Beginner · Beginner
Poker Hand Rankings: A Clear Beginner Guide
A simple guide to hand rankings from royal flush to high card, with common beginner mistakes.
Texas Hold'em uses the best five-card hand. From strongest to weakest: royal flush, straight flush, four of a kind, full house, flush, straight, three of a kind, two pair, one pair, and high card.
When two players have the same hand class, compare the relevant ranks and then the kickers. For example, top pair with AK often beats top pair with AQ because of the kicker.
Community cards belong to everyone. A board can make the same pair, straight, or flush available to multiple players, so always evaluate the final five-card combination.
Three Rules to Remember
- Pick the best five cards.
- Kickers matter when hand classes tie.
- The board helps every player.
FAQ
Who is this Poker Hand Rankings: A Clear Beginner Guide lesson for?
It is written for beginner players who want to connect poker hand rankings with real positions, ranges, and betting decisions.
Should I study GTO or player types first?
Use GTO as a baseline language, then adjust when opponents clearly call too much, fold too much, or bluff too much.
Is this a real-time play tool?
No. This lesson is for offline poker education, not a poker room, casino, or play assistant.