Texas holdem is by far the most popular form of poker played
in the world today. You can see it played on television, online,
in poker rooms, and in most casinos. You can even find home
games in almost any city if you know who to ask or where to
look.
What hands are rank highest in Poker. ABOUT CARDPLAYER, THE POKER AUTHORITY CardPlayer.com is the world's oldest and most well respected poker magazine and online poker guide.Since 1988. Importance of Poker Hand Rankings. You can’t play Texas Hold’em poker online, real money or otherwise, without any hand rankings in the game. These rankings separate the winners from the losers. The stronger your hand is, the better chance you have of winning. Note that we’re dealing specifically with Texas Hold’em in this guide.
But how do you get started playing if you’ve never played
before?
We’ve designed this Texas holdem basics page just like a
Texas holdem 101 guide. By reading the sections on this page we
walk you step by step through the options and rules for holdem
and give you some simple tips so you can get started playing
right away.
Read all the way through the page from top to bottom and then
come back and go over the sections where you need more help.
Once you master everything here you can start learning more in
our strategy section.
But don’t get ahead of yourself and try to take in too much
at one time. Learn the basics first and then start trying to
improve your game slowly.
The Deck
Texas holdem uses a standard deck of 52 playing cards. The
deck has four suits of 13 cards each. The four suits are spades,
hearts, clubs, and diamonds.
The cards in each of the four suits are ace, king, queen,
jack, 10, nine, eight, seven, six, five, four, three, and two.
Aces can be used as a high card above the king or a low card
below a two. Otherwise, the rank of cards from high to low is as
they’re listed above from ace down to two. None of the four
suits have a higher rank than the others.
Rank of Hands
The rank of hands used in Texas holdem is the same as many
traditional card games. The highest possible hand is a royal
flush and the lowest possible hand is two, three, four, five,
seven of at least two different suits.
Here’s a list of the different possible Texas holdem hands
from highest to lowest. To see who has the best hand, start from
the top of the list and work down towards the bottom. The first
hand you see on the list is the better hand.
- Royal Flush
Ace, king, queen, jack, 10 all of the same suit.
- Straight Flush
Five cards in sequential order all of the same suit but
not ace high. - Four of a Kind
Four cards of the same rank, like four sevens or four
jacks. - Full House
Three cards of the same rank and two cards of a different
rank. For example, three queens and two nines is a full house of
queens over nines. - Flush
A flush is any five cards, all of the same suit. When two or more
players have a flush the one with the highest card wins. If they
have the same highest card the next highest card wins. This is
continued until one player has a higher card than the others. If
all five cards are of the same rank the pot is split. - Straight
Five cards in sequential order of at least two different suits.
The ace can be used to form a high straight or a low one. Ace,
king, queen, jack, 10 is a straight as well as five, four,
three, two, ace. - Three of a Kind
Three of a kind is three cards of the same rank, such as
three twos or three aces. - Two Pair
Two cards of the same rank and two other cards of the same rank.
- One Pair
A pair is two cards of the same rank like two fives or two
kings. - High Card
If your five card hand doesn’t make any of the hands listed
above you have a high card hand, designate by the highest card
in your hand. If the highest card in your hand is a queen and
you don’t have a higher ranked hand as listed above, you have a
queen high hand.
If two or more hands tie the pot is split between the winning
hands. But a tie must be five identical cards. When two players
have the same two, three, or four card best hand they use the
remaining cards to determine who wins. This is called a kicker.
One player has a pair of kings, a pair of eights, and an ace
and the other player has a pair of kings, a pair of eights, and
a seven. Both players have the same two pair, but their fifth
card is different. The player with the ace as the fifth card
wins the hand because the ace is higher than the seven.
If two or more players each have a pair, the highest pair
wins. The higher cards win if the hands are otherwise the same.
In a full house, the higher three of a kind rank wins.
Limit – No Limit – Pot Limit
Texas holdem is offered in limit, no limit, and pot limit
varieties or limits. This deals with the amount players may bet
on each round of play. Otherwise, the games are played the same
way using the same set of rules and regulations.
Limit
Limit Texas holdem has a strict betting amount that is used
on each round. Before and on the flop players have to make bets
and raises of a set amount and on the turn and river they must
use another set amount. The second amount is almost always twice
the early amount.
The betting limits are expressed as two numbers divide by a
slash. 3 / 6 means the early betting limit is $3 and the last
two rounds use $6 increments.
No Limit
No limit uses a minimum betting limit on each round, but the
maximum amount a player may bet is only limited to the amount
they have in front of them. A player may bet any amount up to
and including their entire stack on any betting round of no
limit Texas holdem.
Pot Limit
Pot limit is the least popular form of Texas holdem and is
rarely played in land based play. In pot limit play you can bet
any amount up to and including the amount in the pot. This is
usually pretty straightforward, but in the case where a player
bets and you want to raise, you add the amount it takes to call
to the pot before determining the amount you can raise.
This doesn’t mean you take action in two steps. You only make
one bet, but you add the amount required to call mentally to
determine the total amount of the bet you can make.
If the pot has $60 in it and an opponent bets $20. The new
amount in the pot is $80. If you want to raise the maximum
amount you add $20 to the amount in the pot in your head to get
a total pot of $100. So you can raise up to $100. If you want to
raise the maximum amount you place $120 in the pot. This is $20
for the call and a raise of $100.
Don’t worry if this seems a bit confusing. You probably won’t
ever have to play pot limit Texas holdem and if you do, the
dealer can help you until you get the hang of it. If you play
online the software takes care of everything so you don’t have
to worry about it.
Other poker games, like Omaha and 7 Card Stud are more likely
to be played in pot limit than holdem.
Tournaments or Ring Games
Texas holdem is played in ring or cash game format and
tournament formats. A ring game doesn’t have a set procedure for
ending and players come and go. You can join a ring game at any
time as long as there’s an open seat and you have the money. You
can also leave at any time by picking up your chips and leaving
the table.
Tournaments have a set starting point and play down until
only one player remains. You can find numerous tournament
variations and they can all be played in any of the limit
formats listed in the last section. But most Texas holdem
tournaments boil down to either single table or multi table
events.
- Single Table Tournaments
A single table tournament, usually called a sit and go, has
10, nine, or six players most of the time with the top three or
two players finishing in the money. - Multi Table Tournaments
A multi table tournament can have up to thousands of entrants
and the pay outs are based on the tournament structure.
Before the Deal
The process of events before a hand is dealt depends somewhat
on what has just happened. If a new game or a new tournament is
being started the dealer does one set of things and if a hand
just ended the dealer follows a different set of procedures.
The dealer is the person dealing the cards. In a casino or
poker room an employee of the house deals the cards and does not
play in the game. In a home game many times the players deal the
cards. When you play online the computer software the poker room
uses takes care of dealing the cards.
In a normal Texas holdem game one of the players is also
called the dealer. The dealer position is also called the
button, based on a white disc with the word dealer on it that
gets passed around the table after each hand.
The player who has the dealer button in front of them gets to
act last on each betting round in a Texas holdem game except the
first one.
In the case of a new game or tournament starting the dealer
shuffles the cards and then deals a card face up to each of the
players at the table. The player who receives the highest card
is awarded the dealer button for the first hand. The first
player to the left of the dealer button then must place a forced
bet called the small blind and the next player to the left is
forced to place a big blind bet.
- About The Blinds
The small blind is usually half the big blind and the big
blind is usually the same as the smaller amount in a limit game.
So a 50 / 100 limit game has a small blind of 25 and a big blind
of 50. In a no limit or pot limit game the blind levels are set
by the house. In a tournament the blinds are determined by a
schedule that has the blinds increase at set times.
In the next hand of a continuing game or tournament the
dealer makes sure the dealer button is passed one place to the
left and that the new blinds have placed their forced bets. The
dealer can also make change or help a new player buy into the
game.
The dealer shuffles the cards or places the deck in an
automatic shuffling machine while getting a freshly shuffle deck
from the machine. Once the blind bets are placed and the dealer
has a shuffled deck of cards the deal is ready to start.
The Deal
The dealer deals one card at a time face down to each player
around the table from left to right starting with the player in
the small blind. This continues until each player has received
two face down cards. These are called the player’s hole cards.
Once each player has their hole cards the player to the
immediate left of the big blind acts first and must fold by
passing their cards to the dealer face down, call the big blind
by placing a bet equal to the big blind into the pot, or raise.
The possible amounts of a raise are based on the limits that we
discussed in an earlier section.
Once the first player to the left of the big blind acts, the
next player to the left acts by folding, calling the previous
bet, or making a raise. Play continues to the left with each
player making the same decisions until play reaches the small
blind.
The small blind may fold, complete the amount of their bet to
equal the current bet, or raise. In a pot that hasn’t been
raised the small blind can put enough into the pot to equal the
big blind, or another half bet. Once the small blind has acted
the big blind can check in a pot that hasn’t been raised, call a
bet in a raised pot, fold in a raised pot, or raise.
Play continues to the left until each player has folded or
called the most recent bet. If everyone folds except one player
that player is awarded the pot. This is true at any time during
a hand.
Remember in a limit Texas holdem game the bets before the
flop and on the flop are at the lower betting limit. All raises
are restricted to the amount of the lower betting limit.
The Flop
Once all of the beginning of the hand betting has been
completed the dealer takes the top card of the deck of un-dealt
cards and places it face down in the discard pile without anyone
seeing the value. This is called burning a card and the purpose
is to help prevent cheating.
If the cards were to be marked in some way a player still
wouldn’t be able to see the value of the next card to be dealt
because of the burn card not being discarded until the next card
was being played.
The next three cards are turned face up in the center of the
table. These cards are called the flop and they’re the first of
five total community cards that will be in the middle of the
table face up at the end of the hand. Players combine their two
hole cards with the five community cards to make the best
possible five card poker hand.
Once the flop cards are displayed the first remaining player
to the left of the button position is the first to act. This
player may bet or check. Play then moves to the left. Each
player may check if a bet hasn’t been made, call if a bet has
been made, or raise. This process continues to the left until
each player has checked, folded, or called the last bet.
The Turn or Fourth Street
In limit Texas holdem all bets on the turn and river are the
upper betting amount. In a 10 / 20 game all bets and raises on
the turn and river are at the 20 level.
At the beginning of the turn the dealer burns the top card
again and places one additional card face up in the center of
the table with the other community cards.
The play then starts with the first player left in the hand
to the left of the dealer button. This player may check or bet.
Play continues to the left just like on the flop and continues
until each player has checked, folded, or has called the most
recent wager.
The River or Fifth Street
On the river the dealer burns a final card and places the
fifth and final community card face up in the center of the
table.
The river betting round is carried out the same as the turn
betting round.
Showdown
Once all of the betting has been completed on the river the
remaining players reveal their hole cards to determine which
player has the best five card hand. Players can use both of
their hole cards and three community cards, one of their hole
cards and four community cards, or just the five community cards
to form their best five card hand.
If no one placed a bet on the river the first player to the
left of the dealer button is the first player to reveal their
cards. Then the next player to the left can reveal their cards
or discard them if they don’t have a better hand. In some poker
rooms you may see the cards if they’re discarded and in others
you can’t.
Generally it’s considered poor etiquette to ask
to see the discards even in the poker rooms where it’s allowed.
You can use your own judgment in this situation.
If one or more bets have been made on the river the player
who made a bet that was called last is required to show their
cards first, with play continuing to the left.
When you play at an online poker room the software takes care
of everything at the showdown. If you aren’t first to act and
you don’t have the best hand you may have the option to fold or
show your cards.
As a general rule you never want to show your cards unless
you have to. When you show your cards in a hand that you don’t
win you give your opponents extra information about the way you
played the hand that they might be able to use against you at a
later date. You want to avoid giving your opponents any extra
information about the way you play.
Never let the dealer have your cards in a live Texas holdem
game until you receive the pot when you win a hand. If you’re
not sure who wins a hand never give up your cards until you know
and understand. Also never take another player’s word for the
strength of their hand. Some players may state that they have a
better hand than you to try to get you to fold. Once your cards
are in the muck or discard pile they generally can’t be brought
back out.
Basic Strategy
Texas holdem strategy has hundreds of books and thousands of
web sites dedicated to it, so we only have room for the basics
here. We do have a complete section dedicated to Texas holdem
strategy, so once you learn the basics make sure you take the
time to read our other strategy articles and pages.
The first thing you need to think about when it comes to
Texas holdem strategy and your long term chances to win is you
need to try to play against players who are worse than you. At
first this can be difficult because you might not be very good
at first. But as you get better it can be easier to find games
with players who aren’t as good as you.
It doesn’t matter how good or bad you play, if you only play
against players who aren’t as good as you the odds are that
you’ll win more than you lose in the long run.
The basic idea that fuels winning Texas holdem play is you
need to maximize the amount of money you win when you win and
minimize the amount of money you lose when you lose. This sounds
like a common sense type of approach, but most players don’t
seem to play this way.
You need to bet and raise when you have the best hand to
maximize the amount in the pot, and check and call when you’re
drawing to a better hand to minimize your risk. When you don’t
know if you have the best hand or not you can use odds and
percentages to get a good idea of the possibilities either way.
The way you end up with better hands on average than your
opponents is by playing better starting hands than they do on
average. When you’re first learning how to play holdem don’t
play many hands. Most new players play twice as many hands or
more than they should, quickly drain their bankroll.
Another important strategy concept that helps you become a
winning player faster is learning how position impacts the hands
you can play and your profitability. The general rule of thumb
is you can play more hands in late position than in early
position. So you should only play your top starting hands from
early position.
You gain a large advantage when you get to act last, so you
tend to win more money in late position than in any other
position at the table. This is because you get to see what every
other player does before you have to make a playing decision.
You also have the opportunity to take a free card for the turn
and / or river when all of your opponents check.
Once you learn how to use your position, pick your starting
hands, and how to maximize your wins and minimize your losses,
you’ll be well on your way to playing winning Texas holdem. At
that point you can start learning the finer points of advanced
strategy.
Common Slang
Like many popular gambling games Texas holdem has a unique
language that includes a number of interesting terms. Here’s a
small list of popular Texas holdem slang you might need to know
at the table.
All In: | If a player bets all of their chips in a no limit Texas holdem game they’re all in. You can say all in when you want to bet all of your chips. |
Back Door: | Usually used in reference to a long shot straight or flush draw. If you have two of the same suit in your hand and the flop only has one of your suit, you have a back door chance at a flush. If the turn and river both match your suit you hit a back door flush. |
Bad Beat: | When a player loses a hand on a long shot draw they receive a bad beat. |
Board: | The board is another name for the community cards. |
Boat: | A boat is a word used for a full house. Some players call it a full boat instead of a full house. |
Bullets or Rockets: | Bullets or rockets are slang terms used for pocket aces. Pocket aces are the best possible starting hand in Texas holdem. Some players say they have pocket rockets when the have a pair of aces in the hole. |
Calling Station: | A calling station is the word used to describe a player who calls and almost never raises when they face a bet. A calling station rarely wins money in the long run. Most successful Texas holdem players play tight and aggressively. They don’t play many hands and the ones the play they play in an aggressive manner. When you bet and raise you can win with the best hand or if your opponents all fold. When you just call you can only win with the best hand. |
Connectors: | Connectors is a name used for cards that are in sequential order or close. An eight and nine are connectors. A seven and a nine are one gap connectors. The word connectors is often combines with suited. A seven and an eight of the same suit are called suited connectors. |
Continuation Bet or C Bet: | A player who makes a raise before the flop often bets after the flop whether they help their hand or not. When a player makes the second bet after the flop they’re continuation betting. |
Cowboys: | Deuce is a name for a two. |
Deuce: | Deuce is a name for a two. |
Ducks: | A pair of twos is often called ducks. |
Fish: | A fish is the name for a poor Texas holdem player. It’s a derogatory term and many players refer to other players as fish even if it’s only a way to transfer attention away from their poor play onto someone else. |
Gut Shot: | A type of straight draw where only one rank of card will complete the straight. If you have a seven, eight, 10, jack you need a nine to complete your straight. This is called a gut shot straight draw. |
Hooks: | Hooks is a name used for a pair of jacks. |
Limp: | When a player calls the big blind before the flop they limp into the pot. |
Nuts: | The best possible hand with the cards on the board, or community cards, is called the nuts. Some players mistakenly say they have the nuts when they have the most likely winning hand but not really the best possible hand. |
Off Suit: | Two cards that aren’t suited are called off suit. This usually refers to a player’s two hole cards. |
Open Ended: | A straight draw that can be completed by a card on either end. For example you have a six, seven, eight, nine so if you get a five or a 10 you complete your straight. |
Quads: | Quads is another name for four of a kind. |
Rags: | The name used to describe a flop or board that has all unconnected cards that doesn’t appear to be useful to anyone. |
Runner Runner: | Slang used when a player hits a back door draw. The player needs a runner runner to win the hand. |
Set: | A set is three of a kind with two of them in a player’s hand. A pair of pocket fives with another five on the board is a set of fives. A set is always a three of a kind but three of a kind isn’t always a set. Three of a kind can be two cards on the board and one in a player’s hand. |
Stack: | A stack is the amount of chips a player has. If a player gets stacked they lose all of their chips. |
Straddle: | In some poker rooms the payer to the immediate left of the big blind can make a bet before the cards are dealt that is twice the amount of the big blind called a straddle. The first betting round starts with the player to the left of the player who placed the straddle and the person who made the straddle bet acts juts like the big blind in normal play. |
Suck Out: | When a player sucks out they hit a long shot draw to win a hand that they shouldn’t normally win. |
Suited: | When two cards are the same suit they’re suited. This usually refers to two hole cards being the same suit. If you have an ace and a king of the same suit then you have ace king suited. |
Tilt: | Sometimes a Texas holdem player who receives a bad beat will let their emotions take over after they receive a bad beat and start playing poorly. When this happens a player is said to be on tilt or tilting. |
Conclusion
Learning the basics of Texas holdem is fairly easy, but to
get a true feel for the game you need to start playing. Once
you’ve learned everything on this page sit down and play a few
hands. You can play for free at most online poker rooms.
If you can’t play online, see if you can get together a group
of friends and family to play a home game. A group of eight to
10 is best, but you only need four or five for a practice game.
When you’re ready to play for real money take it slow and
start at a low limit.
You can play micro limits online, stating at pennies, and
most land based poker rooms have limit holdem as low as 5 / 10
and no limit buy ins as low as $100. Or find a low buy in poker
tournament to try your luck at chasing a big win.
For a certain segment of new hold’em players, starting hand charts can be fascinating. Even those with many years of experience who have little need to consult such charts still find them interesting as debate-starters.
In hold’em there are 169 different combinations of hands you can be dealt. For those of us who enjoy working with numbers or creating lists with which to organize our lives, there’s something appealing about the idea of ranking all of those hands from 1 to 169, even if we know such a list probably might have only limited value when it comes to actual game play.
In truth, there are actually a lot more possible combinations of hole cards in hold’em — 1,326 of them, in fact. But that total also considers suits as distinct, when in fact before the community cards come the suits are all essentially of equal value.
That is to say, is of the same value as when playing preflop, while and are also of equivalent value. So, too, are the different combinations producing the same pocket pairs all equal before the flop in terms of their relative worth. While there are six different ways to get pocket aces — , , , , , — you're equally happy no matter what suits the cards are.
So we get rid of all of those redundant hands and say that in Texas hold'em there are 169 “non-equivalent” starting hands, breaking them down as follows:
- 13 pocket pairs
- 78 non-paired suited hands (e.g., with two cards of the same suit like or )
- 78 non-paired unsuited hands (e.g., with two cards of different suits like or )
Notice now the non-paired combinations of hole cards neatly divide into equal groups, both of which are six times as large (78) as the smaller group of pocket pairs (13). The total of 169 combinations represents a square, too — 13 x 13 — another curious symmetry when it comes to hold'em hands.
Still, that’s a lot of starting hand combinations — too many for most of us humans to keep in our heads — which is one reason hand ranking charts are appealing and even can be useful, since they help players think about certain two-card combos as “strong” or “average” or “weak” as possible starters.
Setting aside the idea of actually ranking the 169 hands from best to worst, we might think for a moment about other ways of categorizing starting hands in hold’em, using that initial breakdown of hands into pocket pairs, non-paired suited hands, and non-paired unsuited hand as a first step toward coming up with further, smaller groups that are easier to remember.
The 13 pocket pairs we might group as big or “premium” (, , and ), medium ( through ), and small ( through ).
Meanwhile, we might divide each of the other groups into “connectors,” “one-gappers,” and “two-gappers” (and so on), further thinking of them also as “big,” “medium,” and “small” while also keeping separate suited and non-suited combinations.
These categories of non-paired hands are created by thinking about straight-making possibilities (affected by connectedness) and flush-making possibilties (affected by suitedness). There are more ways to make straights with “connectors” — that is, two cards of consecutive rank like — than with two-gappers, three-gappers, and so on. So, too, do you have a better chance of making a flush with suited hole cards than with non-suited hole cards.
Another possible group to create would include “ace hands” — i.e., non-paired hands containing one ace — that can be thought of as “big aces” (e.g., , ), “medium aces” ( down to ), and “small aces” ( to ). Or “king hands,” too. We like keeping these groups in mind, as hands with big cards like an ace or king can connect with flops to make big pairs.
Poker Hand Ranking Printable
In any case, you can see how these criteria for making categories can help when it comes to building those starting hand charts. And in fact most of those charts feature a similar ordering of hands, with...
- the premium pocket pairs and the big aces (suited and non-suited) up at the top;
- medium and small pocket pairs and big-to-medium suited connectors and one-gappers in the middle;
- and non-paired hands with less potential to make big pairs, straights, or flushes toward the bottom.
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Play NowHowever, there are problems with relying so heavily on starting hand charts that you don’t take into account factors that can make a given hand gain or lose value. Such as the flop. Or the turn. Or the river. Or other factors — including how your opponents are playing their hands — that can quickly affect the value of your starting hands.
After all, as anyone who’s played even a few hands of hold’em well knows, even if is the highest-ranking starting hand and a non-suited ranks as 169th, a couple of deuces among the community cards is all it takes to make the best hand worst and the worst hand best.
Texas Holdem Ranking Chart
Learning the relative value of starting hands is definitely an important first step when it comes to getting started in hold’em. Other aspects of game play such as the importance of position, knowing when and how much to bet or raise, and thinking about opponents’ holdings and playing styles as hands proceed are good to learn, too, and help show how a great starting hand might not be so great five community cards later.
Poker is not blackjack, a game in which similar hand-ranking guides are sometimes used to inform players’ decisions about how to play. In poker you want to be wary about becoming too reliant on those pretty starting hand charts. They can be great for indicating which hands might be worth playing (and which should be thrown away), but troublesome if allowed to outweigh all of the other important factors that arise as a hand plays out.
That said, starting hand charts can be useful, especially for those new to hold’em. They also can be a big help when picking up other games, too, like pot-limit Omaha or the various stud games, if only to get an early idea what hands tend to play better than others.
But for many such charts ultimately are only themselves a way to get started, before the experience of playing helps players more instinctively recognize both hand groupings and how hands tend to compare in terms of profitability.
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