VIDEO POKER STRATEGY GUIDE

OPTIMAL PLAY DECISIONS FOR MAXIMUM RETURN

All Games Classic Bonus Wild Card Joker
Video poker is one of the few casino games where your decisions directly affect the outcome. Unlike slot machines, which are purely random, every hand of video poker presents you with a strategic choice: which cards to hold and which to discard. Learning the correct strategy can reduce the house edge to less than half a percent on the best pay tables, making video poker one of the most favorable games in the casino. This guide covers optimal strategy for the most popular variants, bankroll management principles, and the expected return for each game type.
Jacks or Better Bonus Poker Deuces Wild Bankroll Management Common Mistakes Expected Returns Related Pages

Jacks or Better Strategy — The Foundation

Jacks or Better is the most common and most important video poker game to master. Once you learn correct strategy here, you can adapt it to almost every other variant. The full-pay (9/6) version returns 99.54% with perfect play, making it one of the best bets available.

Core Strategy Rules (Priority Order)

  1. Always hold a winning hand — If you are dealt a pat hand that pays (pair of Jacks or better through Royal Flush), hold it unless a better draw opportunity exists higher on this list.
  2. Hold 4 to a Royal Flush over anything except a made Royal Flush or Straight Flush. Four to a Royal is the strongest draw in the game and should almost never be broken.
  3. Hold 4 to a Flush over a low pair. The Flush draw (4 suited cards) has higher expected value than keeping a small pair (2s through 10s).
  4. Hold a low pair over 4 to a Straight. A pair of 2s through 10s is worth more than an open-ended or inside straight draw because the pair can improve to trips, full houses, and quads.
  5. Hold 3 to a Royal Flush over a high pair. Three suited Royal cards (e.g., J-Q-K suited) have higher expected value than a lone pair of Jacks, Queens, Kings, or Aces. This is one of the most commonly misplayed hands.
  6. Hold high cards (Jacks or better). When you have no pair or draw, hold any combination of Jacks, Queens, Kings, or Aces. Prefer two high cards of the same suit over two off-suit.

Key Decision Table — Common Hands

DEALT HAND CORRECT HOLD EXPECTED VALUE
Royal Flush Hold all 5 800.00
Straight Flush Hold all 5 50.00
Four of a Kind Hold all 5 25.00
4 to a Royal Flush Hold 4, draw 1 18.66
Full House Hold all 5 9.00
Flush Hold all 5 6.00
3 of a Kind Hold 3, draw 2 4.30
Straight Hold all 5 4.00
Two Pair Hold both pairs, draw 1 2.60
4 to a Straight Flush Hold 4, draw 1 2.56
High Pair (JJ, QQ, KK, AA) Hold pair, draw 3 1.54
3 to a Royal Flush Hold 3, draw 2 1.41
4 to a Flush Hold 4, draw 1 1.22
Low Pair (22-1010) Hold pair, draw 3 0.82
4 to an Open-Ended Straight Hold 4, draw 1 0.68
2 High Cards (same suit) Hold 2, draw 3 0.58
3 to a Straight Flush Hold 3, draw 2 0.54
2 High Cards (off-suit) Hold 2, draw 3 0.49
1 High Card (J, Q, K, A) Hold 1, draw 4 0.47
No High Cards, No Draw Draw all 5 0.36
Pro Tip: Always bet maximum coins (5 credits). The Royal Flush bonus for max bet (4000 coins vs. 1250 for 4 coins) is the single biggest factor in achieving the theoretical 99.54% return. Without max bet, the return drops to approximately 98.37%.
PLAY JACKS OR BETTER PLAY 9/5 JoB PLAY 8/5 JoB

Bonus Poker Strategy Adjustments

Bonus Poker variants add premium payouts for certain four-of-a-kind hands. This changes the optimal strategy because some quads are now worth significantly more. The core Jacks or Better strategy still applies, but several key adjustments are needed to maximize your return.

How Bonus Games Change Strategy

Bonus Poker Decision Priority Adjustments

SCENARIO STANDARD JoB BONUS POKER
3 Aces vs. Made Flush Hold Flush Hold 3 Aces
3 Aces vs. Made Straight Hold Straight Hold 3 Aces
3 Low (2-4) vs. High Pair Hold High Pair Hold 3 Low Cards
Pair of Aces vs. 4 to Flush Hold 4 to Flush Hold Pair of Aces
Pro Tip: In Double Bonus and Double Double Bonus, the variance is significantly higher than standard Jacks or Better. You will experience longer losing streaks, but the premium quad payouts compensate over time. Ensure your bankroll can handle the swings.
PLAY BONUS POKER PLAY DOUBLE BONUS PLAY DOUBLE DOUBLE BONUS PLAY BONUS DELUXE

Deuces Wild Strategy — A Different Game Entirely

Deuces Wild uses a completely different strategy from Jacks or Better and Bonus Poker. All four 2s are wild cards, which fundamentally changes hand rankings and optimal play. The minimum paying hand is Three of a Kind (since pairs are too easy with wild cards), and the full-pay version returns an exceptional 100.76% with perfect play — making it a positive-expectation game.

Strategy by Number of Deuces

Four Deuces (1 in 4,900 hands)

Three Deuces (1 in 47 hands)

Two Deuces (1 in 8 hands)

One Deuce (1 in 3 hands)

No Deuces (1 in 2 hands)

Key Rule: Never hold a kicker (an extra card alongside a paying combination) in Deuces Wild. If you have three 7s plus an Ace kicker, discard the Ace and draw two cards — the kicker reduces your chances of improving to Four of a Kind or better.
PLAY DEUCES WILD PLAY BONUS DEUCES PLAY LOOSE DEUCES PLAY NSU DEUCES

Bankroll Management for Video Poker

Proper bankroll management is essential for surviving the natural variance in video poker. Even with perfect strategy, you will experience extended losing sessions. The recommended bankroll depends on the game variant, its variance profile, and how long you plan to play.

Recommended Bankroll by Game Type

GAME TYPE VARIANCE MIN. BANKROLL (BETS) COMFORTABLE BANKROLL
Jacks or Better 9/6 Low 200 bets 500 bets
Bonus Poker 8/5 Medium 300 bets 700 bets
Double Bonus 10/6 High 500 bets 1,000 bets
Double Double Bonus 9/6 Very High 600 bets 1,200 bets
Deuces Wild (Full Pay) High 500 bets 1,000 bets
Joker Poker (Kings+) High 500 bets 1,000 bets

Variance by Category

Bankroll Rule: Never risk more than you can afford to lose. Set a session loss limit before you start playing, and stop when you reach it. Similarly, set a win goal and consider locking up some profit when you reach it. Discipline is as important as strategy.

Top 5 Video Poker Mistakes to Avoid

Even experienced players make costly strategy errors. Correcting these five common mistakes can significantly improve your expected return across all video poker variants.

  1. Not betting maximum coins. The Royal Flush pays a disproportionately large bonus at max bet (800-for-1 instead of 250-for-1). Playing fewer than 5 coins reduces your overall return by more than 1%. If the max bet denomination is too high, move to a lower denomination machine and always bet 5 coins.
  2. Holding a kicker with a pair. Many players keep an Ace alongside a pair of Kings (K-K-A), hoping to hit a Full House. This actually reduces your expected value because it limits the number of cards you can draw. Always discard the kicker and draw three cards to maximize your chance of trips, quads, or a full house.
  3. Breaking a winning hand for a long-shot draw. Never break a paying Flush to draw to a Straight Flush (unless it is a Royal Flush draw). The math rarely supports chasing the bigger hand when you already have a guaranteed payout in hand.
  4. Keeping three to a Straight over a low pair. A low pair (2s through 10s) has higher expected value than three to an open-ended straight. The pair gives you drawing chances to trips, full houses, and quads, while the straight draw can only improve to a straight.
  5. Playing unfavorable pay tables. Not all machines with the same name have the same pay table. A 9/6 Jacks or Better (Full House pays 9, Flush pays 6) returns 99.54%, while an 6/5 version returns only 95.00%. Always check the pay table before you play — the difference can be several percentage points.

Expected Return Table — Popular Video Poker Games

The theoretical return-to-player (RTP) represents the percentage of wagered money a game returns to players over millions of hands, assuming perfect strategy. Games above 100% are mathematically favorable to the player with perfect play.

GAME PAY TABLE RTP (PERFECT PLAY) CATEGORY
Deuces Wild Full Pay (25/15/9/5/3/2/1) 100.76% Wild Card
Joker Poker (Kings+) Full Pay 100.64% Joker
Double Bonus Poker 10/6 100.17% Bonus
Jacks or Better 9/6 (Full Pay) 99.54% Classic
Bonus Poker 8/5 99.17% Bonus
Double Double Bonus 9/6 98.98% Bonus
All American Poker 8/8/8/1 99.60% Classic
Bonus Deuces Wild Full Pay 99.45% Wild Card
Loose Deuces Wild Full Pay (15/10) 100.97% Wild Card
Jacks or Better 8/5 8/5 97.30% Classic
Note: Games showing over 100% RTP are mathematically favorable to the player — but only with perfect strategy on every single hand. Even minor deviations from optimal play can push the return below 100%. Use our free games to practice and master the strategy before playing for real.