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Poker Chart – Poker Ranking and Hand Hierarchy Guide

Your complete beginner-friendly guide to poker sequences, hand rankings, and winning hands. Poker is one of the most popular card games in the world. It is loved because it combines skill, strategy, psychology, and a little bit of luck. But to win regularly, the first thing every player must learn is the poker hand rankings also called the poker sequence or poker hierarchy.

This simple guide explains all poker hands from highest to lowest, along with examples, tips, and probability charts. Whether you play Texas Hold’em, Omaha, or any other poker game, these rankings always stay the same.

A Poker Chart is a visual and logical ranking of all poker hands, arranged from the strongest hand to the weakest. It acts as a quick decision-making tool while playing.

Why poker players rely on a poker chart:

  • It helps you instantly identify winning hands
  • Reduces costly beginner mistakes
  • Builds confidence during betting
  • Improves long-term winning strategy
 Fact: Most beginner poker losses happen not because of bad luck, but because players don’t know hand rankings properly.

Let’s break down the complete poker hand hierarchy, step by step, in the exact order used worldwide.

The Royal Flush is the strongest hand in poker and cannot be beaten.

Cards required:

  • Ace, King, Queen, Jack, 10
  • All five cards of the same suit

Example: A♠ K♠ Q♠ J♠ 10♠

 Pro Insight: Hitting a Royal Flush is extremely rare—about once in 650,000 hands.

A Straight Flush is five consecutive cards of the same suit.

Example: 9♥ 8♥ 7♥ 6♥ 5♥

👉 The higher the top card, the stronger the straight flush.

Four cards of the same rank plus one extra card (kicker).

Example: K♣ K♦ K♥ K♠ + 3♦

 Beginners often underestimate this hand—don’t.

A Full House is a combination of:

  • Three cards of one rank
  • Two cards of another rank

Example: Q♠ Q♦ Q♥ + 9♣ 9♦

The higher three-of-a-kind decides the winner.

Five cards of the same suit, but not in sequence.

Example: A♦ J♦ 8♦ 6♦ 2♦

 If two players have a flush, the highest card wins.

Five consecutive cards of mixed suits.

Example: 10♠ 9♦ 8♣ 7♥ 6♦

 Important: Ace can act as high (A-K) or low (A-2-3-4-5).

Three cards of the same rank plus two unrelated cards.

Example: 7♠ 7♦ 7♣ + Q♥ 4♠

 Also known as Trips or Set.

Two different pairs plus one kicker card.

Example: A♣ A♦ + 5♠ 5♥ + 9♦

 The highest pair wins; if tied, the second pair or kicker decides.

Two cards of the same rank.

Example: J♠ J♦ + 10♣ 7♥ 2♠

 Many beginners lose money by overplaying one pair.

No matching cards, no sequence, no suit.

Example: A♠ Q♦ 9♣ 6♥ 3♦

 If no one has a pair, the highest card wins.

Your starting hands decide your win rate. Always begin with stronger cards.

1. Big Pocket Pairs

  • AA

  • KK

  • QQ

These are premium hands. Raise confidently.

2. Strong Suited Connectors

  • AK suited

  • KQ suited

  • QJ suited

They can form flushes, straights, and high pairs.

3. High Card Combos

  • Ace-King (AK)

  • Ace-Queen (AQ)

Even unsuited, these are strong openers.

Top 5 Starting Hands in Poker

  1. Pocket Aces (A♠ A♥)

  2. Pocket Kings (K♠ K♣)

  3. Pocket Queens (Q♥ Q♦)

  4. Pocket Jacks (J♠ J♥)

  5. Ace-King Suited (A♠ K♠)

These hands give you the highest chance of winning preflop.

Poker Hand Combinations Probability Odds
Royal Flush 4 0.000154% 649,739:1
Straight Flush 36 0.00139% 72,192:1
Four of a Kind 624 0.02401% 4,164:1
Full House 3,744 0.1441% 693:1
Flush 5,108 0.197% 508:1
Straight 10,200 0.3925% 254:1
Three of a Kind 54,912 2.1128% 46:1
Two Pair 123,552 4.7539% 20:1
One Pair 1,098,240 42.2569% 2.37:1
High Card 1,302,540 50.1177% 1.99:1

This shows how rare each hand is and helps you understand why some hands are more valuable.

Absolute Value

The hand’s rank in the poker sequence.
Example: Flush will always beat Straight.

Relative Value

Strength depends on the board and opponent actions.
Example:

  • You have a pair of Aces

  • But board shows four cards to a straight

  • Someone may have a straight → your Aces become weak

Understanding both helps avoid big losses.

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