I’ve been playing poker for over 25 years, and I still love the game.
Every time I sit down at a table, it feels like a time warp. Three hours can pass in the blink of an eye. The cards, the psychology, the rhythm of betting, and the social interaction all combine into something that’s both mentally stimulating.
As an investor of stocks since 1996, the parallels are quite similar. You need to know when to press and when to cut your losses.
However, as I’ve played with more and more people over the years, especially in live cash games, I’ve noticed something troubling. A lot of players are gambling with way more money than they should.
Not professionals. Not wealthy hobbyists. Just regular people playing stakes that can materially affect their financial lives. And too often, those losses don’t just sting for the night. They linger.
Watching Someone Lose Too Much, Too Fast
One hand in particular stuck with me.
I was playing at a $1 $1 No Limit Holdem table. About as low stakes as most people think poker gets. A 27 year old software engineer sat down with a full stack and seemed friendly and confident. We chatted between hands. He had a decent job, lived San Francisco, and had been playing poker recreationally for a few years.
Then it happened.
In a single hand, he lost $1,500. He called all-in with top pair and a potential for a straight.
At a $1 $1 table.
Based on our conversation, his net worth was under $200,000. Possibly far less after student loans, rent, and everyday expenses. He lives with roommates and pays $1,800 a month in rent.
When the hand was over, he tried to laugh it off. But you could see it in his face. That loss hurt. Not just emotionally, but financially. He left soon after.
As a personal finance enthusiast, I couldn’t help myself. I started thinking about how many people play poker without any framework for what stakes actually make sense relative to their net worth, income, and liquidity.
Poker Risk Is Real, Even at Low Stakes
A $1 $1 game feels harmless, but if you are sitting with multiple buy-ins and those buy-ins represent a meaningful percentage of your discretionary capital, the risk is real. Variance does not care about your intentions. You can play well and still lose several buy ins in one session.
Poker risk should be evaluated the same way we evaluate investment risk. Position sizing matters. Liquidity matters. Emotional tolerance matters.
If you ignore those factors, poker stops being entertainment and starts becoming financial stress. Worse, you might get addicted to trying to “win your money back.”
Recently, two separate players took over a week to pay their losses via Venmo. We’re not talking life-changing money here, $480 and $220. But if you can’t settle up that same evening, you’re almost certainly betting with more than you can afford to lose.
Step One: Separate Poker Money From Life Money
The first rule of responsible poker is simple. You must have a dedicated poker bankroll, completely separate from your real life finances.
This is money you can afford to lose without blinking. Not rent money. Not your kids’ tuition. Not your emergency fund. If losing it would cause anxiety, force lifestyle changes, or require an awkward conversation with your spouse, it’s too much.
A good rule of thumb: your poker bankroll should never exceed 1% of your liquid net worth, with 3% as an absolute ceiling. With $1 million in liquid investments, that’s $10,000 to $30,000. And be honest with yourself here. Most recreational players lose money over time. The house doesn’t lose, and neither do the sharks at your table who’ve been playing longer than you’ve been adulting.
So assume you might lose it all. If that number makes your stomach turn, scale back until it doesn’t.
If You Do Lose Your Entire Bankroll
If you do lose your entire bankroll, the answer is simple: you stop playing. Wait until the year is over and reassess. You do not dip into savings. You do not tell yourself you’re “due for a comeback” because that’s not how poker works. Losing your bankroll is not a tragedy. It’s a signal.
Either your bankroll was sized wrong for your skill level, or your skill level isn’t where you thought it was. Either way, the right move is to step away, reassess, and only return when you’ve rebuilt that dedicated fund from disposable income, not from money that has another job to do.
The goal isn’t to scare you away from poker. It’s to make sure that a bad run of cards stays a mildly annoying Saturday night, not a financial crisis.
Step Two: Buy Ins and Bankroll Size
In No Limit Texas Hold’em, the standard buy-in is 100 big blinds. Some games allow 200 or more, which increases variance dramatically. If the big blind is $1, a standard buy-in runs $100 to $200.
As a general rule, never sit down with less than a full buy-in. Short stacking might save you money in the short run, but it changes your strategic options and signals to everyone at the table that you’re already playing scared. If you can’t comfortably afford a full buy-in at a given stake, that stake is too high for you right now. Drop down.
Here is a simple reference chart to make this tangible.
Poker Stakes and Responsible Bankroll Guide
| Cash Game Stakes (Small / Big Blinds) | Typical Buy In | Minimum Suggested Poker Bankroll | Minimum Implied Net Worth Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| $0.25 / $0.50 | $50 – $100 | $1,000 to $1,500 | $50,000 to $150,000 |
| $0.50 / $1 | $100 – $200 | $2,000 to $3,000 | $100,000 to $300,000 |
| $1 / $2 | $200- $400 | $4,000 to $6,000 | $250,000 to $750,000 |
| $2 / $5 | $500 – $1,000 | $10,000 to $15,000 | $750,000 to $2 million |
| $5 / $10 | $1,000 – $2,000 | $20,000 to $30,000 | $2 million plus |
These are guidelines, not rules. Income stability, expenses, and liquidity all matter. But if you find yourself playing stakes far above the minimum recommended implied range, that is a warning sign.
Step Three: Liquidity and Monthly Expenses Matter
Net worth alone does not tell the full story.
Someone with a $500,000 net worth mostly tied up in home equity and tax-advantaged retirement accounts should be far more conservative than someone with $500,000 in taxable investments and cash. Your poker bankroll should only ever come from liquid assets. Retirement accounts, home equity, and illiquid investments don’t count, no matter how wealthy they make you look on paper.
Monthly expenses matter just as much. Two people with identical net worths can have completely different risk tolerances depending on their cash flow. Someone spending $12,000 a month has far less margin for error than someone spending $5,000, even if their balance sheets look identical. Higher fixed expenses mean less disposable income, less financial cushion, and a much shorter runway if things go sideways at the table.
A simple way to think about it: before deciding what stakes to play, calculate how many months of expenses your liquid net worth covers. The lower that number, the more conservative your poker bankroll should be.
| Liquid Net Worth as Months of Expenses | Suggested Bankroll Adjustment |
|---|---|
| Under 12 months | Cut recommended bankroll in half |
| 12 to 24 months | Use the low end of the recommended range |
| 24 to 60 months | Standard 1% guideline applies |
| 60 months or more | Up to 3% ceiling is reasonable |
If you’re sitting on less than a year of liquid expenses, you have no business funding a poker bankroll at all. That money has a more important job: achieving financial freedom!
The Problem of Net Worth Asymmetry at the Table
Here is something that doesn’t get talked about enough.
You do not want to play in a game where your opponents are playing with money that means nothing to them, but everything to you.
Poker is not played in a vacuum. When someone at the table has a much larger net worth and income, they can apply pressure in ways you simply cannot. They can three-bet light. They can bluff aggressively. They can force you into uncomfortable decisions knowing that the downside barely registers for them.
Even if the odds are in your favor, you may fold because you cannot comfortably absorb a bad beat. You are protecting your stack because that stack represents real money in your real life. They are not.
That asymmetry is dangerous, and it is expensive.
You may technically be the better player, but fear changes behavior. When losing hurts too much, you become predictable. And predictable players get exploited.
The Flip Side: Net Worth Advantage Is a Real Edge
Now let’s flip the script. If you have a much larger net worth, say $20 million versus $500,000 for the rest of the table, you gain a genuine strategic edge that has nothing to do with your card-reading ability.
You can apply pressure without fear. You can bluff more aggressively. You can make thin value bets and call down lighter. Losing a $200 buy-in, or even a $2,000 one, simply does not move the needle in your life.
This is not an invitation to bully the table recklessly. But it does mean that when the money feels trivial, the strategy gets sharper. You play your actual game instead of a fear-based version of it.
Why Playing Smaller Can Leads to Winning More
Most of us play poker for fun. Not ego. Not status. Mostly bragging rights and a way to connect with people you would never otherwise meet.
Playing smaller stakes keeps you emotionally detached, sharpens your decisions, and lets you actually enjoy the table. You last longer. You tilt less. You go home in a better mood, which your family will appreciate.
Ironically, playing smaller often produces better long-term results because you are playing your A-game more consistently. The one caveat: if the stakes feel completely meaningless, you may start playing recklessly just to feel something. Find the level where the money is comfortable but not trivial.
Personally, I get just as much of a thrill playing $1/$2 with $200 to $400 buy-ins as I do at $10/$25 with $2,500 to $5,000 on the line. If I really want high-stakes action, I will just invest more in the stock market. At least there the odds aren’t working against me from the start.
Poker Should Add to Your Life, Not Subtract From It
Poker is a beautiful game. It rewards patience, discipline, observation, and emotional control. But it can also expose financial blind spots and unhealthy risk-taking faster than almost any other hobby.
I have seen too many players convince themselves that one bad night is just variance. But those nights have a way of adding up, quietly, until the damage is real.
Playing responsibly does not make you less of a player. It makes you a smarter one. When you align your stakes with your net worth, income, liquidity, and emotional tolerance, poker stays exactly what it should be: a challenging, social, and deeply enjoyable game that fits comfortably into a well-lived financial life.
And that is a game worth playing for decades.
Readers, are there any avid poker players out there? How do you determine your bankroll and the stakes you play? Do you get the same thrill at lower stakes as you do at higher ones? And have you ever sat at a table where your net worth dwarfed everyone else’s, giving you the freedom to apply pressure and push people around a little more than usual?
Know Your Finances Before You Pick Your Stakes
Most poker blowups don’t happen because someone can’t play. They happen because someone is playing too big for their finances. When you don’t have a clear handle on your net worth, cash flow, and liquidity, it’s easy to convince yourself a buy in is “no big deal” when it actually is.
That’s why I’ve used Empower’s free financial dashboard since leaving my day job in 2012. It shows me, in one place, exactly where my money stands. Net worth, spending, investment fees, and portfolio risk. Once you know your numbers, picking the right poker stakes stops being emotional and starts being rational.
If you haven’t reviewed your finances in the past 6 to 12 months, now is a great time to do so. You can run a DIY checkup using Empower’s free tools or opt for a complimentary financial review. Either way, you’ll likely uncover opportunities to optimize and free up money for what matters most to you.
Poker is supposed to be fun. A buy in should feel like entertainment, not pressure. Get your finances organized first, and you’ll play calmer, avoid tilt, and enjoy the game a lot more.
Empower is a long-time affiliate partner of Financial Samurai and is not currently a client of Empower Advisory Group. I’ve personally used their free tools since 2012 to track my net worth, cash flow, and investments. Click here to learn more.
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