High-low split
In poker, a high-low split (also known as hi-lo) is a game format where the pot is divided between the player holding the best high-ranking hand and the player holding the best qualifying low-ranking hand, often splitting the winnings equally if both qualify.[1][2] This structure introduces strategic depth by encouraging players to pursue dual possibilities for the high and low portions, with the low hand typically ranked using ace-to-five lowball rules where aces are low and straights or flushes do not count against the hand.[3][2] High-low split games originated in the early 20th century, with references to the format appearing as early as 1903 in poker literature, though they gained widespread popularity in casinos and home games during the mid-20th century.[4] Among the most prominent variants are Omaha Hi-Lo Eight or Better (often abbreviated as Omaha/8), introduced in the 1980s as an evolution of standard Omaha hold 'em, and Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo, a staple in mixed-game rotations like HORSE poker.[5][6] In these games, the low hand must generally qualify as "eight or better"—meaning five unpaired cards ranked 8 or lower, such as A-2-3-4-8—to claim its share; otherwise, the entire pot goes to the high hand.[3][7] A single player can sometimes "scoop" the full pot by winning both the high and low.[3] The format's appeal lies in its balanced risk-reward dynamic, which favors versatile starting hands like those containing low cards (e.g., aces and wheels) alongside high potential, and it is commonly played in limit betting structures to manage volatility.[8] High-low splits are featured in major tournaments and are a key component of poker strategy books, emphasizing counterintuitive plays where protecting against opponent scoops is crucial.[9]Fundamentals
Definition
High-low split, also known as high-low or hi-lo, is a category of poker variants in which the pot is divided between the player holding the best high hand—ranked according to traditional poker hierarchies such as straights, flushes, and full houses—and the player with the best qualifying low hand, typically the lowest-ranking combination of cards that meets specific criteria.[10][11] This split-pot structure creates a dual-objective game where players must balance pursuits for strength in high rankings and weakness in low rankings using the same set of cards.[12] Unlike pure high games, such as Texas Hold'em, where the objective is solely to form the strongest possible hand, or low-only variants like Lowball, which reward the weakest hands exclusively, high-low split games introduce a shared reward system that promotes versatile hand construction and strategic adaptability.[13] The mechanic encourages players to evaluate their holdings for potential in both directions, often leading to more complex decision-making as the pot's division incentivizes participation from a broader range of starting hands.[14] At showdown, both high and low hands are evaluated simultaneously using the players' cards, which may include shared community cards in some variants like Omaha Hi-Lo, allowing the same five-card combination to potentially qualify for either or both portions of the pot, depending on its rankings.[15][10] This common-card usage underscores the game's reliance on shared information, as seen in popular variants like Omaha Hi-Lo.[10]Pot Division
In high-low split poker games, the pot is typically divided equally between the best high hand and the best qualifying low hand at showdown, with each winner receiving half if both exist.[16][17] If no qualifying low hand exists, the best high hand wins the entire pot. (The high hand always qualifies.)[16][2] The high hand follows standard poker rankings, such as those used in Texas Hold'em.[18] In cases of ties, the relevant portion of the pot (high or low half) is split equally among the tied players, with any odd chip awarded to the high side in split-pot scenarios.[19][17] Some high-low split games require players to declare their intentions for the high, low, or both portions of the pot, often using verbal announcements or chips placed at the end of the betting round (e.g., no chips for low only, one chip for high only, or two chips for both).[20][21] Invalid declarations, such as claiming both high and low but failing to win at least one, typically result in the player forfeiting eligibility for the contested portion, receiving nothing from it.[21] In contrast, many contemporary tournaments use a "cards speak" rule, where hands are evaluated automatically without declarations.[22]Low Hand Rules
Qualification Criteria
In high-low split poker variants, the most common qualification criterion for a low hand is the "eight or better" standard, which requires a five-card hand composed entirely of distinct cards ranked eight or lower, with aces playing as low cards.[10] This means the hand must use cards from A, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8 only, without any pairs, three-of-a-kind, full houses, four-of-a-kind, or higher poker combinations that would prevent forming five unique ranks.[23] Unlike traditional lowball poker, straights and flushes do not disqualify a hand under this rule; they are simply ignored when evaluating the low, allowing formations like the wheel straight to remain valid.[9] Some variants deviate from this standard, using a stricter "seven or better" threshold where cards higher than seven disqualify the hand entirely.[24] In all cases, if no player holds a qualifying low hand, the entire pot is awarded to the high hand winner.[10] Players evaluate high and low hands from the same pool of cards—typically a combination of hole cards and community or board cards—but may select different subsets of those cards to form the best possible high and low, as long as the low adheres to qualification rules.[23] For example, A-2-3-4-5 qualifies as the nuts low (the best possible) under the eight or better rule, even though it forms a straight.[25] In contrast, 9-7-6-5-4 does not qualify due to the nine exceeding the eight limit, and A-2-3-4-4 fails because the pair eliminates the possibility of five distinct ranks.[24]Card Rankings for Low
In high-low split poker variants, low hands are ranked using an ace-to-five lowball system, where the objective is to form the lowest possible five-card hand from available cards, ignoring straights and flushes. The best low hand is determined by starting with the highest card in the hand; the lowest such card wins, and if tied, the process continues to the next highest card, proceeding downward until a difference is found or all cards match. For instance, A-2-3-4-5 (known as the "wheel" or "nuts low") is the strongest possible low hand, as its highest card is a 5, which is lower than the highest card in any other qualifying low.[26] Aces play exclusively as low cards in this ranking, valued below 2 but above nothing else, ensuring that hands like A-2-3-4-6 rank below the wheel due to the 6 exceeding the 5 in the fifth position. To illustrate progression, consider these example low hands ranked from best to worst among qualifiers: A-2-3-4-5 (wheel, highest card 5); A-2-3-4-6 (highest card 6); A-2-3-5-6 (highest card 6, but second-highest 5 beats a tied alternative like A-2-4-5-6); and 2-3-4-5-8 (highest card 8, the marginal qualifier in 8-or-better games). This comparative method ensures precise ordering without regard for pairs or suited cards, which do not factor into low hand strength.[26] Tiebreakers occur only when hands share identical ranks across all five cards, in which case the pot is split equally among the tied players, as suits do not influence the ranking or resolve such ties in standard rules. Standard suit order (spades highest, followed by hearts, diamonds, and clubs) may apply in rare, non-pot-winning contexts like seating or dealing but is not used to award the low portion of the pot. These rankings apply solely to hands that meet the game's qualification criteria, such as 8-or-better.[27][28]Popular Games
Omaha Hi-Lo
Omaha Hi-Lo, also known as Omaha 8 or Better, is a split-pot poker variant where players compete for both the high and low halves of the pot using a standard 52-card deck. Each player receives four private hole cards, and five community cards are dealt face up in stages. To form a hand, players must use exactly two of their hole cards and three of the community cards to create the best possible five-card high hand and, if qualifying, a low hand.[3][9] The game proceeds through four betting rounds: pre-flop (after hole cards are dealt), flop (after three community cards), turn (after the fourth community card), and river (after the fifth community card). Betting typically follows a pot-limit structure, where the maximum bet or raise equals the current size of the pot, though limit versions exist with fixed bet sizes (e.g., one big blind pre-flop and on the flop, two big blinds on turn and river, with a cap of four bets per round). Blinds are posted by the two players to the left of the dealer button—a small blind and a big blind—to initiate action, and the dealer button rotates clockwise after each hand. At showdown, the pot is divided equally between the best high hand (using standard poker rankings) and the best qualifying low hand; if no low qualifies, the high hand wins the entire pot, and a player winning both halves "scoops" it.[3][29][9] For the low hand, qualification requires five unpaired cards ranked eight or lower (A-2-3-4-5 through A-2-3-4-8), with aces playing low and straights or flushes not counting against the hand (consistent with general low hand rules for eight-or-better games). The nuts low is A-2-3-4-5, known as the wheel, and ties split the low pot. No low hand qualifies if the board lacks at least three cards of eight or lower rank, as players must use exactly two hole cards and three board cards.[3][9][29] A representative hand example illustrates the progression: Suppose the community board is K♥ 3♦ 4♦ 8♠ 2♦. Player A holds A♥ K♠ Q♦ 2♠, forming a high hand of kings (K♥ K♠ Q♦ 8♠ 4♦) and an 8-high low (A♥-2♠-3♦-4♦-8♠). Player B holds J♦ 10♦ 7♥ 6♥, forming a diamond flush for high (J♦ 10♦ 3♦ 4♦ 2♦) and a 7-6-4-3-2 low (7♥ 6♥ 4♦ 3♦ 2♦). Player B scoops the pot, winning both halves with the superior high and low hands.[30]Seven-Card Stud Hi-Lo
Seven-Card Stud Hi-Lo is a variant of seven-card stud poker that incorporates high-low split pot rules, where players compete for both the best high hand and a qualifying low hand using the same seven cards dealt to each participant. In this game, each player receives a total of seven cards—three dealt face down (hole cards) and four face up (community-visible cards)—to form the best possible five-card high hand and, if applicable, a qualifying five-card low hand. The pot is divided equally between the highest-ranking high hand and the lowest-ranking qualifying low hand at showdown, provided a low hand qualifies; otherwise, the entire pot goes to the best high hand. This structure encourages players to pursue dual objectives, balancing aggression for high potential with draws for low possibilities.[31][32][33] The dealing sequence begins with each player posting a small ante, typically a fraction of the small bet limit, to seed the pot. On Third Street, two hole cards are dealt face down, followed by one face-up door card to each player. Betting then commences, initiated by the player showing the lowest door card, who must post a bring-in bet—usually half the small bet limit—or complete it to the full small bet. Subsequent streets proceed as follows: Fourth Street delivers a second face-up card, with betting starting from the player showing the best exposed hand; Fifth and Sixth Streets each add another face-up card, with betting limits doubling to the big bet increment starting on Fifth Street; finally, Seventh Street (the river) deals the last card face down, followed by a final betting round led by the player who acted first on Sixth Street. All betting is structured-limit, with a maximum of three raises per round, and actions proceed clockwise around the table. The low hand follows the qualification criteria outlined in the Low Hand Rules section, typically "eight or better," meaning the five cards must rank eight or lower with no pairs allowed.[31][32][33] A typical deal sequence illustrates the game's progression and decision points. Suppose four players ante $0.50 in a $2/$4 limit game. On Third Street, Player A receives hole cards (A♠ 2♥) and door card 3♦, posting a $1 bring-in; Player B gets (K♣ Q♦) and 7♠; Player C has (10♥ 9♣) and 5♣; Player D holds (J♠ 8♦) and A♥. Player A completes to $2, Player B calls, Player C raises to $4 hoping for a low draw, Player D calls, and Player A calls, building the pot to $15. On Fourth Street, Player A gets 6♣ (showing 3♦-6♣ with hidden low potential), Player B receives 10♦ (showing 7♠-10♦), leading the betting at $2; all call. Fifth Street brings Player A a 4♠ (strong low draw showing 3♦-4♠-6♣), betting now $4 led by the high exposed hand; Player A raises to $8, others call. Sixth Street gives Player A a 9♥ (still viable low showing 3♦-4♠-6♣-9♥), with Player B getting J♣ (showing 7♠-10♦-J♣); betting at $4, Player A checks, Player B bets $4, and calls ensue. On Seventh Street, face-down cards are dealt—Player A draws a 7♦ but forms a 6-high low with A-2-3-4-6—leading to a final $4 betting round where Player B bets aggressively for high, but all call to showdown. Player A wins the low half with 6-high, while Player B wins the high half, splitting the pot. This example highlights how door cards influence early betting and how evolving boards guide decisions toward potential high-low scoops or splits.[31][33]Other Variants
Beyond the more established high-low split games, several niche variants introduce unique twists to the core mechanics, often by altering card distribution, exposure rules, or qualification criteria while maintaining the split-pot structure. These games emphasize hybrid elements, blending high-low competition with low-only pursuits or modified dealing procedures to create distinct strategic layers. Razz, while a low-only game, serves as a foundational relative to high-low splits by focusing exclusively on constructing the lowest possible hand using seven-card stud format, with no high hand contested and no low qualifier imposed—aces low, straights and flushes ignored, and pairs detrimental.[34] Players receive two down cards and one up card initially, followed by four more up cards with betting rounds after each, aiming for the best five-card low from the seven.[35] This variant highlights the low-hand dynamics central to splits without the high-hand interference.[36] Big O extends the Omaha Hi-Lo framework by dealing five hole cards to each player instead of four, requiring exactly two hole cards and three from the five community cards to form hands, with the pot divided equally between the best high and a qualifying low (five unpaired cards ranked 8 or lower).[37] Typically played pot-limit, it amplifies drawing possibilities due to the extra hole card, making low draws more potent while preserving the 8-or-better qualifier.[38] Courchevel Hi-Lo modifies Omaha by exposing the first community card face-up before preflop betting, after dealing four hole cards to each player; subsequent betting and community cards proceed as in standard Omaha, with hands formed from two hole and three community cards, and the low qualifying under an 8-or-better rule for the split pot.[39] This early exposure influences initial aggression, often favoring coordinated hole cards that pair well with the visible flop card.[40] Pot-limit betting is standard.[41] These games generally employ a 50/50 pot split, though some house rules introduce imbalances like 60/40 favoring the high in low-frequency qualifiers; however, equal division remains predominant.[2]| Variant | Card Count (Hole + Community/Total) | Low Qualifier | Betting Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Razz | 7 stud (no community) | None | Limit (common) |
| Big O | 5 hole + 5 community | 8 or better | Pot-limit |
| Courchevel Hi-Lo | 4 hole + 5 community | 8 or better | Pot-limit |