Position in Poker: Why Your Seat Matters
The Most Underrated Concept in Poker
Ask any experienced player what the single most important concept in poker is, and most will say the same thing: position.
Not the cards you’re dealt. Not bluffing. Not reading people. Position.
Why? Because when you act last, you get to see what everyone else does before you make your decision. That information is incredibly powerful — and it’s free.
What Is Position?
Position simply means where you sit relative to the dealer button. The button moves clockwise after every hand, so your position changes every round.
The player on the button acts last in every betting round after the flop. That’s the best seat. The players to the left of the button act first — that’s the worst seat.
The Three Zones
A typical 9-player table breaks down like this:
| Zone | Seats | Also Called | Acts |
|---|---|---|---|
| Early Position | 1st, 2nd, 3rd after the blinds | Under the Gun (UTG), UTG+1, UTG+2 | First |
| Middle Position | 4th, 5th, 6th | MP1, MP2, Hijack | Middle |
| Late Position | 7th and 8th (Cutoff and Button) | CO, BTN | Last |
The blinds (small blind and big blind) are a special case — they act last preflop but first on every street after that.
Why Late Position Is So Good
When you’re on the button or cutoff, you get to see what every other player does before you act. That means:
You Know Who’s Interested
If everyone folds to you, the pot is up for grabs. If someone raises big, you know they’re strong and can get out cheaply. You never have to guess.
You Control the Pot Size
Want to keep the pot small with a marginal hand? Just call. Want to build it with a monster? Raise. You set the pace.
You Can Bluff More Effectively
When everyone checks to you, it often means nobody has much. A well-timed bet from the button can pick up a lot of pots that nobody else wanted.
You Get the Best Price on Draws
If you’re chasing a flush draw, you get to see what your opponents bet before deciding whether the price is right. In early position, you’d have to guess.
Why Early Position Is Tough
Acting first means flying blind. You don’t know if the players behind you have monsters or junk. That means:
- You need stronger hands to play. That pair of nines might look nice, but if someone behind you raises big, you’re in an awkward spot.
- Bluffing is risky. You might bet, thinking you can push people out, only to get called by two players behind you.
- You can’t control the pot. Someone behind you can always raise and put you to a tough decision.
How Position Changes What You Play
The same hand can be a raise, a call, or a fold depending on where you’re sitting.
| Hand | Early Position | Middle Position | Late Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| A-A, K-K, Q-Q | Raise | Raise | Raise |
| A-K, A-Q suited | Raise | Raise | Raise |
| J-J, 10-10 | Raise | Raise | Raise |
| 8-8, 7-7 | Call or fold | Call | Raise |
| A-J suited | Fold or call | Call | Raise |
| K-J suited | Fold | Call | Raise |
| 8-9 suited | Fold | Fold | Raise or call |
| 6-7 suited | Fold | Fold | Raise if folded to you |
Notice the pattern? The later your position, the more hands you can play. That’s not because the cards magically get better — it’s because the information advantage makes them more profitable.
The Button: The Best Seat in the House
If you could choose one seat at the poker table, always pick the button. Here’s why it’s special:
- You act last on the flop, turn, and river
- You can steal the blinds with a wide range of hands when everyone folds to you
- You see maximum information before every decision
- You can play more creatively — suited connectors, small pairs, and speculative hands all work better here
Professional players win the most money from the button, by a significant margin. It’s not close.
The Blinds: A Tricky Spot
The blinds are weird. You act last before the flop (good), but first on every other street (bad). Plus, you’ve already put chips in the pot, which tempts you to defend with marginal hands.
Small blind tips:
- Don’t complete the small blind with junk just because it’s “half price.” Fold most of the time.
- If you play, raise instead of limping. You’ll be out of position for the rest of the hand, so at least start with the initiative.
Big blind tips:
- You get a discount to see the flop, so you can defend a bit wider.
- But don’t fall in love with your hand just because you’re getting a deal. Post-flop, you’re in the worst position.
The Simple Takeaway
You don’t need to overthink this. Just remember:
- Play tight in early position — stick to your best hands.
- Loosen up as you move toward the button — more information means more opportunities.
- Use the button aggressively — it’s your chance to control the hand.
- Be careful in the blinds — the discount is tempting, but the position is bad.
Position is your built-in advantage. Use it, and you’ll make better decisions without needing better cards.
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