No Limit Texas Holdem Rules
- No Limit Texas Hold'em Blind Rules
- Official No Limit Texas Hold'em Rules
- No-limit Texas Hold'em Poker Tournament Rules
The Texas Holdem version of poker is one of the easiest to learn. It is for this reason that it has now become the most popular poker variant both online and in casinos.
The simplicity of the rules allows new players to pick up the game and start playing after a few minutes, whilst the depth of the game helps keep players interested for years. This guide aims to give you a complete understanding on how Texas Holdem is played, and it will take no longer than 5 minutes.
No-Limit Texas Hold'em Betting Rules Given that No-Limit is the most popular betting variation today we'll start with it first. People are drawn to No-Limit betting variations because of its unique mix of. Texas Hold’em Rules In Texas hold’em each player is dealt two cards called their ‘hole’ cards. Hole cards can only be seen and used by one person. Texas Hold'em No-limit and pot-limit games, without exception. In limit games, when there are three or more players involved and all players have not gone all-in, games with two betting rounds (draw or lowball) will allow a bet, plus four raises. In a game which involves three or more betting rounds, the maximum raises allowed are three.
Texas Hold'em rules basics.
Texas Holdem is played with a 52-card deck and poker chips. Texas Holdem can be played in a cash game style, where there is no time limit and each hand is played with real money.
The game can also be played in a tournament style where each player receives a set amount of chips at the start, and the winner is the player that obtains all of the chips on the table. Tournaments can also be played for real money, where the winner takes all or part of the other players’ buy-ins.
- Each player is dealt two cards face down on the table, these are called 'holecards'.
- 5 community cards are dealt face up in the middle of the table in 3 separate stages.
- The Flop is the first stage, where the first 3 cards are dealt face up.
- The Turn is the second stage, where 1 card is dealt up.
- The River is the final stage, where 1 last card is dealt face up.
- Players use a combination of the 2 cards in their hand and the 5 cards on the table to make the best 5 card hand (see Texas Hold'em hand rank).
- At each stage there is a round of betting.
- If there are still players left in the hand after the final round of betting, the hand will go to a ‘showdown’ and the best hand will take the money in the pot.
Texas Hold'em betting.
Betting is a fundamental part of poker. The amount you can bet depends of the variant of Texas Holdem you are playing.
- In Limit Holdem you can only bet a fixed amount on each round.
- In Pot Limit Holdem you can bet any size you wish up to the amount that is already in the pot.
- In No Limit Holdem you can bet any amount of money on any round up to the amount you have in front of you.
There are numerous stages in the game of Texas Holdem where betting can take place.
Sequence of rounds and betting.
Holecards are dealt
Round of betting
Flop is dealt
Round of betting
Turn is dealt
Round of betting
River is dealt
Round of betting
No Limit Texas Hold'em Blind Rules
In each of these rounds of betting, you will have 3 options available to you depending on what has happened before the action reaches you. The two situations you will be in are acting after there has been a bet, or acting after no bets have been made. (See the bet sizing article for betting strategy in Texas Hold'em.)
Acting after no bets.
- Check – By ‘checking’ you do not put any money in the pot, and the next card will be dealt if no other bets are made.
- Bet – By betting you put money into the pot. This means that the other players must call this bet to see the next card to be dealt.
- Fold – You also have the option to fold, but this is rarely done because it is currently free for you to see another card and give yourself an opportunity to make the best hand.
Acting after a bet.
- Call – By calling, you put the same amount of money into the pot that the other player has bet. Therefore you will see the next card if no other players raise this bet.
- Raise – You can raise another player’s bet and force them to call an additional amount of money for them to see the next card.
- Fold – If you do not wish to put more money into the pot, you can fold your hand. Your hand will be declared 'dead' and you will no longer be able to win the money in the pot.
Dealing in Texas Holdem.
The cards in Texas Holdem have to be dealt in accordance to a simple set of rules. These rules help to keep the dealing fair, and prevent the cards from being fixed.
- Holecards must be dealt 1 at a time from the top of the pack in a clockwise motion starting from the dealer’s left.
- Before the flop can be dealt, a card must be 'burned' which means that this card is dealt face down on the table and placed to one side.
- Before the turn, another card must be 'burned'.
- Before the river, one final card must again be 'burned'.
Texas Hold'em rules overview.
As you can hopefully see, Texas Holdem is a very simple game to pick up. It is also a very enjoyable game and can be played for real money or for entertainment purposes without the use of money. Due to the betting nature of the game, it is possible to learn skills and strategies to improve the way you play and win money through playing poker. If you want to be able to win money through poker, we have a strategy section with numerous strategy guides to help you improve your poker game.
Now go out and start playing some Texas Holdem. Don't forget to brush up on the Hold'em hand rank (try the hand rank quiz for some extra help) before you play to ensure that you know what beats what.
Go back to the interesting Texas Hold'em Articles.
Can You Afford Not To Use
Poker Tracker 4?
“I wouldn’t play another session of online poker without it”
“I play $25NL, and in under 1 week PT4 had paid for itself”
Comments
Known as the ‘Cadillac’ of poker games, No Limit Texas Hold ‘Em is the game that caused the poker boom and is the variant currently played at the World Series of Poker main event. It was introduced to the Las Vegas poker scene in the late 1960s and has grown in popularity ever since. No Limit Holdem’s popularity stems partly from the fact that it takes ‘a minute to learn and a lifetime to master’. The no limit betting structure, where players have the chance to win their opponent’s entire stack in one hand makes the game exciting both to play and to watch.
Official No Limit Texas Hold'em Rules
How to Play No Limit Texas Hold ‘Em
No-limit Texas Hold'em Poker Tournament Rules
At the start of a No Limit Holdem hand the two players to the left of the dealer are forced to put in blind bets to get the action going; the player to the immediate left of the dealer puts in the ‘small blind’ and the player to his left the ‘big blind’ (typically twice the small blind). Each player is then dealt two cards, faced down and the ‘pre-flop’ betting action starts on the player to the left of the big blind. If he wants to continue in the hand, he may ‘call’ the amount of the big blind bet or ‘raise’, meaning all other players must match this raise if they wish to continue. Alternatively, he can ‘fold’ and give up his interest in the pot.
The action continues clockwise around the table with each player having the option to call, raise or fold. If there has been no raise by the time the action reaches the small blind, he has the option to complete his bet to the amount of the big blind or indeed raise. Similarly, the big blind has the option to ‘check’, meaning the hand progresses, or to raise. If someone raises pre-flop and everyone else folds, the pot is awarded to the player who made the raise.
Because of the no limit betting structure, each player can bet or raise the amount of his entire chip stack at any point in the hand. Players can only play with chips that are on the table however, and can not add to or remove chips from their stack during the course of a hand. This rule is known as ‘table stakes’.
When all players still in the pot have matched the amount of the big blind, or the last pre-flop raise, we proceed to the ‘flop’, where the dealer puts three cards face up in the middle of the table. These three cards are known as community cards, and can be used by all of the players at the table to make their best 5-card poker hand. The action on the flop and subsequent betting rounds starts on the small blind who has the option to bet or to check, handing the betting initiative to the next player. Note that if there is a bet facing a player he must call, raise or fold; checking is no longer an option. As with pre-flop, if a player makes a bet on the flop that is not called by at least one player, they’re awarded the pot.
If the last bet on the flop betting round has been called, we move on to the ‘turn’. On this round, the dealer places a single community card face up on the table, which can again be used by all players still in the pot to make their hand. They can now use any 5 of the 6 total cards (4 community and 2 hole cards) to make their poker hand. Once again the action starts on the small blind and continues clockwise around the remaining players who have the opportunity to check or bet.
When betting on the turn is complete, we move to the ‘river’, the final round of the hand. On the river, the dealer places a final community card face up which the remaining players again may use to form part of their hand. They now have 7 cards from which to make their poker hand. Once the last bet has been called on the river or if all players remaining in the hand check, the hand goes to a ‘showdown’, where players must turn their hole cards face up and state the strength of their final poker hand. The player with the strongest 5-card poker hand wins the pot in this situation.