Poker tells are a tricky topic.
Most beginners put way too much credence into tells
early in their poker journey. Eating 🏀 an Oreo cookie could mean someone has a strong
hand in the movies, but in real life…not so much.
But many 🏀 experienced pros focus
solely on playing a good strategy, completely ignoring live poker tells in the
process.
The correct path is 🏀 somewhere in the middle–focusing on strategy while also
considering tells when they present themselves.
Which common poker tells deserve your
attention? 🏀 We’ve brought in acclaimed poker tells expert Zach Elwood to help answer
this question. Zach runs a training site that 🏀 focuses on poker tells, and his content
has been recommended by many very successful pros.
Now, let’s kick it over to
🏀 Zach.
Note: Level-up your poker strategy with the 10 Laws of Live Poker. This free
guide reveals powerful tactics that are 🏀 extremely effective in live cash games. Plus,
mental game tips that will help you stay cool and confident even when 🏀 you're running
bad. Get the 10 Laws for free now!
Hey Upswing readers! I’m Zachary Elwood. I’m here to
share a 🏀 new, updated list of the top 7 most useful poker tells.
I chose these tells
because they are common or reliable, 🏀 or both.
First, a little about my expertise on the
subject.
After my first book Reading Poker Tells was well-received in 2012, 🏀 I knew I
would only be writing more books if I had something new and interesting to say. In 2013
🏀 I spent 8 months straight, full-time (50+ hours a week, no joke), researching and
writing the book Verbal Poker Tells.
I 🏀 didn’t plan on spending that long, but as I
watched a lot of televised poker and took notes as I 🏀 played, I found there was a lot
more to say about verbal patterns than what I’d initially imagined.
Some of the 🏀 tells
below may seem common-sense when reading them, but I’ve found when you really start
keying into the major patterns 🏀 and looking for some of these elements, you’ll start to
understand a lot of during-hand much better than you thought 🏀 possible.
7 Poker Tells
That Deserve Your Attention
Click any of these tells for a detailed explanation that
will help your game:
The 🏀 first four poker tells focus on physical tells while the last
three will focus on verbal patterns. Behavior associated with 🏀 large bets is the most
reliable type of behavior, so these patterns all apply best to players making
significant bets.
Tell 🏀 #1: Defensive Movements
Most experienced players know that when
you reach for chips to bet and your opponent then also starts 🏀 to reach for chips, as if
ready to immediately call, it’s an sign they probably don’t have a strong hand.
Mike
🏀 Caro discusses this tell in his 70’s classic Caro’s Book of Poker Tells: The Psychology
and Body Language of Poker. 🏀 The reason why it’s a reliable tell is simple: holding a
strong hand, a player is not likely to give 🏀 a player in front of them a reason not to
bet; to the contrary, they’re more likely to sit still, 🏀 not reach for chips, etc.
But
the weaker a player’s hand is, the more likely it is they’ll make some sort 🏀 of gesture
to try to prevent you from betting.
There are more subtle ways this tell can manifest
itself. Often, even 🏀 just a small unusual movement from a waiting-to-act player makes it
more likely they’re not at the top of their 🏀 range.
Most of this behavior originates
unconsciously; it’s instinctively defensive, not something planned and acted out.
Consequently, defensive movements aren’t likely 🏀 to be reverse tells, and so they can be
quite reliable.
Here are a couple examples of subtle movements:
Minor chip movements
🏀 before checking to the aggressor
Suppose that, on the turn, a player checks and calls a
bet from a player behind 🏀 in a timely manner. On the river, the first player then slowly
grabs her chips and riffles them for a 🏀 couple seconds before checking. This behavior is
subtle, but it can be a sign that she is unconsciously trying to 🏀 give the impression
that she has interest in the pot, which makes a weak hand more likely. The lesson here
🏀 is that you should look for defensive behaviors when opponents check, not just when
they are facing a potential bet.
Subtle 🏀 hand movements toward one’s chips
Suppose that
on the river a player checks and, as his opponent thinks, the first player 🏀 positions
his hand on the rail, close to his chips. Even small movements toward one’s chips can
be a subtle 🏀 indicator of discomfort, and thus an unconscious attempt to discourage a
bet.
Subtle indicators like these are far from perfectly reliable, 🏀 of course, so it
helps if you can find other signs of defensive behavior, such as:
Staring intensely
after a check
Sitting 🏀 awkwardly still after a check
The more signs that indicate
defensiveness, the more you might have the opportunity to bluff.
One caveat: 🏀 Some
players move around a good amount in general, and so this pattern will be less reliable
for these players. 🏀 You should always study your opponents over time to get a sense of
how they normally behave.
And of course: even 🏀 if you correctly read an opponent as
having a weak hand, there’s no guarantee they’ll actually be folding. Even with 🏀 a
strong read of weakness, how loose your opponent is should always be a
consideration.
Tell #2: Hesitations and Pauses When 🏀 Betting
When a player makes a
significant bet, hesitations and pauses will make strong hands more likely. Players
betting weak hands 🏀 and bluffs will usually do so straightforwardly and normally,
without pauses.
A couple examples of hesitating-type behaviors:
A player has a lot 🏀 of
stop-and-start movements when gathering or placing the bet.
A player announces “bet” or
“raise” and then pauses a while before 🏀 announcing the amount or putting in chips.
What
are the reasons for this pattern?
Players betting weak hands and bluffs don’t want 🏀 to
be studied for any longer than is necessary. The longer the bet takes, the more likely
it becomes that 🏀 an opponent might pick up something on them (even something wrong) that
can be interpreted as a sign of a 🏀 weak hand.
The longer the bet takes, the more likely
it becomes that an opponent might pick up something on them 🏀 (even something wrong) that
can be interpreted as a sign of a weak hand. Players betting weak hands and bluffs 🏀 want
to convey confidence. Betting straightforwardly and normally is one way to convey
confidence.
Betting straightforwardly and normally is one way 🏀 to convey confidence.
Players betting strong hands can have incentive to convey uncertainty, so you’re more
likely to find hesitating 🏀 and uncertain behaviors from strong hand bettors.
As with
most bet-related tells, it’s much easier to find signs of relaxation and 🏀 strength in
bettors than it is to find indicators of anxiety or a weak hand. Players betting strong
hands often 🏀 give themselves away by doing unusual things that bluffers generally aren’t
willing to do or aren’t comfortable doing.
Tell #3: Double-checking 🏀 Hole Cards
The
meaning of double-checking hole cards depends on the situation:
For players who are
waiting-to-act or who end up checking, 🏀 double-checking hole cards will generally
indicate weak hands. (This is the case with other ostentatious behaviors as well.)
For
instance: a 🏀 player calls a pre-flop raise, sees the flop, and then double-checks his
cards a couple times before checking.
If this player 🏀 flopped a very strong hand, like a
set, they’d likely be very stoic and wouldn’t draw attention to themselves. Like 🏀 many
ostentatious behaviors from non-aggressors (i.e., checkers, callers), this is an
indication that they’re not mentally focused and unlikely to 🏀 have much of a hand.
For
players who have just made a significant bet, double-checking hole cards will generally
indicate relaxation 🏀 and a strong hand.
For instance: a player makes a big bet on the
river and, soon after, double-checks his cards.
If 🏀 this player were bluffing, he
wouldn’t want to do something that could theoretically convey weakness or uncertainty.
And double-checking hole 🏀 cards can, to many people, convey uncertainty, so a bluffer
would instinctively just not want to risk that interpretation.
This is 🏀 a good example
of how important it is to interpret poker tells in the context of the surrounding
situation. It’s 🏀 a mistake to take a “this means that” approach to behaviors; there are
always multiple factors influencing the meaning of 🏀 behavior.
Note: Level-up your poker
strategy with the 10 Laws of Live Poker. This free guide reveals powerful tactics that
are 🏀 extremely effective in live cash games. Plus, mental game tips that will help you
stay cool and confident even when 🏀 you're running bad. Get the 10 Laws for free
now!
Tell #4: Quicker-than-usual Calls
Of all the bet-timing tells, quick calls are
🏀 probably the most generally useful. Quick calls will generally indicate weak or
medium-strength hands.
Why is this? When a player immediately 🏀 calls a bet, it means
that they have immediately ruled out a raise. Because players with strong hands are
often 🏀 focused on maximizing value and playing their hand the best way they can, this
makes it unlikely that an immediate 🏀 call is made by a player with a strong hand. If a
player with a strong hand does decide to 🏀 only call, he will usually take a few seconds
to reach that decision.
Immediate calls will be most practically useful pre-flop 🏀 and on
the flop just because this is usually when bets are small enough for players to be
capable of 🏀 calling without much thought. On the turn, bets are bigger and most players
will tend to think longer about these 🏀 bets no matter what they have.
Pre-flop, for many
players, an unusually quick call of a 3-bet or a 4-bet will 🏀 make it likely that the
player has QQ or JJ. These are hands that many players consider too strong to 🏀 fold, but
also too weak to reraise with. With all other hands, including AK, most players will at
least consider 🏀 folding or reraising.
Keep in mind that ‘quick’ is of course subjective
and dependent on what you think is normal for 🏀 a player and situation. Depending on
circumstances, a quick call could take several seconds.
The overall aggression of a
player can 🏀 be a factor in narrowing their hand range. For example, when an aggressive
player quickly calls a bet on a 🏀 flop of J♥ 7♥ 2♠, it’s become unlikely that that player
has a flush draw, because an aggressive player will 🏀 usually at least consider a raise,
even if he ends up only calling.
Another factor in interpreting immediate calls is the
🏀 time that has passed during that round. The quicker an immediate call occurs after the
last card(s) has been dealt 🏀 will be more likely to indicate a weak hand. If a player
has had a long time to think about 🏀 what his action might be (for example, if his
opponent thinks a long time before betting), then his immediate call 🏀 will be less
likely to adhere to the general pattern.
Tell #5: Weak-hand statements
What’s a
weak-hand statement? It’s a statement that 🏀 seems on the surface to weaken the hand
range of a speaker.
A weak-hand statement, when said by a player making 🏀 a significant
bet, strengthens that player’s range.
For example, a player bets and says, “I’m just on
a draw; don’t worry.” 🏀 He would be unlikely to weaken his hand range like that, even
jokingly, when bluffing. Bluffers generally don’t want to 🏀 risk such things and stick to
neutral statements or strong-hand statements if they choose to speak.
This fits the
general and 🏀 well-known “weak means strong” category of poker tells and may seem
somewhat obvious. But there is value in analyzing bettors’ 🏀 statements to look for
not-so-obvious instances of weak-hand statements.
Here are a couple more subtle
examples of weak-hand statements:
On the river, 🏀 a player studies his opponent and says,
“I don’t think you have anything,” before shoving all-in.
By stating his opponent
doesn’t 🏀 have anything, he is indirectly stating that he himself does not need a strong
hand to bet. It’s an indirect 🏀 weak-hand statement.
A player shoved on the river and
when his opponent doesn’t call immediately, the player says, “Whew, I was 🏀 afraid you’d
snap-call!”
His statement’s surface level meaning is: “I have a strong hand, but I
don’t have the nuts.” It 🏀 is a weak-hand statement that removes the strongest hands from
his range, and that is something a bluffer would hardly 🏀 ever want to do.
Strong-hand
statements are much harder to interpret than weak-hand statements. Bluffers obviously
have an incentive to imply 🏀 or state that their hands are strong, so you’ll hear a good
amount of strong-hand statements from them.
Also, players betting 🏀 with strong hands may
just be very relaxed and enjoy telling the truth, or enjoy trying some reverse
psychology. I 🏀 would wager you’ve seen plenty of bluffers AND players betting strong
hands say things like, “I’ve got the nuts, I’m 🏀 telling you.”
If you watched the 2024
WSOP Main Event final table, you might have seen the hand where Scott Blumstein 🏀 made a
full house with his T♠ 9♠ versus Pollak. Pollak checked his straight on the river and
Blumstein bet. 🏀 After some talking by Pollak, Blumstein said, “You’re going to let me
bluff you on national TV?”
In such a high-stakes 🏀 spot, it’s quite unlikely that
Blumstein would risk placing the idea he were bluffing in Pollak’s mind, in my
opinion.
One 🏀 of the reasons this kind of behavior is so valuable is that it’s hard to
predict how an opponent will 🏀 react to one’s “speech play”. This means players are
generally very cautious about what they say and don’t want to 🏀 accidentally influence an
opponent to call. This makes weak-hand statements accompanying significant bluffs quite
rare, even amongst better players who 🏀 are theoretically more capable of switching such
things up if they wishes.
Another interesting thing about Blumstein’s statement: it was
a 🏀 bit goading, which leads me to…
Tell #6: Goading
A goad is defined as something “that
urges or forces someone to do 🏀 something”. Its meaning comes from a tool named the goad,
which is a pointed rod used to get an animal 🏀 to move forward.
Goading in poker takes
the form of a player trying to abuse and agitate an opponent into taking 🏀 some
action.
When a player engages in goading behavior when making a significant bet, he’s
more likely to have a strong 🏀 hand. It doesn’t really matter in which direction a goad
is trying to influence someone; just the mere fact that 🏀 it seems intended to get
someone to do something makes it a goad and increases the chances it’s said by 🏀 a
relaxed, strong-hand bettor.
The main reason for this is similar to the rules governing
weak-hand statements: bluffers do not want 🏀 to accidentally agitate an opponent and
trigger what Mike Caro called a player’s “calling reflex.”
Some examples of goading
statements:
A bettor 🏀 saying, “I dare you to call me.”
A bettor saying, “I know you’re
folding.”
A bettor saying, “You’re going to let me 🏀 bluff you on national TV?”
That last
one is the statement we talked about in the last section from Blumstein at 🏀 the WSOP ME
final table. Not only is it a weak-hand statement, it’s also a bit goading. Blumstein’s
statement could 🏀 be interpreted as, “I’m bluffing you and I dare you to call me.”
His
statement is of course open to interpretation, 🏀 but even so, his statement raises the
emotional stakes by seemingly trying to influence Pollak to do something, even if 🏀 we’re
not sure what that something is. And that is something that a bluffer tends to avoid,
because he has 🏀 to be afraid of his opponent acting on his goading statement (whether
logically or illogically) and calling him.
The fear of 🏀 looking stupid is another reason
weak-hand statements and goading statements are so heavily weighted to strong hands. If
a bluffer 🏀 says something like, “Don’t let me bluff you,” and ends up being called, that
is emotionally a tough thing to 🏀 deal with. In such a situation, a bluffer would often
be angry with himself, thinking, “Why did I say I 🏀 had a weak hand.”
Fear of feeling
dumb is a major reason bluffers don’t often try unusual or tricky things; most 🏀 people
don’t want to face the self-doubt and questions involved in taking an unusual risk and
it not paying off.
When 🏀 skilled players play other skilled players, these things are
capable of being more reversed and varied. But for most players, 🏀 these are generally
strong patterns.
Tell #7: Irritation
Similar to the reasons why goading is a sign a
player is relaxed, irritation 🏀 or rudeness from a player making a big bet is a clue that
player is relaxed.
Bluffers generally don’t want to 🏀 express irritation or anger because
they don’t want to risk agitating an opponent with their behavior. Some examples of
irritated 🏀 behavior:
A player shoves on the river and says, “What’s taking you so
long?”
A player 5-bets all-in pre-flop and says angrily, 🏀 “Raise, raise, raise, here’s a
raise.”
A player shoves on the river and calls the clock on his opponent in an 🏀 agitated
way. (One small note about this one: because it’s a well-known indicator of relaxation,
I’ve seen this be a 🏀 reverse tell a good number of times when a good player called the
clock on another good player.)
Players with weak 🏀 hands in these situations do not
generally want to risk angering their opponent.
Another interesting way this pattern
shows up is 🏀 in the context of that often-heard question, “Will you show if I fold?”
Affirmative responses to this question don’t contain 🏀 much meaning; you’ll often hear
players with both strong and weak hands be willing to say, “Yes, sure, I’ll show,” 🏀 to
this question.
But saying, “No,” to this question is weighted significantly to
relaxation and strong hands. This is because bluffers 🏀 don’t want to risk angering their
opponent with a negative answer. It becomes even more likely to adhere to the 🏀 pattern
the more rudely or aggressively the “No” is said.
A note about non-big-bet
situations
One important point: irritation from players not 🏀 making significant bets
will be tied to weak hands and defensiveness.
For example, let’s say a player is
waiting for his 🏀 opponent to act on the river and says, “Come on, what’s taking so
long?” and seems agitated, it has become 🏀 significantly more likely that the speaking
player is defensive and doesn’t have a strong hand. This is because players with 🏀 weak
hands:
Are often less focused on the hand Lack the incentive of players with very
strong hands to not draw 🏀 attention to themselves May have an incentive to say or do
something to discourage an opponent from betting.
This is generally 🏀 true for most
verbal behavior, so that most early-hand or waiting-for-action talking in general will
slightly weaken a player’s range. 🏀 This is a general pattern, of course, not a
super-reliable one.
One example of how this kind of behavior might lead 🏀 to practical
action: a player raises and you have a hand that could easily be 3-bet or folded. As
you 🏀 think, the raiser looks at you and asks, “What’s the hold-up?” If you’re on the
fence, that behavior should encourage 🏀 you to raise, because this behavior from a player
in a non-big-bet situation makes it a bit less likely he 🏀 has a strong hand.
To
summarize: big-bet situations are very different than non-big-bet situations, including
early-hand or small-bet bettors. Thinking more 🏀 about situational factors helps you
better understand verbal poker behavior.
Wrap Up
If you liked this article, you can
sign up for 🏀 Zach’s free 5-part verbal poker tells email course here.