Implied Odds Calculator
Calculate implied odds to justify a drawing hand call in poker.
Returns how much to win on future streets based on pot size, call amount, and draw equity.
Pot odds vs implied odds
Pot odds answer one question: is calling profitable based on what is already in the middle? Implied odds answer the bigger question: is calling profitable counting the chips you expect to win on later streets when you hit your draw?
A flush draw on the flop has roughly 36% equity to make a flush by the river. If you face a half-pot bet, pot odds say you need 25% equity, so calling is correct on pot odds alone. That math gets harder facing a pot-sized bet (33% needed), and almost impossible facing an over-bet (40%+ needed). That is where implied odds enter: you call hoping the price gets cheaper effectively, because you will win more if you hit.
The formula
minimum_total_pot_to_break_even = call_amount ÷ hand_equity
If the current pot plus call already meets that number, the call is profitable on pot odds. If it does not, the gap is how much extra you need to extract on later streets. With $30 to call into a $100 pot and 18% equity (a gutshot), you need a total pot of 30 ÷ 0.18 = $167. Current total is $130, so you need $37 more in implied earnings to break even.
What raises and lowers implied odds
Implied odds are higher when:
- You have a well-disguised draw (gutshots, backdoor, bottom set)
- Your opponent has a strong made hand they will pay off (top pair top kicker, overpair)
- Stack-to-pot ratio is deep so there is room to win big
- Position lets you control the size of later pots
Implied odds are lower when:
- Your draw is obvious (flush draws when 3-to-a-suit are on board)
- Your opponent is short-stacked
- Multi-way pots where someone always wakes up with the nuts
- Aggressive opponents who will barrel you off if you miss and check-raise you off if you hit
Reverse implied odds — the hidden cost
Some draws and weak made hands have negative implied odds — when you hit, you do not get paid, but when you miss or hit second-best, you lose more. Open-ended straight draws when the board is paired, low pocket pairs against a raise, ace-rag in a multi-way pot. Drawing dead and paying off is the most expensive mistake in poker. If your draw could be dominated by a bigger draw of the same type, treat the implied odds number as wildly optimistic.