Pictured below are the hands of poker, listed in order
from highest to lowest.
Royal Flush
Five cards in a
row, 10 through ace, all in the same suit. A royal
flush is actually the highest possible straight
flush. This is the best hand you can get in a game
without wild cards. Since suits have no bearing in
poker, two players holding royal flushes would
tie. A royal flush ranks above any other straight
flush. The illustration shows a royal flush in
spades.
Straight Flush
Five cards of
the same suit in consecutive numerical order. (An
ace highstraight flush, as 10d Jd Qd Kd AD, is
given the special name royal flush.) A straight
flush ranks above four of a kind. The illustration
shows a five-high straight flush.
Four of a Kind
Four cards of
the same rank. Four of a kind ranks above a full
house andbelow a straight flush. The illustration
shows four jacks with a deuce kicker(fifth card).
Full House
Any three of one
rank plus two of another. Often identified by the
three of a kind. Three kings and two 3s is a full
house, often known as kings full, and sometimes
more specifically as kings full of 3s. Ties are
broken first by the three of a kind, then the
pair. So, for example, 4-4-4-2-2 beats 3-3-3-A-A.
In community-card games such as hold'em and Omaha,
morethan one player can have a full house
containing the same three cards ofone rank. So,
for example, A-A-A-K-K beats A-A-A-Q-Q. A full
house ranks above a flush and below four of a
kind. The illustration shows 7s full of 3s.
Flush
Five cards of
the same suit, not in sequence. A flush is often
specified by its top one or two cards. For
example, Ah Kh 9h 4h 2h is called anace-king
flush. (Five cards of the same suit in sequence
constitutes a special hand known as a straight
flush.) A flush ranks above a straight and below a
full house. The illustration shows a queen-high
diamond flush.
Straight
Any five
consecutive cards of mixed suits. The ace can be
high or low.A-K-Q-J-T, an ace-high straight is the
highest straight, and 5-4-3-2-A, a5-high straight,
is the lowest straight. (Five cards of the same
suit in sequence constitutes a special hand known
as a straight flush.) A straight ranks above three
of a Kind and below a flush. The illustration
shows a 10-high straight.
Three of a Kind
Three cards of
the same rank, plus two other unrelated cards. The
hand is often called trips or, in community-card
games, a set. Three of a kindranks above two pair
and below a straight. The illustration shows three
4s.
Two Pair
Two of one rank,
plus two of another rank, plus an unrelated card.
Forexample, A-A-K-K-Q is two pair, known variously
as two pair, aces and kings; aces up; aces over;
aces over kings; aces and kings; aces and. Ifboth
hands have the same high pair, the hand containing
the higher second pair wins. For example,
A-A-7-7-2 beats A-A-6-6-K. If both pairs tie, the
high card wins. For example, A-A-7-7-J beats
A-A-7-7-9. Two pair ranks between one pair and
three of a kind. The illustration shows 8s and 5s.
Pair
A hand
containing two cards of the same rank, plus three
other unmatched cards. When two players have the
same pair, the highest side card or cards wins.
For example, J-J-A-3-2 beats J-J-K-Q-9; 4-4-A-K-2
beats 4-4-A-Q-9; A-A-9-8-7 beats A-A-9-8-6. One
pair is the second-lowest category of hand, coming
between no pair and two pair. The illustration
shows a pair of 9s.
No Pair
A hand lower
than one pair, usually named by its high card, as,
for example, ace high. When two players both have
the same high card, thehighest side card or cards
wins. For example, K-Q-4-3-2 beats K-T-9-8-7;
A-K-Q-J-9 beats A-K-Q-J-8. No pair is the lowest
category of hand. The illustration shows a
king-high hand.