromwell is now the place on the Strip to play. It's newish and cleanish, high odds and low minimums. It's across from Caesar's.
There are tons of places in downtown that offer good odds but I don't really like to go downtown unless I'm going book shopping. I usually seek out a locals place off the Strip. I played with the I gatchoo bro guy at Green Valley, a place that had moved its odds back to 3-4-5 the last time I was in there. I've done well at the Sunset and the Silverton, too. The Sunset still has good odds as far as I know (and a Gaudi-inspired bar!) but the Silverton is a useless place to gamble anymore. I only go over there to look at the aquariums and obviously to go to Bass Pro Shops.