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Poker Fundamentals
What Is a Bet in Poker?
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What Is a Bet?
In poker, a bet is the act of placing chips into the pot when no one else has wagered chips in the current betting round yet. It is the opening aggressive action on any street. Once a bet exists, subsequent players must call, raise, or fold — they cannot bet again on that same action.
— Bet: first chips into the pot in a given round (no prior bet to respond to)
— Raise: increasing an existing bet — always a response to a bet already made
— Call: matching the amount of an existing bet or raise exactly
Bet vs. Raise at a $1/$2 table
You put in $12. This is a bet — no one had wagered before you on this street.
Opponent responds by putting in $36.
This is a raise — they are increasing the existing bet of $12.
You put in $36 total to continue.
This is a call — you are matching the raise amount.
1 Big Blind
In No-Limit Hold’em, the minimum bet on any street is equal to 1 big blind. There is no maximum — you may bet any amount up to your entire stack (all-in). In Pot-Limit games, the maximum bet is the size of the current pot.
Classification 1 — Forced vs. Voluntary Bets
The first and most fundamental distinction: some bets are mandatory by the rules of the game. Others are entirely your decision.
Forced Bets
Required by the game structure before any cards are dealt. Players must post these regardless of their hole cards.
Examples: Small blind, big blind, ante, straddle (in games where it is mandatory).
In NLH, the big blind counts as the first bet of the preflop round — which is why the first raise is called a 2-bet, not a 1-bet.
Voluntary Bets
Every bet you choose to make during the hand — preflop open raises, flop c-bets, turn probes, river value bets, bluffs — all voluntary.
The key question every time: Before making a voluntary bet, always ask: What is the purpose of this bet?
If you cannot answer that question clearly, you should probably check instead.
Classification 2 — 2-Bet, 3-Bet, 4-Bet, 5-Bet
Every bet in a sequence is numbered. Understanding this numbering explains why an open raise is called a “2-bet” and a re-raise is called a “3-bet.”
BB Post (1-bet) → Open Raise (2-bet) → 3-bet → 4-bet → 5-bet (all-in)
1-bet Big blind mandatory post — counts as first bet2-bet Open raise — first voluntary raise preflop3-bet Re-raise over the open — most common aggression preflop4-bet Re-raise over the 3-bet — strong or polarized range5-bet Usually all-in — range narrows to premiums or pure bluffsPost-flop Sequence resets each street — flop bet is a 1-bet again| Bet Number | Action | Who Makes It | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1-bet | BB post (preflop) | Big blind (forced) | All hands (mandatory) |
| 2-bet | Open raise | Any position | Top 15–25% of hands by position |
| 3-bet | Re-raise over open | Any player behind | Value hands + bluffs (polarized or linear) |
| 4-bet | Re-raise over 3-bet | Original opener or caller | AA, KK, AKs + bluffs (A5s, K4s) |
| 5-bet | Re-raise over 4-bet | 3-bettor | Almost always all-in: AA, KK only |
Classification 3 — C-Bet, Float Bet, Probe Bet, Donk Bet
Post-flop bets are classified by who has initiative (the last aggressive preflop actor) and whether that player continues betting or checks. These four bet types cover every possible scenario.
C-Bet (Continuation Bet) — The aggressor bets again
Example: Hero opens BTN, BB calls. Hero has initiative. On the flop, BB checks → Hero bets. This is a c-bet.
If BB calls and the turn checks to Hero again → Hero bets. This is a turn c-bet.
C-bets can occur on flop, turn, and river — as long as the same player maintains initiative throughout.
The preflop aggressor
C-bets are the most common post-flop bet type. A player who never c-bets is exploitable — opponents simply check every flop and take free cards. A player who always c-bets is equally exploitable — opponents raise or float profitably.
Float Bet — The aggressor checks, opponent bets into them
Example: Hero opens SB, BB calls. Hero has initiative and acts first on the flop. Hero checks → BB bets. BB’s bet is a float bet.
The float bet exploits the aggressor’s weakness signal (checking when they had the betting lead) to capture the pot.
The player WITHOUT initiative, after aggressor checks first
Probe Bet — Aggressor checks back, opponent leads next street
Example: Hero opens BTN, BB calls. Hero has initiative. Flop: BB checks, Hero checks back (Hero acted last and chose not to c-bet). Turn: BB bets. BB’s turn bet is a probe bet.
The probe bet “tests” whether the aggressor’s check-back represented genuine weakness or a trap. It also allows the out-of-position player to take back initiative when the aggressor showed passivity.
Non-aggressor, after aggressor checked back (acted last)
Donk Bet — Non-aggressor leads into the aggressor when acting first
Example: Hero opens BTN, BB calls. Hero has initiative. Flop: BB acts first and bets into Hero. BB’s bet is a donk bet.
Second example: Same setup — flop goes BB check, Hero c-bets, BB calls. Hero still has initiative. Turn: BB acts first and bets. This is also a donk bet — BB is leading into the initiative player on the turn.
Non-aggressor, leading into the aggressor when OOP
Donk bets have a poor reputation because they are often made without purpose by beginners. However, well-timed donk bets with strong hands or specific board textures can be profitable — they disrupt the aggressor’s c-betting range and capture value before the aggressor can control pot size.
| Bet Type | Who Acts First This Street | Aggressor Does | Bettor Is |
|---|---|---|---|
| C-Bet | Either | Bets | The aggressor |
| Float Bet | Aggressor acts first | Checks first | The non-aggressor |
| Probe Bet | Non-aggressor acts first | Checked back prior street | The non-aggressor |
| Donk Bet | Non-aggressor acts first | Has not acted yet | The non-aggressor |
Classification 4 — Bet Sizing
Bet size is one of the most important and least understood levers in poker. Every sizing choice sends information to your opponent and sets the price for them to continue.
| Size Category | % of Pot | Best Used For | Opponent Needs to Call |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small | 25–33% pot | High-frequency c-bets on dry boards, thin value, blocking bets | ~20–25% equity to call |
| Medium | 50–67% pot | Balanced default sizing — value and bluffs mixed | ~33–40% equity to call |
| Large | 75–100% pot | Polarized ranges, protecting strong hands, two-street value | ~43–50% equity to call |
| Overbet | >100% pot | Extreme polarization — nutted hands or pure bluffs only | >50% equity to call |
| All-in | All remaining chips | Final street value, preflop premiums, bluffs with no equity | Depends on pot/stack ratio |
Betting limits vary by game type
Pot-Limit (PL): Maximum bet is the current size of the pot. Common in Omaha (PLO). Limits overbet spots but still allows large bets as the pot grows.
Fixed-Limit (FL): Bets and raises are fixed at predetermined amounts (e.g., $4 on the flop/turn, $8 on the river in a $4/$8 game). Less common today but important for limit hold’em strategy.
Classification 5 — Bet Purpose: Value, Bluff, and Protection
Every bet you make voluntarily should have a clear purpose. There are three fundamental reasons to bet — and the best bets often serve more than one simultaneously.
Value Bet — Getting called by worse hands
Example: You hold A♠A♦ on a board of A♣K♦7♥. You have top set. You bet hoping villain has AK, KK, K7, or a draw that will call. Every call from a worse hand is +EV.
The question to ask: “What hands worse than mine will call this bet?”
If the answer is “none” — reconsider betting for value.
Worse hands willing to call
Bluff Bet — Folding out better hands
Example: You hold 8♠7♠ and missed your flush draw on the river. The board is K♦Q♣5♥2♠J♦. You bet large, representing AK, KK, or two-pair. Villain folds KQ. You win.
The question to ask: “What stronger hands will fold to this bet?”
If the answer is “none” — the bluff has no fold equity and should be abandoned.
Better hands that can fold
Protection Bet — Charging draws to continue
Example: You hold K♠K♦ on a board of J♣T♥8♠. You have an overpair, but villain could have a straight draw (QJ, Q9), a flush draw if suited, or two pair. You bet to deny free cards — if villain wants to chase a straight, they pay for it.
Key distinction: A protection bet is not purely a value bet (you would prefer folds from draws) and not a bluff (your hand is ahead). It is about denying equity realization to drawing hands.
Draws paying incorrect price to continue
Putting It Together: The Purpose Test in Practice
The most important habit a new player can develop is running the purpose test before every voluntary bet. Here is a worked example showing exactly how it works.
Should you bet the river here?
4♠4♣
A♦5♣9♥Q♠5♦
Run the purpose test:
— Bet for value? What worse hands will call? Villain would need less than a pair of fours to call. Unlikely given they have seen an ace on board. → No.
— Bet as a bluff? What better hands will fold? Villain checked the river — they likely have a pair or better, and checking the river with a made hand is common. Nothing in their range folds to a small bet here. → No.
— Bet for protection? It is the river — no more cards to come. Nothing to protect against. → No.
Check — no valid purpose for betting
Betting here risks being called by any pair on the board (55, A-anything, Q-anything, 9-anything) — all of which beat 44. No worse hand calls, no better hand folds. The bet has zero expected value and positive expected cost. Check and see the showdown.
Common Questions About Betting in Poker
What is the difference between a bet and a raise?
A bet is the first chips placed into the pot voluntarily on a given street — no prior wager exists to respond to. A raise is an increase over a bet that is already in play. On the flop, if you act first and put chips in, that is a bet. If your opponent increases it, that is a raise. The mechanical distinction matters because raises have a minimum size rule (typically must be at least as large as the previous bet or raise in that round), while a bet only requires meeting the table minimum of 1 big blind.
How do I choose between a small bet and a large bet?
Match your sizing to the polarity of your range on that board texture. Small bets (25–33% pot) work well when your range has many medium-strength hands that benefit from a cheap call — dry boards where your c-betting range is wide and balanced. Large bets (75–100%+) work when your range is polarized — you have either a very strong hand or a complete bluff, and you want to charge draws heavily or maximize value from hands that will call a large bet. A medium-strength hand on a draw-heavy board often warrants a larger size to deny equity; the same hand on a dry board may bet smaller to build pot with less risk.
Is it ever correct to bet without a value, bluff, or protection purpose?
Rarely — and almost never intentionally. Some advanced players make information bets (betting small to induce a raise or call that reveals hand strength) or leverage bets (setting up a larger bet on the next street by building pot now). These are sophisticated plays that require accurate reads on opponent tendencies. For the vast majority of situations, especially at lower stakes, if you cannot identify a clear value, bluff, or protection motive, checking is the higher-EV play. Purposeless bets are one of the most common and expensive leaks in recreational players’ games.
Every Bet Needs a Reason. Every Check Is Also a Decision.Mastering when to bet — and when not to — is the foundation of all post-flop poker. Classify your bets by purpose, size them to match your range, and never put chips in the pot without being able to answer the question: what am I trying to accomplish here? Value
Worse hands call
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Bluff
Better hands fold
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Protect
Draws pay to see cards
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None?
Check instead
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To understand how 3-bets work in practice — including sizing, ranges, and when to use them — read our full guide on what is a 3-bet in poker.

