How Poker Works
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Level 2 · Lesson 7

Pot odds & basic drawing math

Poker isn't all reads and instinct — most calls come down to a simple price comparison. After this lesson, you'll price any bet in seconds — turning calls from a gut feeling into the same quick math the pros run without thinking.

Pot odds in poker — a balance scale weighing chips against a card.

What pot odds are

Pot odds are the price you're being offered to call: the size of the pot compared to the amount you must put in. Suppose the pot is $150 and your opponent has bet, so to call costs you $50. You're risking $50 to win $150 — pot odds of 3 to 1.

Turned into a percentage: you're putting in $50 of an eventual $200 pot, so you need to win more than $50 / $200 = 25% of the time for the call to profit. That 25% is your break-even point.

Counting your outs

An out is any card left in the deck that completes your hand. Two common draws:

The rule of 2 and 4

A shortcut to turn outs into a rough chance of hitting:

So a 9-out flush draw is roughly 9 × 4 = 36% to complete by the river from the flop, and about 9 × 2 = 18% on the turn. (These approximations are close enough for the table.)

Putting it together: you have a flush draw on the flop (~36% to hit) and you're offered 3-to-1 pot odds (you need 25%). Since 36% > 25%, calling is profitable — your chance of hitting beats the price. If the pot only offered you, say, 5-to-1 against (needing ~45%), you'd fold. Compare your chance of hitting to the price; call when it's higher.

A word on implied odds

Pot odds only count chips already in the pot. Implied odds account for the extra you might win on later streets if you hit. A draw that's slightly short on raw pot odds can still be a fine call when a big payday is likely if it lands — and a poor one when your opponent will shut down the moment the flush card arrives.

Check yourself — no peeking

Answer each from memory. Retrieving the answer is what builds lasting recall.

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