Bad Beat
PokerA bad beat in poker is losing a hand despite being a significant statistical favorite — usually a strong hand losing to a lucky draw.
A bad beat in poker occurs when a player holding a statistically dominant hand loses to an opponent who was a clear underdog and then hits an unlikely card. The defining feature is that the eventual loser was a heavy favourite at the moment the money went in, only for the board to deliver a remote out to the opponent.
Worked example: you hold pocket aces and an opponent calls all-in pre-flop with 7-2 offsuit, the worst starting hand. Your aces are roughly an 88% favourite. The board runs out to give your opponent two pair, and you lose a pot you were overwhelmingly likely to win. That is a textbook bad beat — correct decision, cruel result.
Why it matters: bad beats are emotionally painful precisely because the play was right and the outcome was wrong. Over a large enough sample they are not just possible but inevitable; an 88% favourite still loses around one time in eight, and a session contains many such spots. Understanding this is central to bankroll management and to not letting variance distort decision-making.
Many card rooms offer a "bad beat jackpot", a bonus prize paid when a very strong hand (commonly a strong four-of-a-kind or better) is beaten under set conditions. The losing player typically takes the largest share, with smaller cuts to the winner and others at the table — a small consolation built into the rules.
Common mistake: going "on tilt" after a bad beat and chasing losses with reckless play, which compounds the damage far beyond the lost pot. A bad beat means you were unlucky, not that you played badly.
Compare to: Cooler, which is a distinct and unavoidable strong-versus-stronger situation.
More in Poker
Coloque em prática
Ready to put it into play?
Now you know what Bad Beat means — see our top-rated betting sites and live odds.
✓Sites avaliados por especialistas✓Melhores bônus de boas-vindas✓Odds ao vivo comparadas