Texas Holdem Preflop Chart

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Willem Drost

The Poker Hand Range Calculator calculates Texas Hold'em hand ranges from percentage values and vice-versa. All this online and free. Setup a poker range by selecting the hands in the poker hand calculator and share the link which is automatically generated for you. The hands you play preflop are the starting point of your game. A poor preflop strategy is like building a house on quicksand – you will go nowhere quickly. There is a very good reason engineers dig a deep hole when building skyscrapers – you need a solid foundation. The same applies to poker and preflop is the foundation of your game. Texas Hold'em: a game in which it is easy to learn the basics, but considerably harder to master. For now, let's cover a basic part of the game - starting hands. More information. Texas HoldEm Preflop Odds Chart poker odds chart pre flop reading opponent hand preflop for kk post to. Find this Pin and more on Pokerby Scott Anderson. Saved from casinopokerbetting.org. Casinopokerbetting.org - This website is for sale! - casinopokerbetting Resources and Information. Holdem Preflop Odds. These tables are computed by simulating or enumerating millions or billions of hands to give some useful numbers for playing poker. Texas Holdem 10 Player Preflop Odds. Texas Holdem Heads-Up Preflop Odds. Texas Holdem Preflop Nut Odds. Omaha Hi Lo Preflop Odds.

Limit Hold'em (LHE) is often seen as the ugly duckling next to No Limit Hold'em. Limit Hold'em might not bring the kick of No Limit, where you can lose your entire stack or double up in one hand. On the other hand, in Limit Hold'em you can keep betting and raising throughout the entire hand, in a sense making it more of an action game. The action is just not as intense as in No Limit. In LHE there is also more emphasis on playing after the flop. You need to make decisions on every street, and with every decision you need to think about the strength of your hand, your opponent's hand, etc. Besides that you need to take the action that is most profitable for you. Even if LHE is not your game of choice, you will learn a lot by playing it every now and then.

The most important concept in LHE is aggression. You always have to be aggressive if you think you have the best hand. When you have a good hand, you keep betting and raising until you believe your opponent has a better hand. Many opponents will call with any pair on the river, so it is important to keep valuebetting. As far as slowplaying goes in LHE, just don't do it. Not before the flop and not after the flop. You are likely to lose more value slowplaying than you gain by deception. Especially when up against two or more opponents you always need to bet/raise when you think you have the best hand.

You also need to be aggressive with your draws. There are two important reasons for this. First of all, by playing your draws aggressively you have two ways to win the pot. You can now win by hitting your draw or by making every body else fold. The second reason to semi-bluff is for balance. Imagine playing against an opponent who never bluffs. If he now bets, you can easily fold your marginal hands. But if you know this player also bluffs, you are forced to keep calling with a wide range of hands. So in order to get paid off properly when you do have a hand you also need to (semi-)bluff every now and then. On limits of $5/$10 and lower, however, bluffing for balance is not really necessary.

When semi-bluffing, it is seldom a good idea to do this against more than one opponent. Imagine being up against one opponent and you decide to semi-bluff. If this player will fold his hand 1 in 3 times, this means you will pick up the pot by bluffing 33% of the time. Now lets say you're up against two opponents who both fold 1 in 3 times. The chance that you will now pick up the pot by bluffing is 1/3 x 1/3 = 1/9, which is about 11%. As you can see a semi-bluff in a multiway pot is rarely going to be successful, so I recommend you only use it in heads-up situations.

Pre Flop Poker Charts

In this article we will focus on the basic preflop strategy for 6-max Limit Hold'em. In later articles we will move on to playing after the flop. This article will concentrate on a couple of common preflop situations; what to do when everyone in front of you folds, hot to play against a raise and how to play on the button. I will also discuss relative position and defending your blinds.

At a 6-max table, you have four positions when not including the blinds. The player who is first to act is UTG (Under The Gun), followed by MP (Middle Position), followed by CO ( Cut Off) and finally the BTN(Button). The SB and the BB are the Small blind and the Big Blind. In LHE you can only bet/raise a predetermined amount. Before the flop and on the flop this is the so-called small bet. The small bet is always the same amount as the big blind. On the turn and river we then get the big bet, which is always twice the amount of the small bet. A $5/$10 table would therefore have a small bet of $5 and a big bet of $10. On most poker sites there is always a limit to the number of bets/raises that players can make on one street. This cap is usually always 4 bets.

If everyone in front of you folded

If every player in front of you has folded their hand (or you are sitting UTG) it is always important to open with a raise. Don't be scared that the others might fold, you will usually get enough action. And even if everybody else does fold, you still pick up 0.75 big bets without any risk. On average, only hands like AA-QQ and AK will make you more than 0.75 big bets. Below you see a list of hands you can raise with when it has been folded around to you. Remember that these are only guidelines, and that you can always deviate from this line if you have a good reason for it.

UTG: 55+, A5s+, K9s+, Q9s+, J9s+, T9s, 98s, 87s, A8o+, KTo+, QJo

MP: 44+, A4s+, K7s+, Q8s+, J8s+, T8s+, 98s, 87s, 76s, A6o+, K9o+, QTo+, JTo

CO: 33+, A2s+, K4s+, Q5s+, J7s+, T7s+, 97s+, 86s+, 75s+, 65s, A4o+, K6o+, Q8o+, J9o+, T9o

BTN: 22+, A2s+, K2s+, Q3s+, J4s+, T5s+, 95s+, 85s+, 74s+, 64s+, 54s, A2o+, K2o+, Q6o+, J7o+, T7o+, 97o+, 86o+

If your opponents are very loose on the flop and you often see the flop with 3-4 players, you will have to play a little tighter and fold more hands. Hands like A6o don't play as well against numerous opponents. You also wouldn't want to invest 2 bets to play 76s against four opponents, even though this hand plays relatively well in multiway pots. The best thing to do when sitting at a table with a lot of loose players would be to just fold this hand.

If there are only five players sitting at the table (including yourself), then there effectively is no UTG position. If you now are first to act, you are practically in MP.

If there is a raise

If a player raises and everybody else in front of you folds, you have two options. You either fold because you think your hand is not good enough, or you 3-bet your opponent in order to isolate him. Calling is by far the worst option here. First of all you should always re-raise if you think you have the better hand, and furthermore, you don't want to give the BB the right odds to call with hands like J10o, 76s or 53s. If both the blinds fold, they leave 0.75 big bets in the pot as dead money. This means that you will have to win the pot less than 50% of the time to still make profit. One example: You are on the button and the CO raises. You 3-bet, everybody else folds (including the blinds) and CO calls. There are now 7.5 small bets in the pot although you only invested 3. If you now win the hand 40% of the time, you will still make a profit of 7.5 x 0.4 = 3. In other words, you still make profit even if your hand is slightly worse than that of the CO.

The hands you can 3-bet with depend on the range of the raising player. The dead money in the pot makes sure that you can re-raise with a slightly worse hand. Then again, the original raiser could also decide to re-raise you again, resulting in a bigger loss for you if your opponent does happen to have a monster. As a rule of thumb, you can re-raise about 50% of the hands of the original raiser. If he, for example, raises with the top 30% of his hands, you can re-raise with the top 15%. In order to decide which hands you can re-raise with, you need to know the range of your opponent. If you want to 4-bet you will have to think about which hands your opponent would re-raise with, and then only 4-bet with the hands that are ahead against this range.

Many opponents will easily give up on the flop if you re-raise them preflop. They will often try and see if they hit the flop, and if not, they will get rid of their hand. Here is some more maths for you. Lets go back to the situation we described earlier where the CO raises and you re-raise on the button. There are now 7.5 small bets in the pot. If you continuation bet on the flop, you are now risking one bet to win 7.5 bets. If the CO folds only 12% of the time here you will still make a profit. Therefore, if you know your opponents will easily give up their hands on the flop, you could choose to re-raise more often before the flop.

On the button with a couple of callers

It doesn't happen too often at shorthanded tables, but sometimes you will be sitting on the button with a couple of players calling in front of you. In this case you can choose to see a cheap flop and play the rest of the hand in position. Since you know it will end up being a mutliway pot, you shouldn't think about raising with hands that don't play well against numerous opponents. A hand like A9o is very playable here, you just shouldn't raise with it, while a hand like QJs can easily be raised here. Hands you can limp with here are for example 66, A8o, K9o, 76s, 33. Make sure not to expand your range too much though. Hands like J6o, 42o and 35s are still unplayable in this situation.

Relative position

Position is, as always in poker, very important in LHE, as you will have to make a lot of decisions after the flop. The positions for postflop play are decided before the flop. If you have position, it will be easier for you to make decisions, because you can look at what your opponents do before you have to act yourself. Everyone is aware about absolute position. This is the position you have with regards to the dealer button. Besides absolute position, there is also something called relative position. This is your position with regards to the player who has the initiative in the hand (the preflop raiser). If this player is directly to your right in a multiway pot, then your relative position is very bad. If everyone checks to the preflop raiser on the flop, he is likely to bet and then you will have to decide what to do. You now have to decide whether or not to put money into the pot without knowing what the other players behind you are going to do. If, however, the preflop raiser is directly to your left, then you can check to him on the flop, after which he will bet and all other players have to act before you have to make a decision. To better illustrate this concept I have worked out two examples. First we have a situation where you expect to have the perfect relative position:

Situation 1: (6 players) Hero is BB with

2 folds, CO raises, Button calls, SB folds, Hero calls.

This is an easy call with J5s. You can now check on the flop, the CO bets and you can wait for the CO and BTN to act before making a decision. The fact that you are in perfect relative position here provides you with information without you having to pay anything for it. If the BTN now calls, you can also call and be sure that no other player is going to raise. You now know for sure that you can see the turn for one single bet. If the BTN folds, you can also choose to bluff the CO if you think he missed the flop. And if you have a very strong hand you can check-raise both players after the BTN called. Now both players will have to pay 2 bets to see a flop. Compare this to the following situation:

Situation 2: (6 players) Hero is BB with

2 folds, CO calls, Button raises, SB folds, Hero folds, CO calls.

If you now check on the flop, the CO will also check, after which the BTN will make a continuation bet. Now you will have to decide what to do while you don't know what the CO is going to do behind you. You can't just call to see a cheap turn because CO could still raise after you acted. You also can't bluff here because you would need to bluff two players out of the pot, which doesn't work very often. And if you have a monster hand there is now a big chance that the CO will fold after you raise (we don't slowplay), while it is likely that he would have called if he would only have to call a single bet every time. All in all this situation is a lot worse for you when compared to the first situation. In this second example it would have been better to fold J5s.

Poker Preflop Range Chart

Although the concept of relative position only kicks in on the flop, you will have to consider it when making your preflop decision. In situation 1 you can be a lot looser with your call because you are in a better position after the flop. In situation 2 it will be more difficult to play after the flop, which is why you should play tighter in situation 2.

Furthermore, you should be a lot more inclined to 3-bet in situation 2 in order to isolate the preflop raiser. If you would be holding 99 for example, you could still just call in situation 1, but in situation 2 you would improve your situation by 3-betting to try and get heads-up. In situation 1 your chance of coming heads-up is minimal.

Defending your blinds

Stealing and defending your blinds plays an important part at shorthanded tables, as you will be in the blinds 33% of the time at a 6-max table.

In the Small Blind

If you are in the small blind and a player raises and everyone else folds, you will always either have to fold or 3-bet. If you call here you give the big blind 1:5 odds to call as well, which he is likely to do with a great deal of his hands (as he also has perfect relative position). If you 3-bet, he will have to call 2 bets, and as a result he is likely to fold unless he has a good hand. If he does fold, he leaves dead money in the pot, which again means that you will have to win the pot less than 50% to make this play profitable.

You can again use the rule of thumb here to only 3-bet with hands that are ahead against your opponent's raise-range. If the BTN raises, for example, and you think he will do this with the top 40% of his hands, then you can re-raise him with the top 20% of your hands. If, however, UTG raises (with top 20% of his hands), then you can only 3-bet with the best 10% of your hands.

Preflop texas holdem chart starting hands

In the Big Blind

When sitting in the big blind and facing a raise, then you won't have to re-raise as you are already sitting heads-up anyways. You now get 1:3.5 odds to call. Because you are getting good odds you can call with quite a few hands here. As a guideline you can choose to call with the top 60% of your hands. According to PokerStove, this is the following range:

22+, A2s+, K2s+, Q2s+, J2s+, T2s+, 95s+, 85s+, 74s+, 64s+, 54s, A2o+, K2o+, Q4o+, J7o+, T7o+, 97o+, 86o+, 75o+, 65o

Bear in mind, however, that you will always have to consider where this raise is coming from. If the raise comes from a player UTG, for example, it is more likely that this player will have a strong hand, which means you should start playing a little tighter and fold more hands.

As an alternative you could also choose to never 3-bet in the big blind (if you know you will see the flop heads-up). Now you can check-raise pretty much any flop and get the same value out of the hand. The only difference is that now you are not giving away any information about the strength of your hand. If the flop shows K-7-6, for example, and you check-raise, you could be holding 8-9 as well as A-A. This makes it very hard for your opponent to put you on hands, which will eventually lead to more mistakes from your opponent.

Texas Holdem Preflop Chart

In the Big Blind

When sitting in the big blind and facing a raise, then you won't have to re-raise as you are already sitting heads-up anyways. You now get 1:3.5 odds to call. Because you are getting good odds you can call with quite a few hands here. As a guideline you can choose to call with the top 60% of your hands. According to PokerStove, this is the following range:

22+, A2s+, K2s+, Q2s+, J2s+, T2s+, 95s+, 85s+, 74s+, 64s+, 54s, A2o+, K2o+, Q4o+, J7o+, T7o+, 97o+, 86o+, 75o+, 65o

Bear in mind, however, that you will always have to consider where this raise is coming from. If the raise comes from a player UTG, for example, it is more likely that this player will have a strong hand, which means you should start playing a little tighter and fold more hands.

As an alternative you could also choose to never 3-bet in the big blind (if you know you will see the flop heads-up). Now you can check-raise pretty much any flop and get the same value out of the hand. The only difference is that now you are not giving away any information about the strength of your hand. If the flop shows K-7-6, for example, and you check-raise, you could be holding 8-9 as well as A-A. This makes it very hard for your opponent to put you on hands, which will eventually lead to more mistakes from your opponent.

I would like to point out that this strategy is not meant for everyone. You can't just fold every flop that you miss after your opponent makes his inevitable continuation bet. Furthermore, you also lose value preflop by not raising a hand like A-A. You will have to find a way to make up for this lost value after the flop.

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    Beginner StrategyTexas Holdem
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On this site you can find all possible combinations of preflop hands that can occur in Texas Hold'em Poker. As a bonus you will also learn the nicknames of the different hands.

The hands are ranked from #1 to #169, where #1 is the best. This ranking is applicable when the poker table is full ring (9-10 people). The ranking is based on computer calculation results with all the players staying to the river card. It is not applicable to any real play.
If the hand is named XXs then it means the hand is suited, if XXo then the hand is off suit.


#1
AA


Pocket Rockets
American Airlines
The Hand
Bullets
Rocky Mountains

#2
KK

Cowboys
Kamikaze
King Kong
Cold Turkey
Kangaroos

#3
QQ

Hilton Sisters
Ladies
West Hollywood
The Bitches
The Witches
Double Date
4 Tits
Flower Girls

#4
AKs

Big Slick in a suit
Anna Kournikova
Santa Barbara
Mike Haven

#5
JJ

Jokers
Brothers
Hooks
Jackson Hole
SHIP
Gays Online

News »

January 10, 2007
A lot more nicknames added
November 29

More nicknames added

November 25
More nicknames added

November 11, 2006
Site complete with all possible hands.

November 7, 2006
Site was online for the first time.

#6
AQs

Big Chick
Little Slick
Anthony & Cleopatra

#7
KQs

Mamas and Papas
Newlyweds
Marriage
Royal Couple
Parents

#8
AJs

Ajax
Black Jack
Jack Ass
J-birds

#9
KJs

Kojak
King John
Hary Potter
Bachelor's Hand
Tucson Monster

#10
TT

TinTin
Tension
Twenty Miles

#11
AKo

Big Slick
Anna Kournikova

#12
ATs

Johnny Moss
Bookends

#13
QJs

Oedipus
Maverick

#14
KTs

Katie
Big Al

#15
QTs

Quint
Varkony
Gratitude
Greyhound

#16
JTs

Morgan

#17
99

Wayne Gretzky
German Virgin
Popeye's
Phil Hellmuth

#18
AQo

Big Chick
Little slick

#19
A9s

Rounders Hand
Driving the Truck

#20
KQo

Mixed Marriage
Othello

#21
88

Snowmen
Little Oldsmobile
Two Fat Ladies
Catnuts

#22
K9s

Canine
Pair of Dogs
Turner & Hooch
Pedigree
Fido
Sawmill

#23
T9s

Count Down

#24
A8s

Dead Mans Hand

#25
Q9s

Quinine

#26
J9s

Jeanine

#27
AJo

Ace Jack-off

#28
A5s

High Five

#29
77

Buggy Tops
Saturn
Sunset Strip
Hockey Sticks
Mullets
Walking Sticks

#30
A7s

Red Baron

#31
KJo

Kojak
King John
Jack-King-off
Harry Potter

#32
A4s

Sharp Tops
Amen
Tranny's

#33
A3s

Ash Tray
Baskin Robbins

#34
A6s

Mile High

#35
QJo

Maverick
Fred & Ethel

#36
66

Route 66
Kicks

#37
K8s

The Feast
Kokomo

#38
T8s

Tetris
Tenaciously

#39
A2s

Hunting Season
Arizona
Acey-Deucy

#40
98s

Oldsmobile

#41
J8s

Jeffrey Dalmer

#42
ATo

Bookends

#43
Q8s

Kuwait

#44
K7s

King Salmon
Kevin

#45
KTo

Katie
Woodcutter

#46
55

Presto
Double Nickels
Speed Limit
Sammy

#47
JTo

Morgan

#48
87s

RPM
Tahoe

#49
QTo

Quint
Greyhound

#50
44

Robert Varkonyi
Quint
Magnum
Colt 44
Sail Boats
Diana Dors

#51
33

Crabs
City Parks

#52
22

Quackers
Pocket Swans
Ducks
Barely Legal
The Strippers

#53
K6s

The Concubine

#54
97s

Grapefruit

#55
K5s

King of Nickels

#56
76s

America
Union Oil

#57
T7s

The Bowling Hand
Split

#58
K4s

Fork

#59
K3s

King Crab
Sizzler
Commander Crab

#60
K2s

White Men Can't Jump

#61
Q7s

Computer Hand

#62
86s

Eubie
Maxwell Smart

#63
65s

Ken Warren

#64
J7s

Dice Hand

#65
54s

Colt

#66
Q6s

#67
75s

Heinz 57 Sauce

#68
96s

Overtime
Soixante Neuf

#69
Q5s

Granny Mae (if spades)

#70
64s

Revolution
The Rabbit

#71
Q4s

#72
Q3s

Bitch with Crabs
Gay Waiter

#73
T9o

Countdown

#74
T6s

Driver's License

#75
Q2s

Windsor Waiter

#76
A9o

Jesus
Chris Ferguson

#77
53s

#78
85s

Finky Dink

#79
J6s

Jack Sikma

#80
J9o

Emergency
9-11

#81
K9o

Sawmill

#82
J5s

Jackson Five
Motown

#83
Q9o

Quinine

#84
43s

Waltz Time

#85
74s

Barn Owl

#86
J4s

Done Hand
Jermaine
Flat Tire

#87
J3s

J-Lo
Bird Table

#88
95s

Dolly Parton
Hard Working

#89
J2s

The Jew

#90
63s

JFK
Three Dozen

#91
A8o

Dead Man's Hand

#92
52s

Two Bits
Quarter

#93
T5s

Dimestore
Woolworth
Five and Dime

#94
84s

Big Brother
George Orwell

#95
T4s

Roger That
Over and Out
Convoy
The Good Buddy

#96
T3s

#97
42s

The Answer
Lumberjack

#98
T2s

Texas Dolly
Terminator II

#99
98o

Oldsmobile

#100
T8o

Tetris

#101
A5o

High Five

#102
A7o

Red Baron

#103
73s

Dutch Waiter
Swedish Busboy

#104
A4o

Crashing Airlines

#105
32s

Hooter Hand
Jordan

#106
94s

San Fransisco

#107
93s

Jack Benny

#108
J8o

Jeffery Dalmer

#109
A3o

Baskin Robbins
Ash Tray

#110
62s

#111
92s

Twiggy

#112
K8o

The Feast
Dr Spoon
Kokomo

#113
A6o

Mile High

#114
87o

Tahoe

#115
Q8o

Kuwait

#116
83s

Raquel Welch

#117
A2o

Arizona
Big Balls
Hunting Season

#118
82s

Fat Lady and a Duck

#119
97o

Grapefruit

#120
72s

Beer Hand

#121
76o

Union Oil

#122
K7o

King Salmon

#123
65o

Ken Warren

#124
T7o

Split

#125
K6o

The Concubine

#126
86o

Maxwell Smart

#127
54o

Colt 45
Jesse James
Jane Russell

#128
K5o

Rotten Cowboy

#129
J7o

Dice

#130
75o

Filipino Slick
Heinz

#131
Q7o

Computer Hand

#132
K4o

Fork

#133
K3o

Commander Crab
King Crab

#134
96o

Percy

#135
K2o

Big Fritz

#136
64o

The Question

#137
Q6o

#138
53o

Bully Johnson

#139
85o

The Scag

#140
T6o

Sweet Sixteen

#141
Q5o

#142
43o

Waltz Time

#143
Q4o

#144
Q3o

Gay Waiter

#145
74o

Cambodian Slick

#146
Q2o

The Vesty

#147
J6o

Jack Sikma

#148
63o

JFK
Blocky

#149
J5o

Jackson Five

#150
95o

Dolly Parton

#151
52o

Quarter

#152
J4o

Kid Grenade

#153
J3o

Fortran

#154
42o

The Answer

#155
J2o

Bennifer

#156
84o

Big Brother

#157
T5o

Nickels and Dimes

#158
T4o

CB Hand
Roger That

#159
32o

Big Gulp
Hooter Hand
Mississippi Slick
Can of Corn

#160
T3o

#161
73o

Rusty Trombone

#162
T2o

Texas Dolly

#163
62o

Bed & Breakfast

#164
94o

Joe Montana Banana

#165
93o

Jack Benny

#166
92o

Montana Banana
Twiggy

#167
83o

Suzanna Banana
Sven
Raquel Welch

#168
82o

Sixty Nine

#169
72o

Death
The Big Man Hand
The Hammer

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broken image