QQ vs 22: Preflop Equity & Odds
| Hand | Win | Tie | Equity |
|---|---|---|---|
| QQ (Pocket Queens) | 81.6% | 0.5% | 81.8% |
| 22 (Pocket Deuces) | 17.9% | 0.5% | 18.2% |
How QQ vs 22 unfolds by street
Pocket Queens (QQ) is still ahead on 89% of flops against 22, and the lead survives to the turn on 86%. 22 takes the lead on the other 11% of flops, almost always by flopping a set. These figures come from full board enumeration, not a simulation.
| Street | QQ still ahead | 22 flipped the lead |
|---|---|---|
| Flop | 89% | 11% |
| Turn | 86% | 14% |
Set one pocket pair against a bigger one and you get QQ vs 22: QQ wins 81.6%, 22 wins 17.9%, and 0.5% of boards chop. QQ is a 4.6-to-1 favorite. The lower pair, 22, is drawing to the two cards left in the deck that make it a set; miss those and only a runner-runner straight or flush saves it, which is why it gets there just 1 time in 6.
At a final table the raw 81.8% / 18.2% split is only half the story — ICM bends it. As the 18.2% underdog, 22 pays an extra survival premium, so the chip-EV "close enough" call can be a clear ICM fold. The pure equity sets the floor; the payout ladder sets the real price.
As the bigger pair, QQ, your whole job is to get the money in before a scare card — there's no fold here and slow-playing only lets 22 realize its set equity for free. As the smaller pair, the discipline is recognizing when stacks are deep enough that calling off 17.9% equity is a leak, even though folding pre feels impossible.
QQ vs 22 FAQ
Who wins QQ vs 22 preflop?
QQ (Pocket Queens) is the favorite, winning 81.6% of all runouts, while 22 (Pocket Deuces) wins 17.9%. The remaining 0.5% are split pots. Counting splits as half, QQ's preflop equity is 81.8%.
How often does 22 beat QQ?
22 wins 17.9% of the time all-in preflop against QQ — roughly 1 in 6 — so it needs good pot odds or fold equity to get the money in profitably.
Can you fold the smaller pair in QQ vs 22?
Almost never preflop all-in — but the 17.9% the smaller pair wins (about 1 in 6) means that when stacks are very deep and the action screams a bigger pair, laying it down is a real, if rare, fold. Set-mining the lower pair works only with the implied odds to win a full stack when you spike.
Does QQ hold up against 22 after the flop?
QQ is still ahead on 89% of flops and stays ahead through the turn on 86% of boards; 22 takes the lead on the other 11% of flops. These are exact figures from full board enumeration.
Run any matchup in the free equity calculator · AA VS TT · AA VS 99 · AA VS 88 · AA VS 77 · AA VS 66 · AA VS 55