Poker Hand Ranks

Five Card Poker Hand Values
for High
Royal Flush: An Ace,
King, Queen, Jack and Ten in the
same suit.
In the event of a tie: Two or
more Royal Flushes split the
pot.
Straight Flush: Five
cards in sequence, of the same
suit.
In the event of a tie: Highest
rank at the top of the sequence
wins.
Four of a Kind: Four
cards of the same rank, and one
side card.
In the event of a tie: Highest
four of a kind wins. In
community card games where
players have the same four of a
kind, the highest fifth side
card ("kicker") wins.
Full House: Three cards
of the same rank, and two cards
of a different, matching rank.
In the event of a tie: Highest
three matching cards wins the
pot. In community card games
where players have the same
three matching cards, the
highest value of the two
matching cards wins.
Flush: Five cards of the
same suit.
In the event of a tie: The
player holding the highest
ranked card wins. If necessary,
the second-highest,
third-highest, fourth-highest,
and fifth-highest cards can be
used to break the tie.
Straight: Five cards in
sequence.
In the event of a tie: Highest
ranking card at the top of the
sequence wins.
Note: The Ace may be used at the
top or bottom of the sequence,
and is the only card which can
act in this manner.
Three of a kind: Three
cards of the same rank, and two
unrelated side cards.
In the event of a tie: Highest
ranking three of a kind wins. In
community card games where
players have the same three of a
kind, the highest side card, and
if necessary, the second-highest
side card wins.
Two pair: Two cards of a
matching rank, another two cards
of a different matching rank,
and one side card.
In the event of a tie: Highest
pair wins. If players have the
same highest pair, highest
second pair wins. If both
players have identical pairs,
highest side card wins.
One pair: Two cards of a
matching rank, and three
unrelated side cards.
In the event of a tie: Highest
pair wins. If players have the
same pair, the highest side card
wins, and if necessary, the
second-highest and third-highest
side card can be used to break
the tie.
High card: Any hand that
does not qualify under a
category listed above.
In the event of a tie: Highest
card wins, and if necessary, the
second-highest, third-highest,
fourth-highest and smallest card
can be used to break the tie.
Five Card Poker Hand Values
for Low
Note that suits and sequences
are irrelevant for low. A flush
or straight does not "break" a
low poker hand. Aces are the
lowest card when considering a
low.
Five High, or Wheel: The
Five, Four, Three, Deuce and
Ace.
In the event of a tie: All
Five-high hands split the pot.
Six High: Any five
unpaired cards with the highest
card being a Six.
In the event of a tie: The lower
second-highest ranking card wins
the pot. Thus 6, 4, 3, 2, A
defeats 6, 5, 4, 2, A. If
necessary, the third-highest,
fourth-highest and fifth-highest
cards in the hand can be used to
break the tie.
Seven High: Any five
unpaired cards with the highest
card being a Seven.
In the event of a tie: The lower
second-highest ranking card wins
the pot. If necessary, the
third-highest, fourth-highest
and fifth-highest cards in the
hand can be used to break the
tie.
Eight High: Any five
unpaired cards with the highest
card being an Eight.
In the event of a tie: The lower
second-highest ranking card wins
the pot. If necessary, the
third-highest, fourth-highest
and fifth-highest cards in the
hand can be used to break the
tie.
An Eight High is the weakest
hand that qualifies for low in
games where the pot is split
between the best high and low
hands.
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