KQ vs KT: Preflop Equity & Odds
| Hand | Win | Tie | Equity |
|---|---|---|---|
| KQ (King-Queen) | 70.1% | 5.5% | 72.8% |
| KT (King-Ten) | 24.4% | 5.5% | 27.2% |
Suited vs offsuit: KQ
| Matchup | Win | Tie | Equity |
|---|---|---|---|
| KQs | 71.0% | 5.3% | 73.6% |
| KQo | 69.8% | 5.5% | 72.6% |
How KQ vs KT unfolds by street
King-Queen (KQ) is still ahead on 84% of flops against KT, and the lead survives to the turn on 80%. KT takes the lead on the other 16% of flops. These figures come from full board enumeration, not a simulation.
| Street | KQ still ahead | KT flipped the lead |
|---|---|---|
| Flop | 84% | 16% |
| Turn | 80% | 20% |
Share a card and you get a kicker problem — that's KQ vs KT: KQ wins 70.1%, KT wins 24.4%, and 5.5% of boards chop. Note the chunky 5.5% chop rate — it surfaces whenever the shared rank plays and the kickers don't. Spots like this are where stacks quietly disappear: the dominated hand can't fold pre and can't outrun the kicker post.
Translate that into a decision and it's simple pot-odds math: counting split pots as half, KQ carries 72.8% equity and KT 27.2%. Against a pot-sized shove you need about 33% to call and about 25% versus a half-pot bet — so KT needs real fold equity, not just its raw share, to justify stacking off.
Domination is where preflop hand-reading pays off. With KQ you want stacks in; with KT you want out, because three outs and a prayer is not a stack-off — recognizing that you're crushed against a strong range is worth more than any postflop move.
KQ vs KT FAQ
Who wins KQ vs KT preflop?
KQ (King-Queen) is the favorite, winning 70.1% of all runouts, while KT (King-Ten) wins 24.4%. The remaining 5.5% are split pots. Counting splits as half, KQ's preflop equity is 72.8%.
How often does KT beat KQ?
KT wins 24.4% of the time all-in preflop against KQ — roughly 1 in 4 — so it needs good pot odds or fold equity to get the money in profitably.
Why is KT so bad against KQ?
Because they share a card, KT is drawing to roughly three outs and chops 5.5% of the time — it wins only about 1 in 4. That's the danger of a dominated hand: too strong to fold, too far behind to outdraw, which is how kicker problems quietly cost full stacks.
Does KQ hold up against KT after the flop?
KQ is still ahead on 84% of flops and stays ahead through the turn on 80% of boards; KT takes the lead on the other 16% of flops. These are exact figures from full board enumeration.
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