Online poker isn't one product — it's a spectrum that runs from free browser games you can open in seconds to real-money tournaments with buy-ins, rake and payout policies you should read carefully. The right site depends on what you actually want: to learn the ropes risk-free, to play a casual home game with friends, or to sit in a real-money cash game or Sit & Go. This guide explains what separates a trustworthy poker site from a mediocre one, how we test them, and how to avoid the mistakes that cost new players money. The ranked list on this page is drawn from our own live operator data and maintained separately; below, we focus on the criteria so you can judge any site — including ones we haven't reviewed — on the merits. 18+ only. T&Cs apply, and geo eligibility varies by where you live.
- Dominant variant
- Texas Hold'em, usually with Omaha and sometimes Seven-card Stud
- Core formats
- Cash games, Sit & Go, multi-table tournaments (MTT)
- Free vs real money
- Free play-money (no download) or real-money buy-ins depending on site
- US regulated states
- New Jersey, Nevada, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Michigan
- Fairness
- Certified RNG deal; watch for collusion, insider cheating and bots
- Platforms
- Desktop clients, iOS/Android apps, browser no-download play
- Banking
- Standard methods; some operators (e.g. Bovada) accept crypto/Bitcoin
- Age & terms
- 18+ only, T&Cs apply, geo eligibility varies
What makes a great online poker site?
A strong online poker room gets the fundamentals right before it worries about flashy extras. Start with licensing and fairness: a reputable site is regulated by a recognised authority and deals cards using a certified random number generator (RNG), so the shuffle is genuinely random rather than scripted. That certification is the backbone of trust — without it, everything else is marketing.
Next comes game selection and liquidity. Texas Hold'em is the dominant variant you'll find everywhere, usually alongside Omaha and, on some sites, Seven-card Stud. But variety means little if the tables are empty. A great site has enough active players to fill cash games, Sit & Gos and multi-table tournaments (MTTs) at the stakes you play, at the hours you play.
Finally, look at the whole player experience: fast and transparent payouts, responsive support, clear rake, a clean mobile client, and visible responsible-gambling tools. A site that lets you set deposit limits and take a break as easily as you deposit is signalling that it takes player protection seriously. If you gamble, do it for entertainment and never with money you can't afford to lose. Support is available through BeGambleAware and our responsible-gambling resources.
How we test and rank online poker sites
We judge poker sites against the same criteria every time, so comparisons are like-for-like. Our full methodology lives on our How We Rate page, but here's what matters most for poker.
Licensing and legality. We confirm the operating licence and check who can legally play. Regulation matters: in the US, the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA) was enacted in 2006 and the 2011 'Black Friday' enforcement action reshaped the market, and today regulated real-money online poker exists in a limited set of states — New Jersey, Nevada, Delaware, Pennsylvania and Michigan.
Fairness and RNG certification. Card dealing should be governed by a tested RNG. We look for evidence of independent testing and clear policies on the two integrity risks unique to poker: collusion (players secretly working together) and insider cheating (staff or others with access to hidden information).
Game selection and formats. We check the depth of cash games, Sit & Gos and MTTs, plus the variant mix — Texas Hold'em, Omaha and Stud.
Payout speed and banking. We test deposits and withdrawals, timings and options. Real-money operators typically offer standard methods, and some — Bovada, for example — also accept crypto and Bitcoin deposits. Our payment methods hub compares options in detail.
Support and responsible-gambling tooling. We assess how quickly support responds and whether deposit limits, time-outs and self-exclusion are easy to find and use.
Types of online poker and what to expect
Free (play-money) vs real money
The biggest split is between free and real-money play. Free play-money poker is available with no download required — you can play browser-based on sites such as Replay Poker and playwsop.com. Some free apps are generous with chips: PokerStars Play (the free .net app) tops you up with around 15,000 chips every four hours. AARP Games even offers free practice Texas Hold'em against AI, which is a low-pressure way to learn the mechanics.
Real-money sites like Bovada run genuine cash games and tournaments where results have financial consequences. The natural progression is to grind play money until decisions feel automatic, then move to the smallest real-money stakes — never the reverse.
Formats
Expect three core formats everywhere: cash games (chips equal money; leave whenever you like), Sit & Gos (a single table that starts when it fills), and multi-table tournaments (MTTs), which can range from small fields to major events. The World Series of Poker (WSOP), including its Main Event and bracelet events, is the reference point for the tournament calendar.
Platforms
You'll find desktop clients, iOS and Android apps, and browser-based no-download play. Cross-platform sites let you start on a laptop and continue on your phone with the same account and balance.
Bonuses and promotions to look for
Poker bonuses work differently from casino bonuses. A welcome offer is usually released in increments as you generate rake, rather than dropping into your balance instantly — so the real question is how much you must play to unlock it, and over what window.
When you compare offers, read past the headline number to the terms: the release rate, the expiry period, minimum-rake requirements, and whether the bonus applies to cash games, tournaments or both. Freerolls (free-entry tournaments with real prizes) and rakeback or loyalty schemes often deliver more steady value to regular players than a big one-time match. On the free-money side, generous chip top-ups — like the ~15,000 chips every four hours on PokerStars Play — keep casual players in the game without spending.
A bonus should never be the reason you pick a site. Fairness, liquidity and payout reliability matter far more. For how promotions are structured and where the value actually hides, see our guide to casino promotions. 18+, T&Cs apply, and eligibility depends on your location.
Common mistakes and red flags to avoid
Chasing bonuses over fundamentals. A large welcome offer on an unlicensed or thinly populated site is worth nothing if you can't cash out or can't find a game.
Ignoring liquidity. Empty tables kill the experience. Check that your stakes and formats are actually active before you deposit.
Skipping the fine print on withdrawals. Slow or opaque payout policies are the most common real-money complaint. Confirm methods, timings and verification requirements up front.
Misreading the fairness question. 'Is online poker rigged?' is the perennial worry. On a properly licensed site, the shuffle is governed by a certified RNG. The genuine risks aren't the software — they're human: collusion and insider cheating, which reputable operators actively monitor for. AI bots are a related concern; strong sites detect and remove them, but no system is perfect, so play where integrity policies are clear.
Playing without limits. The clearest red flag is your own behaviour. If you're chasing losses or playing longer than planned, stop. Set deposit and time limits before you start, and use self-exclusion if you need it. Never treat poker as a way to make money or recover losses. Help is available via our responsible-gambling page.
Pros
- Certified RNG deals and independent testing keep the shuffle genuinely random
- Deep player pools that fill cash games, Sit & Gos and tournaments at your stakes
- A full variant mix — Texas Hold'em, Omaha and Seven-card Stud
- Fast, transparent payouts with clear banking and (on some sites) crypto options
- Cross-platform play across desktop, iOS/Android apps and no-download browser
- Easy-to-find responsible-gambling tools: deposit limits, time-outs and self-exclusion
- Free play-money and AI practice options to learn before risking cash
Cons
- Real-money online poker is legal only in certain jurisdictions — check your local rules first
- Welcome bonuses often unlock slowly through rake, not instantly
- Thin liquidity at some sites means empty tables and long waits
- Human integrity risks — collusion, insider cheating and AI bots — still require vigilance
- Withdrawal timings and verification can vary widely between operators
- Free play-money results can build false confidence before you move to real stakes













