Broadway Hands in Poker: KQ, KJ, QJ and When to Play Them
Broadway hands are the high-card starting hands that use only T, J, Q, K, and A. They look attractive because they make big pairs and can connect to the strongest straight, but they also create one of the most common beginner leaks: calling too much with a second-best kicker.
Use this page as a practical clinic for KQ, KJ, QJ, JT, AT, AJ, AQ, and AK in casual Texas Holdem practice.
Quick Broadway Chart
| Hand group | Beginner plan | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| AK, AQ | Raise most playable spots | Top pair usually has a strong kicker |
| AJ suited, KQ suited | Raise or call more often in position | Good top-pair value and straight potential |
| KJ, QJ, JT suited | Prefer late position | Strong when cheap, risky when dominated |
| KJ, QJ, KT offsuit | Fold more from early seats | Looks pretty, but often makes second-best pair |
| AT, QT, JT offsuit | Table-dependent | Better as late-position hands than early calls |
The Broadway Straight
The Broadway straight is T-J-Q-K-A. It is the highest straight, so it beats every lower straight such as 9-T-J-Q-K.
Worked example:
- Your hand: KQ
- Flop: J-T-4
- You have an open-ended straight draw.
- Any A gives A-K-Q-J-T.
- Any 9 gives K-Q-J-T-9.
The ace is the cleanest result because it makes the top straight. The nine still makes a straight, but you must watch for boards where someone can hold a higher one.
Why Broadway Hands Get Beginners in Trouble
The danger word is domination. If you hold KJ and another player holds AK, a king on the flop helps both players, but your jack kicker is behind. The same pattern appears with QJ against AQ, KT against AT, and AJ against AK or AQ.
When you are early to act, fold more of the offsuit Broadway hands. When you are on the button or cutoff, you can open more suited Broadway hands because you will act after most opponents on later streets.
Position-Based Practice Plan
| Position | Good beginner range |
|---|---|
| Early position | AK, AQ, sometimes AJs and KQs |
| Middle position | Add AJ, KQ, KJs, QJs |
| Cutoff/Button | Add more suited Broadway hands and some offsuit KQ/AJ |
| Blinds | Defend carefully; avoid calling too wide out of position |
A Louis Poker Practice Drill
Open a free virtual-chip table and tag every hand where you receive two Broadway cards. After the hand, write one sentence:
- Did I make top pair?
- Was my kicker likely ahead or dominated?
- Did position make the decision easier?
Five reviewed hands teach more than fifty automatic calls.
Casual practice with free virtual chips — solidify what you read above.
Start Practicing