If poker were a vending machine, sometimes you get a snack worth savoring (AA), and most of the time you get … off-brand pretzels. Knowing how often certain hands show up helps you choose which hands to play and how aggressively to play them.

Quick context: how many starting hands are there?

  • There are 1,326 unique two-card combinations in Texas Hold’em, which collapse to 169 hand types if you ignore suits.
  • Three big buckets:
    • Pocket pairs (22–AA): the smallest bucket (13 hands and 78 total combinations)—rare but strong.
    • Suited hands (both cards same suit): more common (78 hands and a total of 312 combinations).
    • Offsuit hands (different suits): about 3× as common as their suited counterparts (78 hands and a total of 936 combinations).

Quick context: how many hands do we actually see?

At our home games players see roughly 20–30 hands per hour. The average player busts after about 2 hours, and the night ends in about 3–3.5 hours. That means most players will be dealt ~50–100 hands in a typical tournament here. Keep those ranges in mind when you read the table below.


How to read the table

  • % = chance of getting dealt this hand (or hand type) on any given hand (rounded).
  • 1 in N = the same chance, expressed as easy odds.
  • Per hour = expected times you will see the hand (or hand type) in every 20–30 hands (rounded; rare ones show “<1 (~X–Y% chance)”.
  • Per tournament = expected times in 50–100 hands (same idea).
  • Terms (super quick): Broadway = Ten or higher (T, J, Q, K, A). Connector = consecutive ranks (e.g., J-T). Suited = same suit (♠️/❤️/♦️/♣️). Offsuit = different suits.

Deal frequencies you can actually use

Hand / CategoryWhat it means%1 in NPer hour (20–30)Per tournament (50–100)
Any pocket pair (22–AA)One pair in the hole5.9%171–23–6
Premium pairs (JJ+)JJ, QQ, KK, AA1.8%550–1 (~35–50% chance)1–2 
Specific pocket pair (e.g., A A)That exact pair rank0.5%221<1 (~10–15% chance)<1 (~25–50% chance)
Any suited hand (non-pair)Both same suit (not a pair)23.5%45–712–24
Suited hands that can flop a straight (≤3-gap)Suited connectors + 1/2/3-gappers (incl. A5s–A2s; excludes 4-gappers like A6s)~14%73–47–14
Suited connectorsConsecutive & suited (AKs–32s)3.6%2812–4
Specific suited hand (e.g., A♠K♠)Exactly that suited combo0.3%332<1 (~6–9% chance)<1 (~15–30% chance)
Any offsuit hand (non-pair)Both different suits (not a pair)70.6%1.414–2135–70
Offsuit connectorsConsecutive & offsuit (AKo–32o)10.9%92–35–11
Specific offsuit hand (e.g., A♠K♦)Exactly that offsuit combo0.9%110<1 (~20–25% chance)0–1 (~50–90% chance)
Any unpaired Ace (Ax, excludes AA)At least one Ace, not AA14.5%73–47–14
Ace + Broadway kicker (unpaired)A with K/Q/J/T (suited or offsuit), not a pair(e.g., AQ, AT)4.8%2112–5
Any offsuit Ace (Axo, excludes AA)Ax offsuit (not AA)10.9%92–35–11
Any suited Ace (Axs)A♠x♠, etc.3.6%2812–4
Any two Broadways (unpaired)Both cards T+ and not a pair (e.g., KQ, AJ, AT)12.1%82–46–12
Offsuit Broadways (unpaired)Two T+ cards offsuit, not a pair (e.g., K♠Q♦)9.0%112–35–9
Suited Broadways (unpaired)Two T+ cards suited, not a pair (e.g., K♠Q♠)3.0%3312–3

Notes:

  • “Any Ace (Ax)” excludes AA, which is counted inside Premium pairs (JJ+).
  • “Suited … can flop a straight” = connectors + 1/2/3-gappers (e.g., J8s, T7s), and includes wheel hands A5s–A2sA6s+ are excluded.

What this should change in your game (plain English)

  1. Fold more of the offsuit junk.
    Offsuit versions are ~3× as common as suited—but most play terribly, especially out of position. You’ll get plenty; you don’t need to play them all.
  2. Pairs are rare—treat them like assets.
    You’ll see a pair ~once every 17 hands. Raise first-in, don’t limp. Postflop, stay humble when the board and action say you’re beat.
  3. Suited helps, but it isn’t magic.
    Suited is ~1 in 4 hands. Favor suited connectors/Broadways (they make strong top pairs, straights, and flushes). “Any two suited” is not an automatic call (except in the big blind).
  4. Realistic expectations calm the FOMO.
    In a typical tournament (50–100 hands), expect roughly:
    • Pocket pairs: 3–6 times
    • Any Ace (non-pair): 7–14 times
    • Suited connectors: 2–4 times
    • Premium pairs (JJ+): ~1 time (sometimes zero)

How this links to our previous tips

  • Tip #1 (Raise preflop): Strong hands are rare and deserve aggression to force large heads-up pots.
  • Tip #2 (Position): Play fewer borderline hands early; expand late when you act last.

Try this next game (60-second challenge)

Pick your hand types that you plan to play and commit to raising them first-in:

  • Pairssuited Acessuited Broadwayssuited connectors are all playable hands in a lot of situations.
    Then notice how often you are dealt offsuit trash hands (e.g., K-4 offsuit, T-7 offsuit, 8-5 offsuit) and do your best to auto-fold  them. Try to track how many chips you save one or two big blinds at a time.