Good poker is really just good decisions made over and over, and the players who improve fastest are the ones who check their instincts against the numbers while they learn. That is exactly what this toolkit is for. Instead of memorising charts or guessing at a call, you can see the real equity, the break-even percentage and the correct opening range in seconds, then carry that understanding back to the table. Every tool below is free, needs no account, and runs entirely in your browser, so you can keep one open in a second tab while you play or study.
The four tools cover the decisions that come up in almost every hand: how far ahead or behind you are, whether a call is profitable, which starting hands to play from each seat, and what actually beats what. Whether you are learning the ranks for the first time or fine-tuning your pre-flop ranges, start with whichever tool matches the decision you find hardest, then work outward. Below the tools you will find a short guide to how each one helps and which to reach for first.
Poker Odds Calculator
Set your hand, the board and your opponents to get instant Texas Hold'em win-equity. Shareable, no sign-up.
Open toolPot Odds Calculator
Facing a bet? Get the win % you need to call, plus a call-or-fold verdict from your outs (rule of 2 & 4).
Open toolStarting Hand Chart
All 169 starting hands ranked by strength, with a sensible opening range for every seat.
Open toolHand-Ranking Trainer
Two hands, one question: which wins? Build a streak and learn what beats what, fast.
Open toolWhy use poker tools?
Poker rewards good decisions repeated over thousands of hands, and the fastest way to build those instincts is to check your reasoning against the math while you learn. Our odds calculator shows exactly how far ahead or behind a hand is; the pot odds calculator turns a tricky call into a simple yes-or-no; the starting hands chart tells you which hands to play from each seat; and the hand-ranking trainer drills what beats what until it's automatic. Used together, they replace guesswork with numbers you can trust.
None of these tools replace playing; they accelerate it. A beginner who checks the odds calculator after each big decision, or drills the trainer for a few minutes a day, can learn in weeks what used to take months of trial and error at the tables. That's the whole idea: turn abstract poker theory into concrete numbers you can feel, so the right play gradually becomes second nature.
How our tools work
Everything here runs entirely in your browser. There's no sign-up, no account and no upload: every calculation happens on your own device, and nothing you type ever leaves it. The engines behind the calculators are independently verified for accuracy against known poker probabilities, so the equity and pot-odds figures you see are the real numbers rather than rough estimates. All four tools are free, load instantly, and work just as well on a phone as on a desktop.
Which tool should you start with?
If you're new, begin with the hand-ranking trainer to lock in what beats what, then use the starting hands chart to tighten up which hands you play. Once you're in a hand, the pot odds and odds calculators handle the actual call-or-fold decisions. Pair them with our poker guides and our best poker sites ranking, and you have everything you need to go from beginner to a confident, thinking player.
Frequently asked questions
Are these poker tools free?
Yes, all four tools are completely free, with no sign-up or account required. Just open one and start using it.
Do the tools work on mobile?
Yes. Every tool is responsive and runs in any modern browser on phone, tablet or desktop, with no app to install.
Are the calculators accurate?
The engines are independently verified against known poker probabilities, so the equity and pot-odds figures you see are exact, not rough estimates.
Is anything I enter stored or sent anywhere?
No. Every calculation runs entirely on your own device, and nothing you type is uploaded, saved or shared.
Which poker tool is best for beginners?
Start with the hand-ranking trainer and the starting hands chart to build the basics, then add the pot-odds and odds calculators as you start making in-hand decisions.