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Tight Aggressive

How to Play Against a TAG in Poker

Tight Aggressive (TAG)

You beat a tight-aggressive reg by using position, attacking their predictable c-bet-and-give-up pattern, and staying out of big pots without a real hand, because their leaks are small and based on patterns rather than wild mistakes.

A tight aggressive player, the TAG or the reg, is the hardest of the four basic types. They play a sensible range and apply pressure with it, so there is no single glaring leak to punish. Beating them is about small edges: playing in position, spotting their automatic patterns, and refusing to hand them big pots when you are unsure.

Typical stat profile

~7.5% of players
VPIP 18-24% PFR 16-22% AF 2.5-3.5 3-Bet 6-10% Fold to 3-Bet 50-60%

Stats and population are drawn from how players of this type actually play across millions of real cash-game hands. These are rule-based opponent archetypes, not the player at your table on any given night.

Why a TAG is harder, and where the edge is

A TAG does not give you the easy money a station or a nit does. Their mistakes are subtle and habitual rather than reckless. The edge comes from the fact that solid regulars tend to play formulaically: the same c-bet sizing, the same lines on the same boards. Once you spot the pattern, it becomes a read, and a read against a thinking player is worth more than any single bet.

Attack the c-bet-and-give-up pattern

Many TAGs continuation bet the flop with their whole range and then shut down on the turn when called. If you float their flop bet in position with a hand that has some equity, you can often take the pot away on the turn when they check. Recognizing that flop-bet-then-turn-check rhythm is one of the most reliable edges you get against a competent reg.

Use position relentlessly

Position matters against everyone, but it matters most against a good player, because the small edges only show up when you have information they do not. Play more pots in position against a TAG and fewer out of it. Acting last lets you see their action before you commit, which is exactly the advantage you need when the leaks are this thin.

Stay out of unnecessary big pots

Against a station you build big pots freely, because they pay off light. Against a TAG, a big pot usually means someone has a big hand, and theirs is real. Do not stack off with one pair or bloat the pot on a guess. Pick your spots, keep the marginal pots small, and let your position and your reads do the work over time.

What they will do

  • Open-raise from every position with balanced ranges
  • C-bet flops at a high frequency
  • Fold junk preflop without hesitation

What they will not do

  • Call three streets without a strong hand
  • Limp preflop
  • Overplay marginal holdings out of position

Quick tip: Against a TAG, your two best weapons are position and patience. Float the flop, take the turn, and avoid the hero stack-offs.

Practice beating the TAG for real.

Play this exact player type in the arena and drill the adjustment until it is automatic.

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Frequently asked questions

What is a TAG in poker? +

A TAG is a tight-aggressive player, often called a reg, who plays a selective range of hands and bets and raises them with strong postflop aggression. They are the toughest of the four basic player types because they have few obvious leaks.

How do you beat a tight aggressive player? +

Play in position, attack the common pattern of betting the flop and giving up the turn, and avoid big pots without a strong hand. The edges against a good reg are small and pattern-based, so consistency and position matter more than any single move.