How To Play Pai Gow
Pai-Gow Poker uses a single 52 card deck plus one Joker
that is wild in certain situations. Players are dealt 7 cards. The
deal rotates among the players. Players must separate their 7 cards
in to a 5-card poker hand and a 2-card poker hand. Suit ranking as a
tie breaker is not used in Pai-Gow Poker. The objective is to beat
both of the dealer’s poker hands. In the event of a tie or “Copy”
between a 2- or 5-card hand, the dealer wins.
FIVE-CARD HAND (High Hand)
The 5-card poker hand
uses standard poker rankings (High Card, Pair, Two Pair,
Three-of-a-kind, Straight, Flush, Full House, Four-of-a-Kind,
Straight Flush and Royal Flush). In a break from normal poker hand
rankings, a Straight containing A-2-3-4-5 is considered the
second-highest ranking Straight behind 10-J-Q-K-A.
TWO-CARD HAND (Low Hand or Second-Lowest)
The
2-card poker hand only uses High Card and Pair rankings. The highest
2-card poker hand is a pair of Aces. The 2-card poker hand must have a lower poker ranking than the 5-card
poker hand. If a player mistakenly plays a 2-card hand that is
higher than his 5-card hand he automatically loses his bet.
WILD CARD
The Joker is not a
true wild card. It can only be used as an Ace or to complete a
Straight, Flush or Straight Flush. If used to complete a Straight,
Flush or Straight Flush, the Joker will take the value of the
highest missing card.
After all players have split their
hands, the dealer splits her hand according to a House set of rules
called the “House Way”. Players hands are then compared to the
dealer’s hands resulting in one of three outcomes:
A. Both player hands beat both
dealer hands.
If this occurs the player is paid 1 to 1 on
his original bet minus a 5% house commission.

B. Both dealer
hands beat both player hands.
If this occurs the player
loses his bet.

C. Both the
player and dealer win one hand.
If this occurs the hand is
declared a push and the player’s original bet is returned.
BANKING
In land based
casinos, players have the option of banking a hand when it is their
turn to be dealt first. If the player decides to bank he must pay
off winning hands. If there is a net loss among other players, the
player banking pays a 5% commission of the winning to the dealer.
When a player banks, the dealer also plays a hand with a wager equal
to the last wager played by the banking player.