Card Games Encyclopedia

Poker Profit Target Calculator

Setting realistic profit targets is crucial for sustainable poker success. This calculator helps you establish achievable session goals, determine how much time you need to reach income targets, and set appropriate stop-loss limits to protect your bankroll. By understanding the relationship between win rate, variance, and time, you can create a sustainable approach to poker that balances ambition with mathematical reality.

💰 Profit Target Calculator

Your expected win rate in big blinds per 100 hands

The big blind amount at your stakes

How long you plan to play

Avg hands/hour (25-35 live, 60-100 online)

Quick Presets:

$0
Expected Value
$0/hr
Hourly Rate
$0 - $0
Realistic Range (±1 SD)
0
Total Hands

Variance Range for Session

-$100 EV: $40 +$200

📊 Session Recommendation

Based on your inputs, here's what you should expect...

Your desired monthly poker earnings

Your expected win rate

The big blind at your stakes

Average hands per hour

Income Goal Presets:

0
Hours Per Month
0
Hands Per Month
0
Hours Per Week
$0
Hourly EV
Timeframe Hours Needed Sessions (4hr) Expected Profit

📈 Income Analysis

Based on your inputs...

Standard buy-in for your game (typically 100 BB)

Amount you bring to a session

Your entire poker bankroll

How much loss you're comfortable with

-$0
Session Stop-Loss
0
Buy-Ins Allowed
+$0
Win Target (Optional)
0%
% of Total Bankroll

Note: Stop-loss limits are guidelines to protect your bankroll and mental game. If you're playing your A-game, some players continue until time limits are reached. If you're tilted or playing poorly, stop immediately regardless of results.

Scenario Stop-Loss Risk Level Recovery Sessions

🛡️ Bankroll Protection

Based on your inputs...

Understanding Profit Targets in Poker

Unlike traditional employment where income is predictable, poker earnings fluctuate significantly due to variance. This makes goal-setting in poker fundamentally different from other professions. Successful players focus on process goals (hands played, decisions made) alongside outcome goals (profit targets), understanding that short-term results often don't reflect true skill level.

According to research published in the Journal of Economic Psychology, poker players who set volume-based goals (hands or hours played) alongside profit targets tend to make better decisions than those focused solely on monetary outcomes. This approach reduces results-oriented thinking and the tilt that often follows variance-induced losses.

Volume Goals

Set targets for hands or hours played rather than just profit. This keeps you focused on putting in quality volume rather than chasing short-term results. For online players, 30,000-50,000 hands monthly is a common goal; live players might target 100+ hours.

Expected Value Focus

Track your decisions, not just results. Review hands where you made correct plays regardless of outcome. Over time, good decisions lead to positive results, but any single session can deviate wildly from expected value.

Bankroll Preservation

Your bankroll is your poker business capital. Stop-loss limits protect this capital during inevitable downswings. Most professionals recommend having 20-30 buy-ins for your stakes to weather variance comfortably.

Realistic Expectations

Even excellent players experience losing months. A solid 5 BB/100 winner can realistically lose money over 50,000 hands. Understanding this prevents discouragement during mathematically normal downswings.

Win Rate Reference Guide

Your win rate determines everything about your profit potential. The Two Plus Two poker community has extensively documented typical win rates across different game types and stakes. Here's what the data suggests:

Game Type Solid Winner Strong Winner Elite Player
Online 6-max Cash 2-4 BB/100 4-7 BB/100 7-10+ BB/100
Online Full Ring 1.5-3 BB/100 3-5 BB/100 5-8+ BB/100
Live $1/$2 or $1/$3 5-10 BB/hr 10-15 BB/hr 15-25+ BB/hr
Live $2/$5 3-6 BB/hr 6-10 BB/hr 10-15+ BB/hr
Online MTTs 10-20% ROI 20-50% ROI 50-100%+ ROI

Win rates typically decrease as you move up in stakes because the player pool becomes more skilled. A 10 BB/100 winner at micro stakes might only win 3-4 BB/100 at mid stakes. This calculator helps you understand how stake changes affect your hourly rate and time requirements.

The Mathematics of Stop-Loss Limits

Stop-loss limits serve two purposes: protecting your bankroll and protecting your mental game. Research from the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) shows that decision-making quality deteriorates after significant losses due to emotional factors. A proper stop-loss helps you quit before making costly tilt-driven mistakes.

The Standard Stop-Loss Formula: Most professionals recommend a stop-loss of 2-3 buy-ins per session. For a $1/$2 game with $200 buy-ins, this means stopping after losing $400-$600. This limits single-session damage to 10-15% of a 20 buy-in bankroll while giving you enough room to recover from normal variance.

When to Use Stop-Losses vs. Time Limits

Some winning players argue against hard stop-losses, preferring time-based limits instead. The reasoning: if you're playing well in a profitable game, leaving after losing 3 buy-ins might cost you positive expected value. However, this approach requires honest self-assessment about whether you're truly playing your best poker.

A hybrid approach works well for many players: set a hard stop-loss for catastrophic sessions (4+ buy-ins), a soft stop-loss that triggers a mandatory break and self-assessment (2-3 buy-ins), and time limits to ensure you don't play when fatigued. Use the mental game principles to evaluate whether continuing makes sense.

Common Goal-Setting Mistakes

Mistake Problem Better Approach
Daily profit targets Variance makes daily goals unrealistic; leads to forcing play or stopping early when ahead Weekly or monthly targets; daily volume goals
No stop-loss Catastrophic sessions can damage bankroll and mental game for weeks Set clear limits before sitting down; stick to them
Stopping when winning "Quitting winner" ignores EV; may leave good game too early Play based on game quality and your energy level, not results
Ignoring variance Expecting linear results leads to frustration and tilt Use variance simulator to understand realistic outcome ranges
Overestimating win rate Planning based on unrealistic expectations sets you up for failure Track results over large sample; use session tracker

Building a Sustainable Poker Schedule

Professional poker requires treating the game like a business. The American Gaming Association reports that commercial gaming revenue has grown consistently, indicating healthy poker ecosystems, but individual success depends on sustainable practices rather than marathon sessions.

Session Length

Most players perform best in 4-6 hour sessions. Beyond this, focus and decision quality typically decline. Schedule regular breaks even within sessions to maintain sharpness.

Weekly Volume

Full-time professionals often play 30-50 hours weekly. Part-time players should aim for consistent volume (e.g., 10-15 hours) rather than sporadic marathon sessions.

Game Selection

Your effective hourly rate depends heavily on game quality. Spending time finding good games can double your win rate compared to playing in tough lineups. Review position advantages and table dynamics.

Study Time

Allocate 20-30% of poker time to study. Review hands, use training tools like the preflop trainer, and analyze your session data. Continuous improvement maintains or increases your win rate.

Related Tools & Resources

Effective profit planning requires multiple tools working together. Combine this calculator with these resources for comprehensive poker planning:

Responsible Gaming Reminder

While this calculator helps with poker planning, remember that gambling involves risk. Never play with money you can't afford to lose, and be aware of problem gambling resources if poker stops being enjoyable or affects other areas of your life. Setting limits—both for losses and time spent playing—is a sign of mature, sustainable poker play.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I set realistic poker session goals?

Realistic session goals should be based on your historical win rate, the stakes you play, variance, and session length. A good target is 2-4 big blinds per hour for solid players, but goals should account for variance by using a range rather than a fixed number. Stop-loss limits should typically be 2-3 buy-ins to protect your bankroll on bad days.

What is a good stop-loss limit for poker?

A common stop-loss recommendation is 2-3 buy-ins for cash games. This protects your bankroll while giving you enough room to recover from normal variance. Some professionals use time-based stops (after X hours regardless of results) rather than purely monetary stops to avoid playing while tilted.

How many hours do I need to play poker to make a certain amount?

The hours needed depend on your win rate (in BB/100 or $/hour), the stakes you play, and your hands per hour. For example, a 5 BB/100 winner playing $1/$2 (approximately $10/hour) would need 100 hours to make $1,000. However, variance means actual results will deviate from expected value over shorter timeframes.

Should I set daily or weekly profit targets in poker?

Weekly or monthly targets are generally better than daily targets because they account for variance. Daily results are highly variable even for winning players. Setting monthly volume goals (hours or hands played) alongside result goals helps maintain focus on the process rather than short-term outcomes.