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All-In

shovepushjamship itmoving inputting it all in
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Definition

All-in means betting your entire remaining chip stack in a single wager, committing everything you have to the current hand. Once all-in, you cannot make further betting decisions—you simply wait for showdown. In cash games, all-in creates a maximum risk/reward situation. In tournaments, it often means survival or elimination. When players have unequal stacks, side pots form to handle the excess chips. The all-in move is poker's ultimate commitment—there's no retreat.

All-In

All-in is poker's point of no return—the moment you push every chip you have into the pot and commit your tournament life or entire cash game stack to the outcome. Once all-in, your decisions end; the cards speak for themselves. All-in situations range from premium hands seeking maximum value to desperate short-stack shoves hoping for fold equity. Understanding when to go all-in, when to call all-ins, and how side pots work is essential for both tournament survival and cash game profit.

Table of Contents

What is All-In {#what-is}

Definition

Going all-in means betting your entire remaining stack. Once all-in:

AspectWhat Happens
Your chipsAll committed to the pot
Further actionYou cannot bet, raise, or fold
ShowdownAutomatic if called
WinsLimited to what you can cover

All-In Scenarios

ScenarioDescription
Voluntary shoveYou bet all your chips first
All-in raiseYou raise to your remaining stack
All-in callYou call with your last chips
Forced all-inBlinds consume your stack

Types of All-In Bets

TypeDescriptionRisk Level
Value shoveAll-in with strong hand for max valueLow
Semi-bluff shoveAll-in with draw for fold equity + equityMedium
Bluff shoveAll-in with weak hand, relying on foldsHigh
Desperation shoveShort stack, any playable handVaries

When to Go All-In {#when}

Good All-In Situations

SituationWhy It Works
Premium handsMaximize value vs calling ranges
Short stackNeed fold equity before blinds consume you
Strong drawSemi-bluff with equity if called
Committed SPRStack-to-pot ratio makes folding -EV
Final table bubblePressure medium stacks in tournaments

Stack-to-Pot Ratio (SPR) Guide

SPR=Remaining StackPot Size\text{SPR} = \frac{\text{Remaining Stack}}{\text{Pot Size}}
SPRCommitment Level
<2Commit with top pair
2-4Commit with overpair/two pair
4-8Need strong hand (two pair+)
8-13Need very strong (set+)
>13Deep—rarely commit light

Push/Fold Charts (Short Stack)

When your stack is ≤15 big blinds, switch to push/fold:

Button shove ranges (approximate):

Stack (BB)Shove Range
10 BB35-40% (Any pair, A2s+, A7o+, K9s+, KTo+, suited connectors)
8 BB40-45% (Wider)
5 BB50-60% (Almost any two broadway, suited Ax)
3 BB70%+ (Desperate, nearly any two)

Big Blind calling ranges vs Button shove:

Stack (BB)Call Range
10 BB25-35%
8 BB30-40%
5 BB45-55%
3 BB60-70%

When NOT to Go All-In

SituationWhy Avoid
Deep stacksToo much risk with marginal hands
Multi-way potsSomeone likely has you beat
Way behindOnly called by better
Tournament bubble (medium stack)ICM disaster
Cash game with read on opponent strengthSave chips

All-In Mathematics {#math}

All-In Equity

When all-in and called, you need enough equity to profit:

EV=(Equity×Total Pot)Your Investment\text{EV} = (\text{Equity} \times \text{Total Pot}) - \text{Your Investment}

Example: You shove $100 into $50 pot, opponent calls

  • Pot = $250
  • Your equity needed: $100 / $250 = 40%

Fold Equity Calculation

All-In EV=P(Fold)×Pot+P(Call)×(Equity×New PotRisk)\text{All-In EV} = P(\text{Fold}) \times \text{Pot} + P(\text{Call}) \times (\text{Equity} \times \text{New Pot} - \text{Risk})

Example: Shove $50 into $30 pot with 35% equity if called

Opponent Fold RateEV Calculation
50%0.5 × $30 + 0.5 × (0.35 × $130 - $50) = $15 + ($22.75 - $25) = +$12.75
30%0.3 × $30 + 0.7 × (0.35 × $130 - $50) = $9 + ($31.85 - $35) = +$5.85
10%0.1 × $30 + 0.9 × (0.35 × $130 - $50) = $3 + ($40.95 - $45) = -$1.05

Key insight: Even with weak equity, fold equity can make shoves profitable.

Break-Even Fold Equity

Required Folds=Risk(Equity×New Pot)Pot+New Pot(Equity×New Pot)\text{Required Folds} = \frac{\text{Risk} - (\text{Equity} \times \text{New Pot})}{\text{Pot} + \text{New Pot} - (\text{Equity} \times \text{New Pot})}

Simplified for common scenarios:

Your EquityRisk:Pot RatioRequired Folds
35%1:123%
35%2:143%
25%1:138%
25%2:154%
15%1:155%

Effective Stack Math

The effective stack limits maximum win/loss:

Max Win/Loss=min(Your Stack,Opponent Stack)\text{Max Win/Loss} = \min(\text{Your Stack}, \text{Opponent Stack})

Example:

  • You: $150
  • Opponent: $400
  • Effective stack: $150 (your max win or loss)

Side Pots Explained {#side-pots}

When Side Pots Form

Side pots occur when players have different stack sizes in an all-in situation.

Side Pot Mechanics

Player A: $100 (all-in)
Player B: $500 (calls)
Player C: $500 (calls)

Main Pot: $100 × 3 = $300 (A, B, C eligible)
Side Pot: ($500 - $100) × 2 = $800 (B, C only)

Multiple Side Pots

Player A: $50 (all-in)
Player B: $150 (all-in)
Player C: $500 (calls)
Player D: $500 (calls)

Main Pot: $50 × 4 = $200 (A, B, C, D eligible)
Side Pot 1: ($150 - $50) × 3 = $300 (B, C, D eligible)
Side Pot 2: ($500 - $150) × 2 = $700 (C, D only)

Side Pot Resolution

StepAction
1Show hands (starting with last aggressor or caller)
2Award side pots to winner among eligible players
3Award main pot to winner among all all-in players

Side Pot Strategy

Your PositionStrategy
Short stack (all-in)Focus on main pot equity
Medium stackConsider your side pot equity
Big stackCan pressure with side pot advantage

Tournament All-In Strategy {#tournament}

ICM Considerations

In tournaments, chip value is non-linear:

Chip ValueDollar Value\text{Chip Value} \neq \text{Dollar Value}
Stack SizeValue per Chip
Last chipInfinite (survival)
First chipsHigh value
Middle chipsModerate value
Extra chips (chip leader)Lowest per-chip value

Tournament All-In Adjustments

SituationAdjustment
BubbleTighter calls, wider shoves (big stack)
Final tableICM critical, protect stacks
Pay jumpConsider fold equity from pay pressure
Heads-upChip EV, ignore ICM

Push/Fold Zones in Tournaments

Stack (BB)Strategy
20+Standard play, occasional shove
15-20Resteal shoves, looking for spots
10-15Primary push/fold mode
5-10Desperate mode, wide shoves
<5Any two cards often correct

Big Stack Aggression

As chip leader:

vs.Strategy
Short stacksCareful—they have nothing to lose
Medium stacksAttack relentlessly—ICM pressure
Other big stacksStandard play—both have lots to lose

Cash Game All-In Strategy {#cash-game}

Cash vs Tournament All-In

FactorCash GameTournament
RebuyCan rebuyEliminated
Chip valueLinear ($1 = $1)Non-linear (ICM)
Risk toleranceHigherLower (usually)
Fold equityLess importantCritical

Cash Game All-In Situations

SituationApproach
Set over setGet it in, cooler situation
Nut flush vs lower flushStandard stack-off
Top pair vs drawDepends on SPR
Overpair vs setOften unavoidable
Bluff shoveSelect spots carefully

Implied Odds vs All-In

When all-in removes implied odds:

All-In Equity Needed>Drawing Equity Needed with Implied Odds\text{All-In Equity Needed} > \text{Drawing Equity Needed with Implied Odds}

Example: Calling $200 all-in with flush draw

  • Need ~35% equity (have ~35% on flop)
  • Marginal call with no implied odds

With $400 behind:

  • Implied odds add value if you hit
  • More attractive call

Stack-Off Ranges (100BB Deep)

HoldingTypical Stack-Off Flop
SetAlmost always
OverpairBoard-dependent
Top pair top kickerLow SPR only
Flush drawRarely pure call
Straight drawRarely

Calling All-Ins {#calling}

Call Decision Framework

Call EV=(Equity×Pot After Call)Call Amount\text{Call EV} = (\text{Equity} \times \text{Pot After Call}) - \text{Call Amount}

Required equity to call:

Required Equity=CallPot After Call\text{Required Equity} = \frac{\text{Call}}{\text{Pot After Call}}

Calling Range Guidelines

Pot OddsRequired EquityTypical Calling Range
4:120%Any pair, draws, Ax
3:125%Pairs, strong draws
2:133%Top pair+, strong draws
1:150%Strong hands only
1:267%Premium only

Range Reading for Calls

Opponent TypeLikely Shove Range
TightPremium hands (TT+, AK)
StandardWide value + bluffs
LAGVery wide, many bluffs
Short stackAny two playable
DesperateExtremely wide

Blockers in All-In Calls

Your CardsEffect
AceBlock opponent's AA, AK
KingBlock KK, AK
Suits matching drawBlock flush draws

All-In Etiquette {#etiquette}

Proper All-In Protocol

DoDon't
Announce "all-in" clearlyAmbiguously move chips
Push chips forward decisivelyString bet (chip by chip)
Wait for action to completeShow cards early
Keep composureCelebrate prematurely

Running It Multiple Times

In some cash games, players can "run it twice" (or more):

RunsEffect
OnceNormal—one board determines winner
TwiceBoard dealt twice, pot split accordingly
ThriceThree boards, pot split in thirds

Purpose: Reduces variance, doesn't change EV

Protecting Your All-In

SituationProtection
Cards face downPlace chip on cards
Large potCount and verify
Multiple side potsClarify eligibility

Common Mistakes {#mistakes}

Mistake 1: Shoving Too Deep

Problem: Going all-in with 100BB when not committed Solution: Consider SPR before committing stack

Mistake 2: Calling Light in Tournaments

Problem: Calling with marginal hands near bubble Solution: Respect ICM—fold more than cash game

Mistake 3: Ignoring Position

Problem: Shoving from early position with wide range Solution: Tighten up—more players to act behind

Mistake 4: Not Calculating Odds

Problem: Calling based on "feel" Solution: Calculate pot odds and required equity

Mistake 5: Overvaluing Draws All-In

Problem: Calling all-in with draws at bad odds Solution: Calculate equity vs pot odds precisely

Mistake 6: Missing Fold Equity Value

Problem: Not considering shove profitability via folds Solution: Factor fold equity into all-in decisions

All-In Checklist {#checklist}

Before going all-in:

StepQuestion
1What's my stack in big blinds?
2What's the SPR?
3What's my equity if called?
4What's my fold equity?
5What hands call me?
6Am I the right stack size to shove?

Before calling all-in:

StepQuestion
1What pot odds am I getting?
2What's opponent's likely range?
3What's my equity vs that range?
4Is this a tournament (ICM) or cash game?
5Do I have blockers to their value hands?
  • Equity Calculator - Calculate all-in equity
  • ICM Calculator - Tournament all-in decisions
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Go all-in when: (1) you have a premium hand and want maximum value, (2) you're short-stacked and need fold equity plus showdown value, (3) you're semi-bluffing with a strong draw, or (4) stack-to-pot ratio is low and you're committed. Avoid going all-in with marginal hands when you have deep stacks—you're risking too much with uncertain equity.
When the all-in player has fewer chips than others, a main pot is created containing their contribution matched by opponents. Any additional betting between remaining players goes into a side pot the all-in player cannot win. If a short-stack goes all-in for $100 and two players call $500 each, the main pot is $300 and the side pot is $800.
Effective stack is the smaller of two players' stacks—the maximum either can win or lose in a hand. If you have $200 and opponent has $500, the effective stack is $200. You can only win their first $200, and they can only lose $200 to you. This concept is crucial for calculating pot odds and commitment.
Calculate pot odds and compare to your equity. If calling $100 to win $400, you need 20% equity. A flush draw has ~35% equity on the flop, making it a profitable call. But consider tournament ICM implications—in tournaments, chips you lose are worth more than chips you might win, so drawing hands become less attractive.
Evgeniy Volkov

Evgeniy Volkov

Verified Expert
Fullstack Developer

Fullstack developer with a background in mathematics. I build the calculators and game-style tools on ToolsGambling with Pixi.js and modern web tech, and every result uses transparent probability formulas you can verify yourself.

EducationMathematics
SpecializationiGaming
StatusActive
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