Rankings de Mãos de Poker: O Guia Completo de Todas as Mãos de Poker do Melhor ao Pior
Understanding poker hand rankings is the foundation of becoming a winning poker player. Whether you're a complete beginner or looking to refine your hand evaluation skills, this comprehensive guide covers everything from basic hand rankings to advanced concepts like kickers, board texture, and relative hand strength. Master these fundamentals, and you'll be well on your way to making better decisions at the poker table.
Poker Hand Rankings: Complete List from Best to Worst
In standard poker (Texas Hold'em, Omaha, and most variants), hands are ranked in the following order. The best possible hand is a Royal Flush, and the worst is a high card. Here's the complete ranking:
1. Royal Flush - The Unbeatable Hand
Definition: A, K, Q, J, 10, all of the same suit
Example: A♠ K♠ Q♠ J♠ 10♠
Probability: 0.000154% (1 in 649,740 hands)
The Royal Flush is the strongest possible hand in poker and cannot be beaten. It's the dream hand every player hopes to see at least once in their poker career. When you have a Royal Flush, your only concern is how to extract maximum value from your opponents.
Royal Flush Strategy
If you flop or turn a Royal Flush, your goal is to build the pot as large as possible. Consider:
- Slow-playing on the flop to let opponents catch up
- Betting if the board is coordinated and opponents might have strong hands
- Trapping aggressive players who might bluff into you
- Going all-in on the river - you literally cannot lose
2. Straight Flush - Five Sequential Cards of the Same Suit
Definition: Five consecutive cards of the same suit (not A-K-Q-J-10)
Example: 9♥ 8♥ 7♥ 6♥ 5♥
Probability: 0.00139% (1 in 72,193 hands)
A Straight Flush is extremely rare and almost always the winning hand. The higher the cards in your straight flush, the better. A straight flush to the King (K-Q-J-10-9) beats a straight flush to the 9 (9-8-7-6-5).
Special case: The wheel straight flush (5-4-3-2-A of the same suit) is the lowest possible straight flush, but it's still an incredibly strong hand.
3. Four of a Kind (Quads) - Four Cards of the Same Rank
Definition: Four cards of the same rank, plus any fifth card (kicker)
Example: 8♠ 8♥ 8♦ 8♣ K♠
Probability: 0.024% (1 in 4,165 hands)
Four of a Kind is an extremely powerful hand. The rank of the four cards determines the winner if multiple players have quads. Four Aces beats Four Kings, Four Kings beats Four Queens, and so on.
Kicker importance: If two players have the same four of a kind (only possible when quads are on the board), the fifth card (kicker) determines the winner.
Four of a Kind Example
Board: 8♠ 8♥ 8♦ K♣ 3♥
Player 1: 8♣ A♠ (Four 8s with Ace kicker)
Player 2: K♠ Q♥ (Full House: Kings over Eights)
Winner: Player 1 - Four of a Kind beats Full House
4. Full House (Boat) - Three of a Kind + One Pair
Definition: Three cards of one rank and two cards of another rank
Example: K♠ K♥ K♦ 9♣ 9♠ (Kings full of Nines)
Probability: 0.1441% (1 in 694 hands)
A Full House is a very strong hand that wins most pots. When comparing Full Houses, the rank of the three-of-a-kind determines the winner, not the pair.
Examples of Full House hierarchy:
- Aces full of Kings (A-A-A-K-K) beats Kings full of Aces (K-K-K-A-A)
- Queens full of Deuces (Q-Q-Q-2-2) beats Jacks full of Aces (J-J-J-A-A)
- The three-of-a-kind always matters most
5. Flush - Five Cards of the Same Suit
Definition: Five cards of the same suit, not in sequence
Example: A♦ J♦ 9♦ 5♦ 3♦
Probability: 0.1965% (1 in 509 hands)
A Flush is a strong hand, especially when you have the nut flush (Ace-high). When multiple players have flushes, the player with the highest card wins. If the highest cards are equal, compare the second-highest, and so on.
Nut flush advantage: Having the Ace of the flush suit means you have the best possible flush. This is crucial information for value betting and avoiding coolers.
Flush Comparison Example
Player 1: A♥ 8♥ (Flush: A-K-J-8-3)
Player 2: Q♥ 9♥ (Flush: K-Q-J-9-3)
Board: K♥ J♥ 3♥ 7♣ 2♠
Winner: Player 1 - Ace-high flush beats King-high flush
6. Straight - Five Sequential Cards of Mixed Suits
Definition: Five consecutive cards of different suits
Example: 10♥ 9♠ 8♦ 7♣ 6♥
Probability: 0.3925% (1 in 255 hands)
A Straight is a medium-strength hand that can win big pots or lose big pots depending on the situation. The highest card in the straight determines its rank.
The wheel (A-2-3-4-5): The Ace can be used as either the high card in a straight (A-K-Q-J-10) or as the low card in a "wheel" straight (5-4-3-2-A). The wheel is the lowest possible straight.
Important: Straights do not "wrap around." K-A-2-3-4 is NOT a straight.
7. Three of a Kind (Trips or Set) - Three Cards of the Same Rank
Definition: Three cards of the same rank, plus two unrelated cards
Example: J♠ J♥ J♦ 8♣ 4♠
Probability: 2.1128% (1 in 47 hands)
Terminology difference:
- Set: When you have a pocket pair and hit one on the board (e.g., you have 9-9, board has 9-K-3)
- Trips: When you have one card matching a pair on the board (e.g., you have A-9, board has 9-9-3)
Sets are much more disguised than trips and typically win bigger pots because opponents can't see the pair in your hand.
8. Two Pair - Two Cards of One Rank + Two Cards of Another Rank
Definition: Two pairs of cards with the same rank, plus one unrelated card (kicker)
Example: Q♥ Q♠ 7♦ 7♣ A♥
Probability: 4.7539% (1 in 21 hands)
Two Pair is a medium-strength hand. When comparing two-pair hands, the highest pair determines the winner. If those are equal, the second pair is compared. If both pairs are equal, the kicker decides.
Example: Queens and Sevens beats Jacks and Tens, even though Tens are higher than Sevens.
9. One Pair - Two Cards of the Same Rank
Definition: Two cards of the same rank, plus three unrelated cards
Example: 10♠ 10♥ A♦ 8♣ 3♠
Probability: 42.2569% (1 in 2.37 hands)
One Pair is the most common made hand in poker. The rank of the pair matters most, followed by the kickers. You'll frequently play for small pots with one pair and need to be cautious about over-committing chips.
Overpair vs. underpair:
- Overpair: Your pocket pair is higher than any card on the board (you have K-K, board is 10-8-3)
- Underpair: Your pocket pair is lower than a card on the board (you have 9-9, board is K-8-3)
10. High Card - No Made Hand
Definition: Five unrelated cards with no pairs, straights, or flushes
Example: A♥ K♠ J♦ 9♣ 4♠ (Ace-high)
Probability: 50.1177% (about 1 in 2 hands)
High Card is the weakest hand category. When no player has made a hand (extremely rare), the highest card wins. If the highest cards are equal, compare the second-highest, and so on.
In practice, high card rarely wins at showdown in multi-way pots, but Ace-high can be a winner in heads-up situations, especially on missed draw boards.
Understanding Kickers: The Fifth Card That Matters
A kicker is a card that doesn't contribute to the main ranking of your hand but is used to break ties. Understanding kickers is crucial for hand evaluation.
When Kickers Matter
One Pair situations:
Board: K♠ K♥ 9♦ 5♣ 2♠
Player 1: A♥ 8♦ (Pair of Kings with A-9-5 kickers)
Player 2: Q♣ J♠ (Pair of Kings with Q-J-9 kickers)
Winner: Player 1 - Ace kicker beats Queen kicker
Kicker quality importance:
- Ace kicker is premium - play aggressively
- King or Queen kicker is good - proceed with caution
- Jack or lower kicker is weak - often fold to aggression
Counterfeited Kickers
Sometimes the board "counterfeits" your kicker, making it irrelevant:
Board: K♠ K♥ A♦ Q♣ J♠
You have: K♣ 5♥
Your best hand: K-K-K-A-Q (your 5 doesn't play - the board's A-Q-J are all better kickers)
If your opponent also has a King, you'll chop (tie) because both players use the same five cards: K-K-K-A-Q
Reading the Board: How to Identify Your Best Five Cards
In Texas Hold'em, you make the best five-card hand using any combination of your two hole cards and the five community cards. Let's practice reading boards:
Example 1: Identifying Your Hand
Your cards: A♥ K♥
Board: K♠ K♦ 9♥ 4♥ 2♣
Your hand: Three of a Kind (Trip Kings)
Best five cards: K♠ K♦ K♥ A♥ 9♥
Example 2: Playing the Board
Your cards: 7♣ 2♦
Board: A♠ K♥ Q♦ J♣ 10♠
Your hand: Straight (Broadway - A-K-Q-J-10)
Note: You're "playing the board" - your hole cards don't improve the straight on the board. Any opponent also has the same straight, so you'll chop the pot unless someone has a flush.
Example 3: Flush with Ace Kicker
Your cards: A♠ 3♠
Board: K♠ 8♠ 5♠ 9♥ 2♣
Your hand: Nut Flush (Ace-high flush)
Best five cards: A♠ K♠ 8♠ 5♠ 3♠
This is the best possible flush - no one can have a higher flush than Ace-high.
Relative Hand Strength: Context Matters
A hand's absolute strength (where it ranks) is less important than its relative strength (how it compares to opponent ranges in specific situations). This concept is fundamental to GTO poker strategy.
Board Texture and Hand Strength
Dry boards (few draws, disconnected cards):
- Top pair is very strong
- Overpairs are premium
- Bluffs have less credibility
- Example: K♥ 7♦ 2♣ rainbow
Wet boards (many possible draws and made hands):
- Top pair is vulnerable
- You need two pair or better for comfort
- Bluffs are more credible
- Example: J♥ 10♥ 9♠
Multi-Way vs Heads-Up Pots
Heads-up (1v1):
- Top pair top kicker is often good enough to get all-in
- Ace-high can win at showdown
- Bluffing is more effective
Multi-way (3+ players):
- Someone usually has a strong hand
- You typically need two pair or better
- Bluffing is less effective
- Drawing hands have better implied odds
Hand Strength by Street
Pre-Flop Hand Strength
Pre-flop, hand strength is determined by potential to make strong hands post-flop. Here's a general ranking:
Premium Hands (Top 5%):
- AA, KK, QQ, JJ, AKs (suited Ace-King)
- These hands are profitable from any position
- Should almost always raise or 3-bet
Strong Hands (Top 15%):
- TT, 99, AKo, AQs, AJs, KQs
- Profitable from most positions
- Raise from all but early position
Playable Hands (Top 25%):
- 88, 77, AQo, AJo, KQo, suited connectors like JTs, T9s
- Position-dependent profitability
- Raise from late position, fold or call from early position
For detailed pre-flop strategy by position, see our poker position strategy guide.
Flop Hand Strength
On the flop, categorize your hand:
Monsters (top of your range):
- Sets, straights, flushes, two pair
- Bet for value, build the pot
- Consider slow-playing on dry boards
Strong made hands:
- Top pair top kicker, overpairs
- Bet for value and protection
- Can call down versus aggression
Medium-strength hands:
- Top pair weak kicker, middle pair, weak two pair
- Bet for thin value or pot control
- Difficult to play profitably
Draws:
- Flush draws, straight draws, combo draws
- Semi-bluff or call for the right price
- See our pot odds guide for draw math
Weak hands / Air:
- Nothing made, no draws
- Bluff occasionally or give up
- Don't over-bluff in multi-way pots
Advanced Hand Evaluation Concepts
Blockers and Hand Removal
The cards in your hand affect what hands your opponents can have. This is called card removal or blockers:
Blocker Example
Board: K♥ Q♥ J♥ 4♣ 2♠
You have: A♥ 8♦
You have the nut flush. Additionally, your A♥ blocks the opponent from having A♥T♥ for a royal flush or A♥X♥ for a higher flush. This makes your hand even more valuable.
Learn more about advanced blocker concepts in our blockers and unblockers guide.
Nut Advantage and Range Advantage
Nut advantage: When your range contains more of the strongest possible hands than your opponent's range.
Range advantage: When your overall range is stronger than your opponent's range.
Range Advantage Example
You raise from the Button, Big Blind calls.
Flop: A♠ K♥ 3♦
Your range advantage: As the pre-flop raiser, you have all the strong Aces (AK, AQ, AJ) and big pairs (AA, KK). The BB's calling range contains fewer of these premium hands.
Strategy implication: You can bet this flop with high frequency, including with bluffs, because your range is perceived as stronger.
Understanding ranges is crucial for modern poker. See our guide on understanding ranges in poker.
Hand Equity vs Showdown Value
Equity: Your hand's mathematical chance of winning at showdown
Showdown value: Whether your hand is strong enough to win without improving
Equity vs Showdown Value
Hand 1: K♥ Q♥ on a A♥ 9♥ 3♣ board
High equity (flush draw): About 35% to win with one card to come
Low showdown value: King-high almost never wins without improving
Hand 2: 9♠ 9♦ on a 9♥ 8♣ 2♠ board
High equity: About 90%+ to win
High showdown value: Middle set is almost certainly best right now
Common Hand Ranking Mistakes
1. Overvaluing Top Pair on Wet Boards
Many players get married to top pair even when the board is extremely coordinated with flush and straight possibilities. On wet boards, top pair is often just a bluff-catcher.
2. Undervaluing Sets
Sets are much stronger than many players realize, especially on dry boards. They're disguised, can improve to full houses, and beat most hands people call with.
3. Not Recognizing Counterfeited Hands
When the board pairs or completes obvious draws, your hand value can change dramatically. A hand that was strong on the turn might be worthless on the river.
Counterfeiting Example
Turn: A♥ K♠ 7♦ 3♣
Your hand: A♠ 7♥ (Two pair, Aces and Sevens)
River: K♥
Now your hand is A-A-K-K-7, but anyone with A-K has A-A-K-K with a better kicker than your 7. Your two pair has been counterfeited into a weaker two pair.
4. Ignoring Suit Coordination
When three cards of the same suit appear on the board, any flush beats your straight. When four cards of a suit appear, anyone with a single card of that suit has you beat.
5. Confusing Straights Around the Ace
Remember: K-A-2-3-4 is NOT a straight. The Ace can only be high (A-K-Q-J-10) or low (5-4-3-2-A), not both in the same hand.
Hand Rankings in Different Poker Variants
Texas Hold'em
Standard hand rankings apply. Most common variant both live and online.
Omaha and Omaha Hi-Lo
Hand rankings are identical, but you must use exactly two cards from your hand and three from the board. This creates many more possible combinations.
Important Omaha rule: You CANNOT use three or four cards from your hand, even if it makes a better hand.
Omaha Example
Your hand: A♠ A♥ A♦ K♣
Board: A♣ K♠ K♥ 9♦ 2♣
Your hand is NOT four Aces. You can only use two cards from your hand.
Your actual hand: Full House - Aces full of Kings (using A-A from hand, A-K-K from board)
Short Deck (6+ Hold'em)
Uses a deck with all cards 2-5 removed. Hand rankings are slightly different:
- Flush beats Full House (flushes are rarer with fewer cards)
- Three of a Kind beats a Straight
- A-6-7-8-9 is a straight (Ace can be low)
- All other rankings remain the same
Probability and Hand Rankings: The Math
Understanding the probability of making different hands helps with decision-making:
Probability of Being Dealt Pre-Flop Hands
| Hand | Probability | Odds |
|---|---|---|
| Any pocket pair | 5.88% | 16:1 |
| Specific pocket pair (e.g., AA) | 0.45% | 220:1 |
| AK (suited or unsuited) | 1.21% | 82:1 |
| Any suited cards | 23.5% | 3.25:1 |
Probability of Making Hands by the River
| Starting Hand | Hand Made | Probability |
|---|---|---|
| Pocket pair | Set or better | 12% |
| Suited cards | Flush | 6.5% |
| Connected cards | Straight | 10-15% |
| Any two cards | One pair or better | 49% |
For detailed odds calculations, check out our pot odds and poker math guide.
Using Hand Rankings in Game Theory Optimal (GTO) Play
Modern poker strategy uses hand rankings as a foundation but focuses more on ranges and frequencies. GTO strategy involves:
Polarized vs Merged Ranges
Polarized range: Contains very strong hands and bluffs, with few medium-strength hands
Merged (condensed) range: Contains many medium-strength hands
Understanding which range you and your opponent have affects how you value your specific hand.
Learn more in our guide on polarized vs merged ranges.
Hand Categories in GTO Play
Rather than thinking "I have two pair," think:
- "Is this in the top X% of my range?"
- "How does this compare to opponent's likely holdings?"
- "What frequency should I bet/call/fold with this hand category?"
Use poker solvers to study how hand strength translates to optimal actions across different board textures.
Practice: Test Your Hand Reading Skills
Quiz 1: Identify the Winner
Board: Q♠ Q♥ 9♦ 9♣ 2♠
Player 1: A♥ K♦
Player 2: K♣ J♠
Answer: Player 1 wins. Both have Q-Q-9-9 (two pair from the board), but Player 1's Ace kicker beats Player 2's King kicker.
Quiz 2: What's the Nut Hand?
Board: 8♥ 7♥ 6♠ 5♣ 2♥
Answer: 9♥ 4♥ makes a straight flush (9-8-7-6-5 of hearts). This beats the nut flush (A♥ K♥) and the nut straight (9-8).
Quiz 3: Calculate Your Hand
Your cards: K♥ Q♥
Board: A♥ J♥ 10♠ 3♣ 9♦
Answer: You have a Royal Flush! A♥ K♥ Q♥ J♥ 10♥ - the best possible hand in poker.
Hand Rankings Cheat Sheet for Quick Reference
- Royal Flush: A-K-Q-J-10, same suit (unbeatable)
- Straight Flush: Five sequential cards, same suit
- Four of a Kind: Four cards of same rank
- Full House: Three of a kind + pair
- Flush: Five cards of same suit
- Straight: Five sequential cards, mixed suits
- Three of a Kind: Three cards of same rank
- Two Pair: Two pairs of different ranks
- One Pair: Two cards of same rank
- High Card: No made hand
Conclusion: Mastering Hand Rankings is Just the Beginning
Understanding poker hand rankings is essential, but it's only the foundation. The best poker players know that:
- Context matters more than absolute hand strength: A flush on a paired board might be worthless
- Position affects hand value: Learn positional strategy
- Opponent ranges define hand strength: Study range construction
- Math informs decisions: Master pot odds
- Hand combinations affect ranges: Learn combo counting
Your Learning Path
- Memorize hand rankings until they're automatic
- Practice reading boards and identifying the nuts
- Study how board texture affects hand strength
- Learn pre-flop hand selection by position
- Understand kickers and tiebreakers
- Progress to range-based thinking
- Study GTO fundamentals with solvers
- Apply exploitative adjustments based on opponents
Master these fundamentals, and you'll have the foundation to become a winning poker player. Hand rankings are just the beginning - combine them with solid GTO strategy, tell reading, and proper bankroll management to crush the games.
Ready to take your poker knowledge to the next level? Use GTO Gecko to study optimal strategies, practice hand evaluation, and develop the skills that separate recreational players from professionals. Understanding hand rankings is your first step toward poker mastery.