Poker Texas Holdem Split Pot Rules
In Texas Hold'em, the highest combination of five cards wins the pot. Texas Hold’em Rules – an Idiot’s guide By Thomas Nielsen — on April 7th, @ 13:11 PST Every player is dealt two cards, known as ‘hole cards’ and each player then decides whether to bet or fold their hand, depending on whether they think they will win the hand. The dealer then draws three cards and puts them face-up on the table. A Royal Flush is the highest hand in poker. Between two Royal flushes, there can be no tie breaker. If two players have Royal Flushes, they split the pot. The odds of this happening though are very rare and almost impossible in texas holdem because the board requires three cards of one suit for anyone to have a flush in that suit.
#ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOP Q RST U V W X Y Z
Variant | Game type |
---|---|
2-11 | |
5 Card Double Draw High-Low | |
5 Card Stud High-Low | |
5 Card Stud High-Low With a Buy | |
7 Card Stud High-Low | |
7 Card Stud with Wild Cards | |
10 Card Regrets | |
43 | |
Abyssinia | |
Anaconda [= Pass The Trash] | |
Auction | |
Bitch, The | |
Boise | |
Box | |
Buck Thirty-Five | |
Buddys Game | |
Buy Your Card / Substitution | |
Chicago | |
Chowaha | |
Church [= Iron Cross] | |
Cincinnati | |
Cold Omaha | |
Cowboy, Cowgirl, Cowpattie | |
Cowpie Poker | |
Crazy Pineapple Hi-Lo | |
Criss Cross [= Iron Cross] | |
Criss Cross [= Tic Tac Toe] | |
Cucamonga | |
Dakota | |
Doogie | |
Double Trouble | |
Elevator | |
Five Card Stud High-Low | |
Five Card Stud High-Low With a Buy | |
Five-card Double Draw High-Low | |
Forty-Three | |
Grocery Store Dots | |
Henway | |
High Chicago [= Chicago] | |
High-Low Chicago | |
Howdy Doody | |
Iron Cross | |
Jersey Holdem | |
Kryky | |
Low Chicago | |
Mississippi Gonorrhea | |
Mississippi Mud | |
Motown | |
Mutual of Omaha | |
NASDAQ | |
New York New York | |
No Peek High-Low | |
Oh Shit | |
Omaha Hi-Lo Eight or Better | |
Omaha/8 [= Omaha Hi-Lo Eight or Better] | |
Pass The Trash | |
Pass'Em | |
Pick a Partner | |
Piles | |
Price is Right, The | |
Psycho | |
Pyramid | |
Pyramid (2) | |
Real Poker | |
Roll Your Own | |
San Francisco | |
Selection / Rejection | |
Seven Card Stud High-Low | |
Seven Card Stud with Wild Cards | |
Slam-aha | |
Spots | |
Stud-Jack | |
Substitution | |
Ten-Card Regrets | |
The Bluffs | |
Tic Tac Toe | |
Two Eleven | |
Two-Spit | |
Wall Street | |
Want it? Want it? Got it! [= Selection / Rejection] | |
Widow Jack | |
Z |
A tie goes to the runner in baseball, but a tie in poker results in a split of the pot. Just what constitutes a tie can be confusing. Before you join a Sit-n-Go or play live poker you should brush up on what constitutes a tie, so let's look at some examples.
Is this a Tie at Texas Hold'em?
Suppose there are two players left in a pot. The five community cards showing on the board are 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6, two clubs, two hearts and a diamond. Player 'A' turns over their starting hand and shows a 3 and 4. He had two pair before the river, but now the board is a straight.
Player 'B' turns over their cards and shows a King and a Queen of clubs. They had four clubs and missed the flush on the river. So, who wins?
In Texas Hold'em, the highest combination of five cards wins the pot. So, regardless of the fact that player 'A' had two pair or that player 'B' had higher cards, the best five cards are the straight of 2-3-4-5-6, and since the game includes five community cards available to every player still in the pot, both players will use all five cards on the board to make the same hand, a 6-high straight. Thus, this hand becomes a split pot.
Of course one of the players may bluff at the pot, trying to convince the other that they hold a 7 or even a 7-8 and a higher straight. That's just advanced play and not much you can do about it.
Another Tie Example
Suppose three players call pre-flop, which shows 6-6-8. Player 'A' has pocket aces and bets, called by player 'B' who holds Ace-King suited and a four-flush, and player 'C' who flopped four to a straight. The betting is heavy. On the turn, another 6 hits the board. Now player 'A' has sixes full of aces, player be still has a 4-flush, and player 'C' folds.
The river is another 6, leaving a board of 6-6-8-6-6. Now the best hand is quad 6's with an ace, and both players remaining split the pot. Bummer for player 'A' who's full-house dominated on the turn, but turned into a split on the river!
When Kickers Play
In the last example, both players used their Ace-kicker to claim a split of the pot. Other times kickers can be even more confusing. Suppose the final board is all spades: Ace-K-6-5-4
Player 'A' has two spades in their hand, Jack and 6. Player 'B' has a pair of queens, one of which is a spade. In this case, player 'B' wins because their final hand of Ace-K-Q-6-5-4 spades is higher than player 'A's' hand of Ace-K-J-9-8 spades.
If the players had each held just a single spade in their hand, player 'A' the 2 and player 'B' the 3, this would be a split pot, as the final community cards of Ace-K-6-5-4 would be the highest hand. You'll start to understand these concepts quickly as you learn more advanced strategies.
One Last Example
Poker Texas Holdem Split Pot Rulesot Rules
Now suppose there is an all-in wager preflop and two players call. Player 'A' holds pocket Jacks and player 'B' hold's pocket Tens. The board comes Ace-King-Queen. Player 'A' leads and both have a straight draw. The turn is an Ace and the river is another King, for a final board of:
Ace-King-Queen-Ace-King
Poker Texas Holdem Split Pot Rules Printable
Looks like player 'B' caught-up! Now it's a tie because the board plays and those pocket jacks and tens aren't going to be used! It's simply two-pair (Aces and Kings) with a queen kicker!