Relative Position in Poker

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Poker Concepts — Position & Post-Flop Play

Relative Position in Poker:
Why Where You Sit Relative to the Raiser Changes Everything

Having the button doesn’t always mean having the best position. Relative position — your seat relative to the preflop raiser — often matters more than where you physically sit at the table.

What Is Relative Position?

Relative position (also called relative seating) describes where you sit in relation to the preflop raiser — specifically, whether you act before or after them on every postflop street.

The best relative position is sitting directly to the right of the preflop raiser — so that when they c-bet, you are the last to act and close the betting round. The worst is sitting directly to their left — forced to act first after their c-bet, with players behind you still to act.

Most players understand that position matters in poker. What they underestimate is that absolute position (being on the button, for example) and relative position are two different things — and in multiway pots, relative position can override the value of your seat entirely.

  • Absolute position — Your fixed seat at the table: UTG, MP, CO, BTN, SB, BB. This determines who acts first preflop and sets a baseline for postflop order.
  • Relative position — Your dynamic position in relation to the preflop raiser specifically. This shifts with every hand depending on who raised, from where, and who called along the way.

Understanding both — and recognizing when they diverge — is what separates players who use position correctly from those who only think they do.

Why Relative Position Matters: The Betting Round Reset

Here is the key mechanical fact that makes relative position so important: when a player bets, the action resets. Every player who acted before that bet now gets another opportunity to act. This simple rule is what makes your position relative to the bettor — not relative to the dealer — the most consequential factor in many multiway flops.

Suppose you are on the button (BTN) with two players in front of you — Player A and Player B. In a heads-up pot, being on the BTN means you always close the action. But in a multiway pot, it depends entirely on who bets first.

Scenario A — Favorable Relative Position

BTN closes the action in both cases

Flop: Player A checks → Player B checks → Hero (BTN) checks
Hero closes the betting round. ✅Flop: Player A bets → Player B folds → Hero (BTN) calls
Hero closes the betting round. ✅

Relative position quality
Favorable

In both cases, Hero sees all available information before making a decision and is last to act. Absolute position and relative position are aligned.

Scenario B — Relative Position Shifts

Player B bets — the betting round resets

Flop: Player A checks → Player B bets → Hero (BTN) acts → Player A now acts againPlayer B’s bet forces Player A to act a second time — after Hero.
Hero is no longer closing the action. Player A still has fold / call / raise available.

Relative position quality
Compromised

Hero still has the button and sees Player B’s action before acting. But Player A behind them remains a live threat — their range is completely uncapped. Being “last to act” is only guaranteed relative to the bettor, not the whole field.

The Sandwich Situation: Caught Between a C-Bet and an Unknown

The most uncomfortable spot created by bad relative position is what players call the sandwich: you are stuck between the preflop raiser making a c-bet and a player behind you who checked but could have anything.

In Texas Hold’em, players routinely check to the preflop raiser, expecting them to c-bet. This means that a player who checks on the flop is not necessarily weak — they may be slow-playing a set, a two-pair, a strong draw, or planning a check-raise. Their check reveals almost nothing about their hand strength.

The Sandwich — Full Example

Hero holds Q♥J♠ on the BTN. CO raises preflop, SB calls, BB folds.

Hero hand:
Q♥J♠
Flop:
Q♦7♣6♠

Hero has top pair, good kicker. Three players see the flop. The action unfolds:

SB: checks (range = anything from air to slowplayed monster)
CO: c-bets ¾ pot (range = strong hands, draws, standard c-bet bluffs)
Hero (BTN): must act — but SB still has a live decision behind
SB: can now fold, call, or raise
Hero’s situation
Sandwiched

Hero cannot close the action. Whatever they do — call, raise, or fold — the SB still has a full menu of options. A call by Hero that is then raised by SB becomes a very expensive spot with top pair. Hero entered this hand with the button; relative position has neutralized most of that advantage.

The sandwich problem compounds on every future street. If both Hero and SB call the flop c-bet, the same dynamic repeats on the turn: SB checks to CO, CO bets again, Hero is again caught between a strong range and an unknown one.

Best and Worst Relative Positions at the Table

Seat Relative to Preflop Raiser Relative Position Quality Why
Directly to raiser’s right (act just before them) Best possible When raiser c-bets, you act last. No players behind you with live decisions.
Two seats to raiser’s right Very good Only one player between you and closing the action after a c-bet.
Directly to raiser’s left (first to act after them) Worst possible C-bet forces you to act first with all other players still behind you.
Two seats to raiser’s left Very poor Multiple players behind you after c-bet — maximum sandwich exposure.
Heads-up vs. raiser (any seat) Relative position irrelevant No third player to create the sandwich. Absolute position dominates.

This ranking explains why calling preflop raises is more profitable from some seats than others — not just because of absolute position, but because of where you land relative to the raiser when c-bets start flying on the flop.

How to Adjust Your Strategy Based on Relative Position

  • In good relative position (to the raiser’s right): play wider and more aggressively. You will close the action when the c-bet comes. This allows you to continue with more marginal hands, float more often, and raise-bluff more comfortably — you know exactly where you stand once you act.
  • In bad relative position (to the raiser’s left): tighten your calling range significantly. You will be first to face c-bets with players behind you still holding unknown hands. Hands that are comfortable calls in good relative position become folds or 3-bets here. Flatting with medium-strength hands is especially dangerous.
  • Consider 3-betting instead of calling from bad relative position. A 3-bet isolates the raiser and eliminates the sandwich entirely. You either win the pot preflop or play heads-up postflop with a well-defined range. This is why 3-bet-or-fold is often the correct strategy from poor relative positions.
  • Fold more freely in the sandwich. When you are caught between a c-bettor and an uncapped player, the math on continuing with medium-strength hands deteriorates sharply. Top pair is still good — but medium pair, weak top pair, and draws become significantly less valuable when you cannot close the action.
  • Track relative position preflop, not just absolute position. Before calling a raise, ask: who called before me? Who is acting after me? If the preflop raiser is immediately to your right in the postflop order, great. If they are immediately to your left, think twice before flatting.

Relative Position and 3-Bet / 4-Bet Strategy

Relative position has a direct and underappreciated influence on how aggressively you should 3-bet preflop — not just as a value play, but as a structural correction to a positional disadvantage.

Situation Relative Position Preferred Action Reason
BTN open, you are in BB Poor (OOP entire hand) 3-bet or fold strong hands; call selectively Calling OOP keeps you sandwiched on multiway flops and OOP heads-up
CO open, you are on BTN Good — you act after CO postflop Call or 3-bet — both workable Absolute and relative position both favor you; flatting is fine
EP open, multiple callers, you are CO Sandwiched by callers 3-bet to isolate or fold Flatting puts you between raiser and multiple unknown callers
BTN open, you are directly to their right (SB) Best possible heads-up 3-bet range can widen If called, you have the best relative position against the c-bet

Common Questions About Relative Position

Q&A

How do I improve my ability to recognize relative position in real time?

Make it a habit to identify the preflop raiser the moment the action is over — before the flop is even dealt. Then mentally note: am I to their left or their right? How many players are between me and closing the action when they c-bet? This takes only a second and becomes automatic with practice. Review hand histories with this lens: mark every hand where you were sandwiched and trace whether the outcome matched the structural disadvantage.

Q&A

Does relative position matter in heads-up pots?

No — only absolute position matters heads-up. There is no third player to create a sandwich. When it is just you and the preflop raiser, your postflop position is fixed by your absolute seat. Relative position only becomes meaningful with three or more players in the hand, because that is when the betting-round reset can leave you stranded between active ranges.

Q&A

How does relative position interact with 3-betting and 4-betting ranges?

Good relative position lets you widen your 3-bet range because postflop play will be comfortable regardless of whether the 3-bet is called. Poor relative position pushes your strategy toward 3-bet or fold — particularly with hands that are marginal calls. The 3-bet solves the relative position problem by either winning the pot preflop or creating a heads-up pot where absolute position takes over. Hands that would be profitable calls in good relative position often become correct 3-bets or folds in poor relative position.

The Button Is Only As Good As Your Position Relative to the Raiser

Position is not just a seat — it is a dynamic relationship that changes with every raise and every call. Identify the preflop raiser, locate yourself relative to them, and let that assessment shape every decision you make from preflop through the river. The players who habitually sit to the right of the aggressor and force others into the sandwich are quietly extracting an edge that most of their opponents never even notice.

Your calling range must always be stronger than your raising range — read our full guide on the gap concept in poker.

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