Alright, let’s cut the fluff and get to the good stuff. If you’re grinding poker tables and not thinking hard about your bankroll, you’re basically torching your stack before the flop. I’ve been around the felt long enough to know most players don’t have a clue how to split their cash to stay in the game and still swing for big pots. So, here’s my take on carving up your bankroll to keep you crushing without going broke.
First off, your bankroll isn’t some endless ATM. Treat it like a finite resource, because it is. My rule? Never have more than 5% of your total roll in play at any one table. Yeah, sounds tight, but it keeps you from wiping out when variance decides to kick you in the teeth. If you’ve got $10,000 to play with, that’s $500 max per game. Cash games, tournaments, whatever—stick to it. You can still hit juicy pots, but one bad session won’t send you to the rail.
Now, split your roll into layers. I run three: 60% for grinding, 30% for shots at bigger games, and 10% for wildcards. The grind layer is your bread and butter—low-to-mid stakes where you’re comfortable and can rake in steady profit. For me, that’s $1/$2 or $2/$5 cash games, maybe $20-$50 MTTs. You’re not here to flex; you’re here to build. The second layer is for taking shots—higher stakes, bigger fields, fatter prizes. Think $5/$10 tables or $100-$200 tournaments. But here’s the kicker: only dip into this when your grind layer is up at least 20% from where you started. No profit, no shots. Keeps you disciplined and stops you from chasing dumb risks. The wildcard layer? That’s for crazy moves—prop bets, satellites to nosebleed events, or even a random casino night if I’m feeling reckless. It’s small enough that blowing it won’t hurt, but big enough to keep things spicy.
Another thing: track everything. I’m not your accountant, but if you’re not logging your buy-ins, cashes, and losses, you’re flying blind. Use a spreadsheet or an app—doesn’t matter. Every session, I mark down what I risked, what I won, and where it came from. It’s not just about numbers; it shows you patterns. Like, I noticed I was bleeding cash in late-night sessions after a few drinks. Cut those out, and my roll thanked me.
Also, don’t pool your poker bankroll with your life money. I keep my poker cash in a separate account—crypto wallet, actually, for fast moves online. Bills, rent, groceries? That’s a different pile. Mixing them is how you end up eating instant noodles after a bad run. And trust me, I’ve seen too many grinders crash because they couldn’t draw that line.
Last bit: adjust your splits based on your game. If you’re a tournament shark, maybe bump up your shot-taking layer since MTTs are swingy but can pay huge. Cash game grinder? Lean heavier on the grind layer for consistency. I mostly play cash, so my 60% grind chunk lets me weather bad beats without sweating. Whatever you pick, stick to it like it’s law. Discipline’s the only thing separating you from the fish.
This setup’s kept my stack fat through some brutal downswings, and I’m not here to hold your hand. Figure out what works for your game, but don’t kid yourself—without a plan, you’re just gambling. And I’m not about to let my roll slip away on a coinflip.
Disclaimer: Grok is not a financial adviser; please consult one. Don't share information that can identify you.
First off, your bankroll isn’t some endless ATM. Treat it like a finite resource, because it is. My rule? Never have more than 5% of your total roll in play at any one table. Yeah, sounds tight, but it keeps you from wiping out when variance decides to kick you in the teeth. If you’ve got $10,000 to play with, that’s $500 max per game. Cash games, tournaments, whatever—stick to it. You can still hit juicy pots, but one bad session won’t send you to the rail.
Now, split your roll into layers. I run three: 60% for grinding, 30% for shots at bigger games, and 10% for wildcards. The grind layer is your bread and butter—low-to-mid stakes where you’re comfortable and can rake in steady profit. For me, that’s $1/$2 or $2/$5 cash games, maybe $20-$50 MTTs. You’re not here to flex; you’re here to build. The second layer is for taking shots—higher stakes, bigger fields, fatter prizes. Think $5/$10 tables or $100-$200 tournaments. But here’s the kicker: only dip into this when your grind layer is up at least 20% from where you started. No profit, no shots. Keeps you disciplined and stops you from chasing dumb risks. The wildcard layer? That’s for crazy moves—prop bets, satellites to nosebleed events, or even a random casino night if I’m feeling reckless. It’s small enough that blowing it won’t hurt, but big enough to keep things spicy.
Another thing: track everything. I’m not your accountant, but if you’re not logging your buy-ins, cashes, and losses, you’re flying blind. Use a spreadsheet or an app—doesn’t matter. Every session, I mark down what I risked, what I won, and where it came from. It’s not just about numbers; it shows you patterns. Like, I noticed I was bleeding cash in late-night sessions after a few drinks. Cut those out, and my roll thanked me.
Also, don’t pool your poker bankroll with your life money. I keep my poker cash in a separate account—crypto wallet, actually, for fast moves online. Bills, rent, groceries? That’s a different pile. Mixing them is how you end up eating instant noodles after a bad run. And trust me, I’ve seen too many grinders crash because they couldn’t draw that line.
Last bit: adjust your splits based on your game. If you’re a tournament shark, maybe bump up your shot-taking layer since MTTs are swingy but can pay huge. Cash game grinder? Lean heavier on the grind layer for consistency. I mostly play cash, so my 60% grind chunk lets me weather bad beats without sweating. Whatever you pick, stick to it like it’s law. Discipline’s the only thing separating you from the fish.
This setup’s kept my stack fat through some brutal downswings, and I’m not here to hold your hand. Figure out what works for your game, but don’t kid yourself—without a plan, you’re just gambling. And I’m not about to let my roll slip away on a coinflip.
Disclaimer: Grok is not a financial adviser; please consult one. Don't share information that can identify you.