If you are on the flop and want to know how often a certain outcome will happen by the river, use this tool. Or use these lessons from The Poker Math Course: Choose the one that’s right for your exploration, fill in the blue numbers, and see how slight changes in size affect things. There are two tabs for this spreadsheet: one for taking a bet/bet/bet line and another for raising the flop and barreling the turn and river. This tool is perfect for experimenting with bet sizes and seeing how they impact the final pot size. More specifically, this sheet looks at the EV of shoving over the top of their bet, allowing you to explore the profitability of a play too few players consider with marginal hands and missed draws. This sheet is perfect for comparing the EV of calling vs. You face a bet on the river and have to make a decision. Use this sheet to complete the floating section of The Postflop Workbook. This would more correctly be titled “the EV of floats given you were clairvoyant to what the exact next card and their frequencies on that card would be” – but the sheet helps put some mathematical estimates to the value of floating when specific next cards come. This sheet calculates the EV of a simplified float where things like implied odds, reverse implied odds, etc. Floating (Simplified) SpreadsheetĪ float is when you call a bet, your opponent checks the next street, and you opt to bet. You can play with a simpler web-based version of the free implied odds tool here. This tool requires just a few numbers and is the starting point of playing weaker drawing hands more profitably. Implied odds help you gauge how much extra money you need to make later in a hand to justify calling now with incorrect pot odds. I also have a free web-based version of the pot odds calculator here. This tool gives you the pot odds AND equity requirement given the size of your opponent’s bet or raise. Pot odds are one of the most fundamental concepts that every player needs to understand. This shows you the long-form math (while also doing it for you) and is a great way to quiz yourself when comparing breakeven-%, EV, and commonly used bluff sizes. See the EV of an outright bluff by just adding a few numbers. This is great when stealing from the HJ, CO, and BTN – and also for running multi-way bluffs. This dashboard allows you to see the BE% of your actual squeeze size, related sizes, and to estimate how often your opponent(s) will collectively fold – allowing you to find extra +EV squeezes.Ī simple sheet where you enter in the estimated folding frequency for each player involved, and you see how often you can expect folds from ALL of them. This spreadsheet allows you to compare the EV of both options to help you visualize the most profitable approach with your hand! Your opponent checks to you on the river, and you have the option to fire or check behind.
Use this spreadsheet to quickly calculate (and even quiz) the breakeven percentage of a bet or raise. The breakeven percentage is something you have to memorize. This is especially useful for comparing a few bet sizing options. Very similar to the basic EV spreadsheet, but this time you can run multiple EV calculations at once and compare them side-by-side. This is great for fishier games with short stacks.Ī very simple EV calculator that requires three numbers: how often you expect to win (usually your equity %), the upside of winning, and the downside of losing. Looking for the EV when the pot could go multi-way after you commit? Look no further than this complex sheet.
Use this for both preflop and postflop hands so long as there is a committing decision by one of the players involved. This is my most popular spreadsheet that breaks down the EV of spots where you commit (either by calling or shoving). To be sure that you are on the right track using these sheets, and putting the right numbers into the right cells, I put together this list of free poker videos where I show how to use each one.