Beginner Guide

How to Count Points: The Complete Beginner's System

Master the Milton Work point-count system that every bridge player uses. Learn how to count high card points, distribution points, and when to adjust your...

7 min read

Point counting is the foundation of bridge bidding. Before you can decide whether to open, respond, or compete, you need to know how strong your hand is. The good news? The system is simple, consistent, and takes just seconds to apply once you practice it.

This guide will teach you the standard Milton Work point-count system used by bridge players worldwide, plus when and how to adjust for distribution.

The Basic Point Count System

The Milton Work point-count system assigns values to the four honors in each suit:

High Card Point (HCP) Values:

  • Ace (A) = 4 points
  • King (K) = 3 points
  • Queen (Q) = 2 points
  • Jack (J) = 1 point

Total deck: 40 high card points

Average hand: 10 points

To count your hand, simply add up the point values of all your honors. That's your high card point (HCP) total.

Practice Examples

Let's count some real hands:

Example 1:

♠ AK73 ♥ Q84 ♦ J95 ♣ K62

♠ A (4) + K (3) = 7

♥ Q (2) = 2

♦ J (1) = 1

♣ K (3) = 3

Total: 13 HCP — enough to open!

Example 2:

♠ 9542 ♥ KJ7 ♦ AQ3 ♣ 863

♠ — = 0

♥ K (3) + J (1) = 4

♦ A (4) + Q (2) = 6

♣ — = 0

Total: 10 HCP — not enough to open, but respond if partner does

Distribution Points

High card points aren't everything. The shape of your hand — how your cards are distributed across the four suits — also matters.

When you have support for partner's suit, add points for short suits:

Distribution Points (with trump fit):

  • Void (0 cards) = 3 points
  • Singleton (1 card) = 2 points
  • Doubleton (2 cards) = 1 point

Important: Only count distribution points AFTER you find a trump fit with partner!

Point Ranges for Bidding Decisions

Different point ranges guide different bidding actions:

Standard Point Ranges:

  • 0-5 points: Pass (very weak)
  • 6-9 points: Minimum response to partner's opening
  • 10-12 points: Invitational strength (invite game)
  • 13-21 points: Opening hand
  • 22+ points: Very strong (open 2♣)

Combined Partnership Points

Game and slam contracts require combined partnership strength:

  • 25-26 points combined: Bid game in a major (4♥/4♠) or 3NT
  • 28-29 points combined: Bid game in a minor (5♣/5♦)
  • 33 points combined: Small slam (6-level)
  • 37 points combined: Grand slam (7-level)

When to Adjust Point Values

Experienced players make small adjustments based on card quality:

Upgrade (add a point):

  • All your honors are in long suits (5+ cards)
  • You have 4 aces (powerful)
  • You have 10s and 9s supporting your honors

Downgrade (subtract a point):

  • You have 4-3-3-3 shape (flat and boring)
  • You have honors in short suits (Qx, Jx)
  • You have no aces
  • You have "quacks" (QJ doubleton with no other honors)

Common Counting Mistakes

Avoid These Errors:

  • Counting distribution too early — Only add short-suit points AFTER finding a fit
  • Forgetting to recount — When partner shows a fit, recount with distribution points
  • Counting 10s and 9s — Only A, K, Q, J count in the basic system
  • Double-counting — Don't count both HCP and distribution for the same feature

Practice Time

Count these hands and decide what action to take:

♠ AKJ93 ♥ Q7 ♦ K84 ♣ 652

Answer: 13 HCP. Open 1♠.

♠ 8 ♥ AQJ73 ♦ K952 ♣ 643

Answer: 11 HCP initially. If partner opens 1♥, add 2 for singleton spade = 13 total. Jump to 3♥.

♠ KQ7 ♥ A84 ♦ QJ3 ♣ J952

Answer: 12 HCP but flat 4-3-3-3. Borderline. Most would pass, some would open 1♣.

Master Point Counting with Practice

Brian shows you your point count on every hand and explains how to use it in bidding decisions.

Practice with Brian

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