Rakeback Bonus - What is Rake?
March 23, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
What is rake?
Rake is the money taken out of the pot by the house. Depending on the limit it can be from $.05-$3.00.
What is a Rakeback or rake back?
Rakeback is a percent of the rake paid back to you for playing at a poker site. Serious players earn thousands of dollars a month just in rakeback. When you sign-up for a rakeback deal via RRR your rakeback money is usually paid automatically by the poker room directly to your poker account. However, sometimes your rakeback money will be paid to your Neteller account.
What is a rakeback affiliate?
A rakeback affiliate such as RRR is a site that helps promote online poker rooms. In return we are paid a percent of the rake collected from poker players that sign up via us. Each month we pass on the vast majority of our cut from poker rooms to our players.
I am already signed up at a room, can I get rake back there?
No. You can, however, on some networks switch skins and play on the same network.
What is a skin?
A skin is a group of poker rooms that share are on the same poker network. For example Cryptologic skins would include InterPoker and Sun Poker and a handful other rooms. Players at all of these rooms play in the same games. Most networks will allow you to sign up under all skins regardless of the number of rooms on the network you are already signed up for.
How does the poker room come up with my rake amount?
The rooms use a formula called Monthly Gross Revenue (MGR) a ka net rake. This is the amount from which your rakeback is calculated, i.e. if your rakeback percentage is 30 and your MGR is $1,000 you would get $300 in rakeback.
To calculate your MGR some rooms subtract any bonuses earned during the month, while others don’t. The same goes for whether or not tournament fees are included in MGR. Rooms also have different methods for calculating your share of the actual rake. Some poker rooms use what is called contributed rake where you must participate in the pot to have rake credited. Others use the dealt method where you are credited with rake in every hand where you’re dealt cards.
Read more about how a certain poker room calculates rake by visiting its page here on RRR.
Will I get a sign-up bonus when I sign up for a rakeback deal?
In most cases yes. Read more about a certain poker room’s sign-up bonus by visiting its page here on RRR. Please note that in some cases this bonus will be subtracted from your net rake.
Can my spouse, parent, brother, sister, roommate or anyone else that shares my computer have an account at the same poker room as me?
Usually, but they will need to get their own funding source for their account. You usually can not share Neteller or Firepay accounts with them. You may however transfer them money at most poker rooms. Signing up underage people, pets, appliances, lawn gnomes or some other figment of your imagination just to get a rakeback deal is fraud. You risk the poker room asking for ID and then having your account frozen and funds confiscated. It will also be hard to fund this account as it is not possible to get Neteller accounts for these fantasies.
Poker Professional Annie Duke
March 23, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
In a game that has historically been dominated by males, Annie Duke is making some serious waves. Beyond kicking the stereotype, Annie Duke has gone one better by not only beating the top women players, but taking out the men as well. She is currently the top female poker player in the world, and also has a WSOP bracelet to show for her success.
Annie Duke was born into a very competitive family, and family card nights were the norm during her childhood. Between herself and Poker star brother Howard Lederer, those must have been some pretty intense games! As a child, Annie excelled in school and went on to pursue studies in English and Psychology at Columbia University. As a student, Annie frequently visited her brother’s poker games, but oddly never joined in. Instead she continued her studies in cognitive psychology at graduate school at the University of Pennsylvania, where she won an esteemed National Science Foundation Fellowship.
In the early 90s, Howard Lederer brought Annie to Las Vegas during a weekend off of Grad School. It was the WSOP week, and Howard taught Annie the basics of Texas Hold’em. A couple of trips to Las Vegas was all it would take for the competitive Duke to get hooked on the game, and in 1992 she left her studies to take up the game.
This was a very bold move indeed for a young woman who had just competed 5 years of Graduate School! Her poker career began in Billings, Montana, where she played the local tournaments. Big brother Howard taught her a few things, and after some small successes in Montana, he convinced her to enter her first WSOP tournament. She placed in 3 tournaments in her first year, and cashed out over $70,000 in winnings, and secured her future as a professional poker player.
Annie’s commitment to poker has paid big dividends for her; she has won major tournaments and even took the title (and $2 million pot) away from the World Series of Poker Tournament of Champions, knocking out 8 of the top players in the world along the way. She also does instructional seminars, and is even personal tutor to movie star Ben Affleck.
Perhaps the only thing that exceeds Annie’s commitment to Poker is her commitment to her family; she’s a mother to four children, and they will always take priority over Poker according to Annie.
When she does finally retire from the game, it’s safe to say she’ll be remembered as one of the all time greats, not one of the all time great women. Annie has proven herself against the top players in the game, irrespective of gender.
Vanessa Rousso Poker News
March 23, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
Vanessa Rousso can speak three languages. She’s a citizen of two countries, graduated from Duke in two and a half years, and one look at her academic resume (debate team, business club, mock trial, volunteer work and the Alpha Delta Pi sorority) conjures an image of an overachieving young woman not unlike Election’s Tracy Flick. Rousso has a knack for achieving her goals in record time and her rise in the poker world came on just as quickly. With less than three years of professional play behind her, Rousso has already earned close to $2 million playing tournament poker both live and online — all while earning a law degree on the side. Not bad for a 26-year-old.
Vanessa Rousso was born on February 5, 1983 in White Plains, NY. She grew up in Paris, living there until she was 10, when her parents divorced and her mother decided to return to the United States. Vanessa went with her and after moving around the east coast quite a bit, they finally settled down in Wellington, FL, where her mom worked as a high school guidance counselor. In high school, Vanessa showed advanced academic aptitude and graduated as her class valedictorian, earning a full scholarship to Duke University.
Rousso majored in economics and minored in political science at Duke. Several courses in game theory also drew her interest. She began playing backgammon and chess to apply the skills she’d learned in the classroom, but soon found herself taken with the mathematical and psychological aspects of poker. On track to graduate three semesters early, Rousso began playing online while she was applying to law schools. She was accepted to the University of Miami, and was offered a full scholarship. While at law school, Rousso turned 21 and was finally able to play live. The Hard Rock Seminole Casino was a short trip down the freeway and Rousso began making frequent trips, building her bankroll and gaining experience by playing $65 single-table sit-’n’-goes.
After completing her first year of law school in May 2005, Rousso traveled to New Orleans to play in a WSOP Circuit side event. She ended up finishing seventh in the $200 no-limit hold’em event, earning about $6,400. Buoyed by her success in the Crescent City, Rousso decided to hit up the World Series of Poker that summer. She cashed the ladies event in 45th place, and picked up an extra couple of grand when she won one of the Palms’ daily tournaments. In the fall she returned to law school, but played poker whenever she had a chance—either online or traveling to small buy-in tournaments on breaks. She made three cashes and two final tables in early 2006, her biggest score coming in the $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em Event at Atlantic City’s WSOP-Circuit stop where she banked $17,550. That’s when Vanessa Rousso got a funny idea in her head — she wanted to play in the $25,000 World Poker Tour Championships.
To buy in directly would have nearly leveled her bankroll, so Rousso sought out backers, selling shares of herself to a number of friends to come up with the $25,000. With nothing more than a dream and a whole lot of chutzpah, Rousso sat down amidst poker’s elite and much to everyone’s surprise, she ground her way to a seventh-place finish and a $263,625 score, busting on the TV final-table bubble when her A-K fell to James Van Alstyne’s A-J. Her breakout performance at Bellagio put her on everyone’s radar, and soon she was signed to a sponsorship deal as a member of Team Poker Stars Pro. It’s also where she met the man who would become her fiancé, Chad Brown, who finished the tournament right behind her in ninth place.
Rousso cashed three times at the 2006 WSOP, her best finish coming in $5,000 Short-handed No-Limit Hold’em, where she finished eighth. She cashed the 2006 WPT Legends of Poker in 42nd place and appeared on the WPT’s Ladies Night Out IV, where she finished fifth. Returning to the east coast in September, Rousso ended up taking down her first major event, winning the $5,000 No-Limit Hold’em event at the Borgata Poker Open. The win was Rousso’s largest-ever live score, at $285,540.
In the two years that followed, Rousso added three WPT cashes, three WSOP cashes, and two WSOP-Circuit cashes to her growing C.V. She also made her largest tournament cash ever – via an online event – when she finished second in the PokerStars WCOOP Main Event for $700,000. Rousso also made several appearances on NBC’s “Poker After Dark,” winning $120,000 in a six-handed, winner-take-all sit-’n’-go with the theme “Gus and the Ladies” featuring Gus Hansen, J.J. Liu, Erica Schoenberg, Beth Shak, Clonie Gowen, and Rousso. She also started traveling on PokerStars’ Latin American and European Poker Tours, notching a tenth-place finish at the 2008 LAPT-Punta del Este and a 39th-place finish at the 2008 EPT London. It looked like Rousso was headed for her first WPT final table at the 2009 Southern Poker Championship in Biloxi last month, but she ended up with another break-your-heart seventh-place finish, bubbling the televised final table once again.
When she’s not living out of her suitcase on the tournament circuit, Vanessa Rousso lives in Las Vegas with her husband-to-be, Chad Brown.
Interview With a Poker Pro - Jennifer Harman
Jennifer Harman has clinched two WSOP bracelets and despite her penchant for high-limit cash games, won more than $1.5 million in tournament play. Besides donning a Full Tilt jersey and writing a chapter in Super System 2, Harman tries to keep her free time free, but she parted with some of it to tell us about tough swings, the Corporation, and her fight with kidney disease.
You grew up playing poker, so were you a total shark by the time you were in high school?
“No. I wasn’t. When I started going into casinos and playing when I was 16, I felt like I knew nothing. It was a real reality check because everybody was so much better than me. I had a fake ID, but actually, I never got carded. Isn’t that weird? I don’t know if I was winning for the first two years or not - I probably wasn’t. It takes a little while to learn those games.”
Any wild tales of underage casino hopping?
“Not really. I remember one of my very first hands I played in texas holdem. Before I went to play in a casino, I went and watched one of my father’s friends play. I watched him for about two hours, sitting behind him, and I thought, ‘I can do this. I can play this game.’ So, the next day I was going to go down and play, but I had an eye doctor appointment first. I got to the casino, and my eyes were all dilated. We were playing seven-card stud, and I couldn’t even see the up-cards because my eyes were so dilated - everything was so blurry. Here’s my first time playing in a casino, and I can’t even see the cards.”
So, did you essentially become a pro the day you turned 21?
“Not really. I had no plans to become a professional poker player. I wanted to move out of Reno, and I decided to go to L.A. and got a job as a bartender at this Japanese hotel downtown. I was working there for about three days, and I ran into a friend from Reno at the grocery store in L.A. He told me I had to go down to the Bicycle Club and play poker because these games were amazing. I went down there and immediately quit my job after five days and started playing poker. But, I never thought it about as my profession. I was just having fun playing poker and I would get a job later.”
Was there a point where you did feel like a pro?
“Yeah, but it was years later - like 10 years. I was just having fun; that’s not a job. I was in L.A. for about two years; then I went to Maryland. I gave up poker for a year, started a business and went broke. So, I had to come back and play poker because I was in debt. I’d never been in debt in my life, so I borrowed some money and came to Las Vegas. I might get yelled at for this statement, but I feel like all players have to go through Las Vegas to become great players because it has the toughest competitors. That’s where you get your learning experience. I may be wrong, but that’s my opinion.”
You’re also known as a cash game player, where most pros rarely play them and mostly play tournaments. Why do you stick with them?
“Cash games are what poker’s all about. To be a professional poker player means freedom, and that’s what cash games are - they give you that freedom. You don’t have to set your alarm, and you play when you want. You go on vacations when you want, and that’s the ultimate freedom. Whereas tournaments, you do have to set your alarm and take your dinner breaks and go back and do it again the next day.”
What are the tradeoffs between tournaments and cash games?
“Tournaments vs. cash games … Tournaments can change people’s lives. They can win a big pay day, and their life is changed forever - tournaments are over $1 million for first place. It’s a small buy-in compared to the prize pool.”
Tell us about the $4,000-$8,000 game at the Bellagio - that’s one of your regulars, right?
“Yeah. It’s way too high. It’s a big game; a lot of great players play in it. You always have to be on top of things and focused. I played until 5:30 this morning, although the game started at 10, so it’s not that bad. Everybody’s yawning, but they’re still on top of their game. You always have to be focused and read every player. It’s a very mental game, and it can be exhausting. But, it’s so competitive that it’s a rush when you play well or bluff players whose greatest strengths are reading players. Doyle Brunson, Phil Ivey, Daniel Negreanu - they all play it.”
You said the limit is too high, how so?
“You see people lose a lot of money, and it can be painful. I’m sensitive. Sometimes it hurts you too when you see somebody lose that kind of money. And, it really hurts when you lose that kind of money. You just have to be really detached from money and think of it as chips. You have to have a lot of confidence to take those kinds of swings. I’ve lost $450,000 in one session and I’ve won about $470,000.”
That’s like half a million in one night…
“You just try not to think about it. Please don’t say that: ‘half a million.’ That’s just one of the challenges. You can’t be attached to the money. You need a pretty big bankroll to play that game; I’m probably the poorest player at the table. If someone’s taking a shot, they could do it with half a million. If you’re ready to play non-stop … it just depends what you feel comfortable with. Some people would do it with $1 million and a half, others would need $5 million. It all depends.”
What’s the deal with the Corporation and Andy Beal?
“Andy first came to town five or six years ago. He wanted to play $10,000-$20,000 at first, and nobody felt like they could afford him. And, he likes to play heads-up because he can play more hands; he got bored in ring games. So, we decided in order to make it fair for everybody, that we’d pool our money, have one person play him and take pieces of him. And, the Corporation has grown - from seven players to around 20. When we find out Andy’s coming to town, everybody has to post up and have their money there. If people are in Europe, they’ll make arrangements to get money to the Bellagio. It makes it a little chaotic for people when he comes to town. The bankroll depends on the stakes we’re playing and how much we decide to raise. The limits got up to $100,000-$200,000, but we only played that once.”
You’re a two-time WSOP event champ - what advice do you have for amateurs jumping in for the first time this year?
“Get plenty of rest, eat well and stay focused. You’re going to have different decisions against different opponents, and the more you watch them and study them, the easier your decisions will be. In no limit, the biggest mistake I see is a player going all in instead of making a big raise that would be just as effective. They’ll risk all their chips instead of some of them. I think TV has a lot to do with it; especially if you’re a beginner, you have nothing else to go by. The poker on TV is mostly highlights, so it’s hard to understand the whole game.”
When we talked to Annie Duke, she told us she gets lots of fawning email about how she should pose naked for magazines and all this stuff - do you have to fend off admirers in such a male-dominated game?
“I’ve been really lucky. The question I get from emails is ‘Will you marry me?’ Maybe I look like a wholesome girl, and they don’t want me to pose nude. The emails I get are more like people saying their proud of me and that kind of thing.”
You wrote a chapter of Super System 2, what other projects are you working on?
“Nothing. I like to enjoy life, so I try not to make myself that busy. I might be working on a book about the psychology of poker, but I haven’t decided. The main thing I like to do is play poker, so that’s what I do. The other thing I love to do is be home with my family, so I play tournaments based on geography - what’s close to home? I go to charity events - I really believe in that kind of stuff.”
Speaking of charity, you founded Creating Organ Donation Awareness, and have had two kidney transplants now?
“I’m trying to create donor awareness because a lot of people are dying, waiting for organs. People are undereducated on how important it is to give that kind of gift. It is truly a gift. My mother died from the same disease my sister and I have when I was 17. In 2004, I was under the knife during the main event. I wish I could have been in both places, but you have to set your priorities [laughs]. Going through stuff like that always makes you realize how everything is so important in your life. My health now is doing great. As far as I know, I’ll be at the Series this year, and I’m very excited about it. I’m going to take, like, two weeks off and go hang out in Tahoe beforehand so I’m nice and rested. The World Series is long.”
Online Poker Tournaments with a 100% Deposit Bonus
|
Wed 11th Mar 2009 (All Times Eastern) |
|||||||||||||||||
|
Start |
Name |
Game Type |
Buy In |
Entry Fee |
Players |
Prize Pool |
|||||||||||
|
00:15 |
USARounders Skill Level 6 - Daily 00:15 CST - Deep Stack 5000/15M Rounds, With Antes |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$20.00 |
$2.00 |
0 |
$0.00 |
|||||||||||
|
00:20 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$3.00 |
$0.30 |
0 |
$0.00 |
||||||||||||
|
00:30 |
Pot Limit Texas Holdem |
$3.00 |
$0.30 |
3 |
$9.00 |
||||||||||||
|
00:40 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$1.00 |
$0.10 |
0 |
$0.00 |
||||||||||||
|
00:45 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$5.00 |
$0.50 |
0 |
$0.00 |
||||||||||||
|
01:00 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$5.00 |
$0.50 |
0 |
$0.00 |
||||||||||||
|
01:00 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$2.00 |
$0.20 |
2 |
$4.00 |
||||||||||||
|
01:15 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$3.00 |
$0.50 |
1 |
$3.00 |
||||||||||||
|
01:40 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$1.00 |
$0.10 |
0 |
$0.00 |
||||||||||||
|
02:00 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$5.00 |
$0.50 |
0 |
$0.00 |
||||||||||||
|
02:15 |
USARounders - Skill Level 5 - Daily 02:15 CST - Deep Stack 5000/10M Rounds, With Antes |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$15.00 |
$1.50 |
0 |
$0.00 |
|||||||||||
|
02:20 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$3.00 |
$0.30 |
0 |
$0.00 |
||||||||||||
|
02:40 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$1.00 |
$0.10 |
0 |
$0.00 |
||||||||||||
|
05:15 |
USARounders - Skill Level 4 - Daily 05:15 CST - Deep Stack 5000/8M Rounds, With Antes |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$12.00 |
$1.20 |
0 |
$0.00 |
|||||||||||
|
12:40 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$2.00 |
$0.20 |
0 |
$0.00 |
||||||||||||
|
15:20 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$3.00 |
$0.30 |
0 |
$0.00 |
||||||||||||
|
17:45 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$1.00 |
$0.10 |
0 |
$0.00 |
||||||||||||
|
18:20 |
Pot Limit Texas Holdem |
$3.00 |
$0.30 |
0 |
$0.00 |
||||||||||||
|
20:00 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$5.00 |
$0.50 |
0 |
$0.00 |
||||||||||||
|
23:40 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$5.00 |
$0.50 |
0 |
$0.00 |
||||||||||||
|
Thu 12th Mar 2009 (All Times Eastern) |
|||||||||||||||||
|
Start |
Name |
Game Type |
Buy In |
Entry Fee |
Players |
Prize Pool |
|||||||||||
|
21:00 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$25.00 |
$2.00 |
0 |
$100.00 |
||||||||||||
|
Sun 15th Mar 2009 (All Times Eastern) |
|||||||||||||||||
|
Start |
Name |
Game Type |
Buy In |
Entry Fee |
Players |
Prize Pool |
|||||||||||
|
13:00 |
Pot Limit Texas Holdem |
$0.00 |
$0.00 |
0 |
$10.00 |
||||||||||||
|
Sun 29th Mar 2009 (All Times Eastern) |
|||||||||||||||||
|
Start |
Name |
Game Type |
Buy In |
Entry Fee |
Players |
Prize Pool |
|||||||||||
|
13:00 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$0.00 |
$0.00 |
0 |
$0.00 |
||||||||||||
|
Tue 10th Mar 2009 (All Times Eastern) |
|||||||||||||||||
|
Start |
Name |
Game Type |
Buy In |
Entry Fee |
Players |
Prize Pool |
|||||||||||
|
23:00 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$5.00 |
$1.00 |
23 |
$115.00 |
||||||||||||
|
23:20 |
Pot Limit Texas Holdem |
$3.00 |
$0.30 |
24 |
$72.00 |
||||||||||||
|
23:50 |
No Limit Texas Holdem |
$2.00 |
$0.30 |
68 |
$136.00 |
||||||||||||
|
Tue 10th Mar 2009 (All Times Eastern) |
|||||||||||||||||
|
Finish |
Name |
Buy In |
Entry Fee |
Players |
Prize Pool |
Winner |
|||||||||||
|
20:50 |
$5.00 |
$0.50 |
33 |
$165.00 |
BigJ19 |
||||||||||||
|
20:10 |
$3.00 |
$0.30 |
39 |
$117.00 |
BLOtheAFguy |
||||||||||||
|
19:17 |
$1.00 |
$0.10 |
109 |
$109.00 |
allycats221 |
||||||||||||
|
16:57 |
$3.00 |
$0.30 |
42 |
$126.00 |
gusbuster5 |
||||||||||||
|
14:36 |
$2.00 |
$0.20 |
24 |
$48.00 |
mrscarroll21 |
||||||||||||
|
03:00 |
$3.00 |
$0.50 |
35 |
$105.00 |
exbruin |
||||||||||||
|
02:26 |
$2.00 |
$0.20 |
22 |
$44.00 |
nyhydro |
||||||||||||
|
02:16 |
$5.00 |
$0.50 |
13 |
$65.00 |
ChefBoyrdvegas1 |
||||||||||||
|
01:50 |
$3.00 |
$0.30 |
17 |
$51.00 |
UseYourBlink |
||||||||||||
|
01:37 |
$2.00 |
$0.30 |
87 |
$174.00 |
timothy0101 |
||||||||||||
|
01:15 |
$5.00 |
$1.00 |
52 |
$260.00 |
dolphinfan131 |
||||||||||||
|
01:13 |
$3.00 |
$0.30 |
26 |
$78.00 |
wheresyourdevilatnow |
||||||||||||
|
00:20 |
$5.00 |
$0.50 |
8 |
$40.00 |
DABIGMAC |
||||||||||||
Reading the Board in Poker
Poker Positions and Why they Matter
March 2, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
5 Card Draw Poker
March 2, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
The rules of 5 Card Draw are similar to the rules of Holdem. The game is played as follows:
- A small dealer button identifies one player as the dealer. The dealer button moves one spot clockwise after every hand.
- Before any cards are dealt, players must post any mandatory bets, known as ‘blinds’ or ‘antes’.
- In Draw, the player directly to the left of the dealer must post the ‘small blind’.
- The player two spots left of the dealer must post the ‘big blind’.
- The small blind is most often smaller than the big blind, usually exactly half.
- After the mandatory blinds and/or antes are posted, each player is dealt five cards face down.
- A betting round begins, beginning with the player to the left of the big blind. This player is said to be ‘under the gun’. As in every other form of poker, players can choose to check, fold, bet or call as appropriate throughout the round of betting.
- After the first round of betting, players have the option of discarding up to 5 cards, and exchanging them for new ones. It is not mandatory that players discard and exchange- it is strictly optional. If a player chooses to keep all of his original cards, this is known as ‘staying’.
- After each player has discarded and exchanged his desired amount of cards, a second and final round of betting begins. The action starts once again with the player under the gun.
- Once the final round of betting is complete, any remaining players must show down their hands. As in all other forms of poker, the player with the best five-card poker hand wins the pot. If two players show down identical hands, they must split the pot.
- Once the pot has been transferred to the winner, the dealer button is moved one spot clockwise, and a new hand may begin.
Betting the Turn in Poker
March 2, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
What is a Poker Rakeback?
March 2, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
Rake is how poker rooms make money.
To understand what is rakeback, you must first learn how poker rooms make profit by charging rake from all real money players. Rake is the only way for poker rooms to make money, since unlike with other casino games, in poker the players are wagering money against other players and not against the house. Think of rake as a small entry fee taken by the poker room for organizing the games.
Poker players do not directly lose any money to the poker room, but the room is steadily raking in micro payments from every cash game pot and tournament entry. The proportion of rake taken online is roughly the same 5% of pot size as in brick and mortar casinos, and depending from stakes it can be anywhere from one cent to five dollars.
Rakeback is a refund of rake
Rakeback is a way for you to save on poker rake costs. By creating your new online poker room accounts through Rakeback.com you will save on average 30% of any rake you pay. Once your poker account is registered in Rakeback.com system, we can keep track of all rake you pay to the poker room. And based on revenue share agreement made between the poker room and Rakeback.com, we are able to credit your poker account with rakeback payments of your rake. Rakeback is typically paid once per calendar month, directly back to your poker account.
Please try the Rakeback Calculator tool to see an estimate of how much rake you are currently paying, and how big your savings could be if you were using rakeback.
How your rake is calculated
Some online poker rooms display the total amount of rake taken from a pot, but none show what your individual rake contribution has been. For accounting purposes however your personal rake is recorded in the poker room backend, and rakeback is based on these rake reports. There are two main ways that poker rooms use to calculate your individual rake contribution: shared and contributed.
In the shared method, rake is divided evenly among all players that were dealt cards. For example if there are ten players sitting at the table and total rake is $1, each player would be assigned 10 cents of rake.
In the contributed method, players must contribute money to the pot to get assigned rake. The rake a player gets credited with is proportionate to the amount of his/her pot contribution. If you were to contribute $50 to a pot of $150 and the total rake taken was $3, you would be assigned $1 rake.








