Poker Hands

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The following is a list of texas hold’em poker hand rankings from the strongest (Royal Flush) to the weakest (High Card). If you’re looking for starting hand information, see our starting hand guide!

The hand ranking is the most basic element of the texas hold’em rules, and the first thing you should learn before you start playing the game. If you don’t know what beats what, your poker game won’t be a very enjoyable experience. The texas hold’em hand ranking is the same as in other common poker games, such as Seven Card Stud, Omaha and Draw Poker.

Poker Hands

Poker hands - The nine main winning poker hands
This is a good image to keep handy especially if you are learning to play poker.

You should keep in mind that all the suits have exactly the same value in Texas Hold’em and other poker games. Consequently, a flush of spades is worth just as much as a flush of hearts or a flush of diamonds.

Another important concept is the kicker. The kicker is used when two players have made the same poker hand, for example a pair of aces. In a case like that, the player with the highest side card wins the pot. One player might have a king in his hand while the other one has a queen – the player with the king in his hand wins the pot.

HandDescriptionExample
Royal Straight FlushThis is the daddy of all hands and even if you play often, you will rarely see one. It’s similar to a hole in one in golf. It is made of up all of the same suite, ten through Ace. It is a straight and a flush and the royal part comes from it being made up of the highest cards too.        
As, Ks, Qs, Js, Ts 
Straight FlushWhile not as magical as the royal straight flush, the straight flush still is a rariety. It is made up of 5 cards of the same suite ranked in succession. For example 6-10, or A-5 (Ace can play both high and low in straights).    
Jc, Tc, 9c, 8c, 7c 
Four Of A KindThis is self-explanatory. A four of a kind ocurrs when you have all the cards of one type.    
Ks, Kd, Kc, Kh
Full HouseA full house happens when you have both three of a kind and also a pair. To determine if one full house higher ranked then another, first look at the three cards of the same kind. The one that is larger wins. If they both are the same then you’ll have to compare the two cards. For example: Jacks full of fours (JJJ, 44) beats 9s full of Aces (999, AA) Jacks full of tens (JJJ, TT) beats Jacks full of nines (JJJ, 99) Full houses in texas hold’em are nice hands and you will most likely see someone show one down everytime you play.     
Jc, Jd, Jh, 9c, 9h 
FlushA flush occurs when you have five of the same suite. If the cards were also in succession (like a straight), then it would be a straight flush. To determine which flush wins if there are more then one in a hand, then the person with the highest card in their hand wins. In the example to the right, the person has a ten high flush. This would beat someone with a nine high flush and below. Flushes are pretty common in hold’em.     
Th, 8h, 4h, 3h, 2h
StraightA straight occurs when a player has five cards in ranked succession. Note that an Ace can play both as a high card or a low card. Note the two examples to the right. Straights are also very common in hold’em.     
Ah, Kc, Qd, Jd, Th
    
Ah, 2c, 3h, 4h, 5c 
Three Of A KindThree of a kind is a nice hand. There are two different names for three of a kind hands and it depends on whether you have two of them on the board, or a pair in your hand. They both rank the same but to be a savy player you should know the difference. If you have a pocket pair and hit one on the flop then it is called a “set”. If you have two cards on the flop and only one in your hand then it is called three of a kind.     
8h, 8d, 8c, 9d, Ad
Two PairTwo pair is when your best five cards create a pair twice. That seems easy enough right? When comparing two hands both with two pair then the larger one always wins. For example:
AA 22 would beat KK JJ
88 33 would beat 77 66 
     
Kh, Kd, Qh, Qd, 3c 
One PairOne pair is the hand you’ll be getting the most and trying to win with the most. Top pair is usually the hand you’ll be betting and trying to win some pots with. When more then one person has the same pair, then the “kickers” come in to play. Remember texas hold’em uses the best five cards so the following is true: Ah, Ac, Jc, 6d, 4d would lose to
Ad, As, Jd, 6c, 5d Notice how the 5 beats the 4 (best five cards makes a hand). 
    
Kh, Kd, 8s, 6d, 5c
High CardThe high card hand is the lowest non pair hand. Sometimes Ace high can win, but in the low limit games it is very rare. In the example to the right, the high card is K. So you would have “king high”. You would beat someone if they had “queen high” or below but even a pair of deuces would beat you!     
Kh, Tc, 4c, 3d, 2h 

Texas Hold’em Hand Odds And Probabilities

Enough talking! Take me to a poker room now!

Texas Holdem odds chart

ProbabilityPercentageProbability / Odds Against
Pair preflop61 in 17 – 16:1
Suited cards preflop241 in 4.2 – 3.2:1
Suited Connectors (2/3, KQ, …)41 in 25 – 24:1
AA or KK preflop.91 in 111 – 110:1
AK preflop1.21 in 83 – 82:1
AKs preflop.31 in 332 – 331:1
A in hand preflop161 in 6.25 – 5.25:1
AA, KK, QQ, JJ1.81 in 56 – 55:1
Flop being all one kind (JJJ or QQQ).241 in 425 – 424:1
AA versus KK preflop (heads up).0041 in 22560 – 22559:1
AK dealt preflop and hitting an A or K by the river501 in 2 – even
QQ versus AK heads up till river561 in 1.78 – 14:11 favorite
Two cards preflop that are Js or higher91 in 11 – 10:1
Beer Hand (72off) preflop (or any other nonsuited two card combo).91 in 110 – 109:1
Four flush completing (JsTs Flop Qs4sAd 6h Ks)391 in 2.6 – 3:2
Open Ended Straight-Flush completing to flush or straight by river541 in 1.85
Open Ended Straight completing (JT Flop Q94 86)341 in 2.9 – ~2:1
Two Pair on flop Improving to Full House171 in 5.8 – ~5:1
Three of a kind (set) on flop improving to Full House or Quads371 in 2.7- ~3:2
Pocket pair improving to three of a kind on flop121 in 8 – 7:1
No pair hand preflop improving to a pair on the flop (either card)321 in 3.125 – ~2:1
If you have suited cards, two will flop111 in 9 – 8:1
One pair on flop improving to two pair or three of a kind by river221 in 4.7 – ~4:1
Pocket pair improving to three of a kind after flop91 in 11 – 10:1
Two over cards improving to a pair by river261 in 3.9 – ~3:1
Two over cards and a gutshot improving to pair or straight431 in 2.3 – 4:3
Gutshot straight draw hitting by river171 in 6 – 5:1
Gutshot and pair improving to two pair or better391 in 2.6 – 3:2
Backdoor Flush hitting (5s6s Flop 7sAh9c KsJs)41 in 24 – 23:1
Runner Runner Straight (56 Flop 3TQ 47)1.51 in 68 – 67:1
Backdoor Flush and One Over Card improving to that pair or flush171 in 6 – 5:1
Catching Ace on turn or river (A4 Flop Q63 KA)131 in 8 – 7:1
Backdoor Flush and Gutshot improving to one by river (Ac4c Flop 3s5cKs)211 in 4.8 – 3.8:1
Backdoor Flush And Two Over Cards improving to pair or flush301 in 3.3 – 2.3:1
5 players on flop, that someone has an A when one is on board581 in 1.7
4 players on flop, that someone has an A when one is on board471 in 2.1
3 players on flop, that someone has an A when one is on board351 in 2.9
2 players on flop, that someone has an A when one is on board231 in 4.3
3 of one suit on board and another coming (QsTs2s) if you have one391 in 2.6 – 3:2
5 players in with board paired, chance of one of them having it431 in 2.4
4 players in with board paired, chance of one of them having it341 in 3
3 players in with board paired, chance of one of them having it261 in 4
2 players in with board paired, chance of one of them having it171 in 5.8