Texas Hold’em Rules

Texas Hold’em is the most popular poker game in the United States. It is easy to learn, fast enough to stay exciting, and deep enough to keep improving for years.
Every player receives two private cards. These are called hole cards. The dealer then places five shared cards on the table. These shared cards are called community cards.
Your goal is to make the best five-card poker hand. You can use both hole cards, one hole card, or only the community cards. You can also win before showdown if every other player folds.
How Texas Hold’em works
Texas Hold’em is a community card poker game. That means players combine private cards with shared cards on the table.
A hand starts with forced bets called blinds. After that, each player receives two hole cards face down. The hand then moves through four betting rounds.
The five community cards appear in stages. First comes the flop, then the turn, and finally the river. If two or more players remain after the final betting round, the hand goes to showdown.
The dealer button and blinds
Texas Hold’em uses a dealer button. This button shows which player has the dealer position for that hand.
In online poker, the software deals the cards. However, the button still matters because it decides the order of action. The button moves one seat to the left after each hand.
The two players left of the button post the blinds. The first player posts the small blind. The next player posts the big blind.
Blinds create action before the cards are dealt. Without blinds, players could wait too long for premium hands.
Hole cards and community cards
Each player receives two hole cards. These cards belong only to that player.
After the first betting round, the dealer places community cards on the table. All remaining players can use these cards.
Texas Hold’em has five community cards in total. The first three are called the flop. The fourth card is called the turn. The fifth card is called the river.
At showdown, each player makes the best five-card hand possible. You do not need to use both hole cards.
Betting rounds in Texas Hold’em

Texas Hold’em has four betting rounds. Each round gives players a chance to check, bet, call, raise, or fold.
The action does not always start with the same player. Before the flop, the player left of the big blind acts first. After the flop, the first active player left of the button acts first.
Preflop
Preflop starts after every player receives two hole cards. The blinds are already in the pot.
The first player left of the big blind acts first. That player can call the big blind, raise, or fold.
Action then moves around the table. The round ends when all remaining players have matched the current bet.
Flop
The flop starts when the dealer places three community cards face up. These cards are shared by all players.
A new betting round begins. The first active player left of the button acts first.
Players can check if no one has bet. If someone bets, the next players must call, raise, or fold.
Turn
The turn is the fourth community card. It appears after the flop betting round ends.
Another betting round follows. By this point, players know six of the seven available cards.
The turn often creates big decisions. Draws now have one card left to improve, and made hands become easier to judge.
River
The river is the fifth and final community card. No more cards come after the river.
The final betting round begins. Players now know their best possible hand.
If a player bets and everyone else folds, that player wins the pot. If at least two players call or check through, the hand goes to showdown.
Showdown rules
A showdown happens when two or more players remain after the final betting round. Players reveal their cards, and the best five-card hand wins the pot.
In Texas Hold’em, you can use any combination of hole cards and community cards. You may use both hole cards, one hole card, or no hole cards.
If two players have the same hand strength, kickers can decide the winner. A kicker is an extra card that does not form the main hand, but can break a tie.
If both players have the exact same five-card hand, they split the pot.
Hand rankings in Texas Hold’em
Texas Hold’em uses standard poker hand rankings. A royal flush is the strongest hand. High card is the weakest hand.
The full order is:
- Royal flush
- Straight flush
- Four of a kind
- Full house
- Flush
- Straight
- Three of a kind
- Two pair
- One pair
- High card
New players should learn these rankings before playing for real money. Many beginner mistakes happen because players misread their hand.
Example of a Texas Hold’em hand

Imagine you receive ace of hearts and king of hearts. These are your two hole cards.
The flop comes queen of hearts, ten of hearts, and two of clubs. You now have a strong draw. You can make a flush with another heart. You can also make a straight with a jack.
The turn is the jack of spades. You now have a straight from ten to ace.
The river is the three of diamonds. If no opponent has a better hand, your straight can win at showdown.
Common Texas Hold’em actions
Texas Hold’em uses the same basic actions as most poker games. You need to understand them before you play.
A check keeps you in the hand without betting. You can only check if no one has bet during that round.
A bet puts chips into the pot. A call matches another player’s bet. A raise increases the current bet. A fold gives up your hand.
These actions sound simple, but they shape the whole game. Good players know when to apply pressure and when to avoid trouble.
No-Limit Texas Hold’em
The most popular version is No-Limit Texas Hold’em. In this format, players can bet any amount up to their full stack.
This creates more pressure than Fixed-Limit poker. One large bet can put an opponent to a difficult decision.
No-Limit Hold’em is common in cash games and tournaments. It is also the main format used in many major live poker events.
Fixed-Limit and Pot-Limit Hold’em

Texas Hold’em can also be played with other betting structures. Fixed-Limit Hold’em uses fixed bet sizes.
In Fixed-Limit games, players cannot suddenly move all-in for a huge amount. The betting is more controlled, and the pot grows more slowly.
Pot-Limit Hold’em is less common. In Pot-Limit games, the maximum bet depends on the size of the pot.
Texas Hold’em cash games and tournaments
Texas Hold’em is played in both cash games and tournaments. The rules of the hand stay mostly the same, but the format changes.
In a cash game, chips represent real money. You can usually sit down, leave, or rebuy within the table rules.
In a tournament, every player starts with tournament chips. The blinds increase over time. Players are eliminated when they lose all their chips.
This makes tournament strategy different from cash game strategy. Survival, stack size, and blind levels matter much more.
Common beginner mistakes in Texas Hold’em

Many new players understand the rules, but still make simple mistakes. Fixing those mistakes can improve your results quickly.
One common mistake is playing too many starting hands. Weak hands often create difficult situations after the flop.
Another mistake is calling too often. Calling can be correct, but it should have a clear reason.
Some players also forget that the best hand uses five cards only. A sixth card never helps. This matters often when the board is paired or connected.
Why Texas Hold’em is a good game to learn first
Texas Hold’em is the best starting point for most new poker players. The rules are simple, and the game is available almost everywhere.
You also find more learning material for Hold’em than for any other poker variant. That makes it easier to improve after you learn the rules.
However, simple rules do not mean the game is easy to master. Betting, position, hand reading, and bankroll control all matter. That depth is exactly why Texas Hold’em stays popular.
Frequently asked questions about Texas Hold’em rules
The table also gets five community cards. All remaining players can use those shared cards.
Your final hand is always the best five-card combination available.
All remaining players can use the flop to build their best hand.
After the turn appears, another betting round takes place.
After the river, players have one final chance to bet before showdown.
After the flop, turn, and river, the first active player left of the button acts first.
Still, pocket aces can lose. No starting hand is guaranteed to win.