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How much bankroll do you need for $2/$5 live poker?

A solid live winner (8bb/100) needs about $7,000 (14 buy-ins of $500) for $2/$5 with less than 5% risk of ruin over roughly two years of weekly play. A modest winner (4bb/100) needs about $10,500.

Solid winner (8 bb/100)

$7,000

14 buy-ins of $500

Worst downswing (95th pctl)
-$10,000

Modest winner (4 bb/100)

$10,500

21 buy-ins of $500

Worst downswing (95th pctl)
-$12,600

For less than 5% risk of ruin over 30,000 hands (about two years of weekly play) at 90 bb/100 standard deviation. Numbers come from the same Monte Carlo engine as the calculator.

$2/$5 is the first live stake where the regulars are unmistakably serious. The rake matters less as a fraction of the pot, the recreational players are still there but better funded, and the soft edges that carried a 1/2 winner get tested. Plan your roll around the modest column ($10,500) until your 2/5 results, not your 1/3 results, prove the solid one is enough.

The dollar swings step up sharply. A modest winner's 95th percentile downswing at 2/5 runs about $12,600 peak to trough. That number needs to coexist with rent and a life; the players who last at this stake are the ones whose bankroll is genuinely separate money.

The standard route in is a shot from a healthy 1/3 roll: set aside a fixed budget of $500 buy-ins, play the shot in game selections you would brag about, and drop back without ceremony if the budget goes. 2/5 rewards patience twice, once in hand selection and once in when you choose to arrive.

Check your exact numbers for $2/$5 live

Opens the calculator preloaded for $2/$5 live. Adjust your bankroll and win rate for a personal verdict.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much money do I need to sit down at 2/5?

One buy-in of 100 big blinds is $500, and most 2/5 games play deeper than lower stakes, with caps of $1,000 or more common. Sitting with less than the standard buy-in at 2/5 announces your constraints to a table that knows how to use them.

When should I move up from 1/3 to 2/5?

A conservative trigger is 30 buy-ins at the new stake ($15,000), but a structured shot from around $10,500 with a fixed step-down rule is how most players actually make the move. What you should not do is arrive at 2/5 on a heater with a 1/3-sized roll.

What win rate should I expect at 2/5?

Expect less than at 1/3, at least at first. The move-up pattern from online holds live: your first sample at a new stake usually undershoots your old rate while you learn the regulars. Budgeting with the modest 4bb/100 column prices that adjustment in.

Your win rate is the cheapest bankroll insurance there is.

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