Omaha Odds and Outs: Quick Guide

Most Hold’em players, including very good Hold’em players, don’t know the true odds and outs in most standard Omaha situations. Good players can play good Omaha purely by feel and instinct. But it never hurts to have knowledge of the true numbers. Before you can learn odds, you have to know which hands we’re talking about.
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Debbie Zammit Pokerlistings Author
  • Fact Checked by: PokerListings
  • Last updated on: September 23, 2024

Odds and Outs for Omaha Draws

So as not to slow things down, I won’t provide an exhaustive list of the standard Hold’em hands and draws here. If you don’t know, check how many outs are in an open-ended straight draw here.

The Wraparound: A wraparound straight draw is where you have two cards above and one below the two connected board cards (or vice versa). For example:

WSOP Chips and Cards

Hand: 

Q
J
8
2

Flop: 

10
9
3

In this scenario, between your hand and the connected board cards, you have 8-9-10-JQ (bold indicates cards in your hand).

To make a straight you need one of the following:

7(x4), 8(x3), J(x3), Q(x3), K(x4) = Total of 17 outs. 

The Double Wraparound: A double wraparound draw is when you have two cards above and two cards below the two connected cards on board. For example:

Hand: 

Q
J
8
7

Flop: 

10
9
3

In this scenario, between your hand and the connected board cards, you have 78-9-10-JQ

To make this straight you need to hit one of the following:

6(x4),7(x3), 8(x3), J(x3), Q(x3), K(x4) = Total of 20 outs.

The 13-Out Straight: A 13-out straight draw is when your hand holds three cards above or below the two connected board cards. For example:

Hand: 

K
Q
J
4

Flop: 

10
9
3

In this scenario, between your hand and the connected board cards, you have 9-10-JQK. To make a straight you need one of the following:

8(x4),J(x3), Q(x3), K(x3) = Total of 13 outs.

Top 30 Starting Hands in Pot-Limit Omaha

Below are the Top 30 starting hands in Pot-Limit Omaha.

1AA-KKdouble-suited
2AA-J-Tdouble-suited
3AA-QQdouble-suited
4AA-JJdouble-suited
5AA-TTdouble-suited
6AA-9-9double-suited
7AA-x-xdouble-suited
8J-T-9-8double-suited
9KK-QQdouble-suited
10KK-JJdouble-suited
11K-Q-J-Tdouble-suited
12KK-TTdouble-suited
13KK-A-Qdouble-suited
14KK-A-Jdouble-suited
15KK-A-Tdouble-suited
16KK-Q-Jdouble-suited
17KK-Q-Tdouble-suited
18KK-J-Tdouble-suited
19QQ-JJdouble-suited
20QQ-TTdouble-suited
21QQ-A-Kdouble-suited
22QQ-A-Jdouble-suited
23QQ-A-Tdouble-suited
24QQ-K-Jdouble-suited
25QQ-K-Tdouble-suited
26QQ-J-Tdouble-suited
27QQ-J-9double-suited
28QQ-9-9double-suited
29JJ-TTdouble-suited
30JJ-T-9double-suited

The odds of getting dealt AA-KK double suited are 50,000-1 against. Not only is it that rare to get dealt the hand, but put AA-KK up against 8-7-6-5 double suited (a hand not even in the top 30), and the AA-KK is a mere 3-2 favorite. 

Compare PLO to Hold’em

Alexander Kravchenko
Unless you’re heads up, you probably shouldn’t play that hand.

The odds of getting dealt AA, Hold’em’s best hand, are 220-1 against. AA up against a hand such as 8-7 suited is a 3-1 favorite.

You’re 227 times more likely to be dealt AA than AA-KK double suited and your AA is a larger favorite to win against the most comparable hand.

Once you know the odds and outs of Omaha, you’ll be able to make more informed decisions about how to play your hands. 

Hold’em players playing Omaha by feel are quick to overvalue their hands and their perceived advantage over their opponent.

Memorize the outs of all the straight draws and how to spot them. Get a very good idea of the top hands and understand the small margin of advantage they hold.

Adjust your play accordingly.

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