I'm a complete beginner and was too embarrassed to ask my partner basic questions. Brian never makes me feel dumb. After three sessions I finally understand Stayman — and I'm actually using it at the table.
Learn Bridge Card Game
Complete Beginner's Guide (2026)
Bridge is a trick-taking card game for four players — and one of the most mentally satisfying games ever invented. This guide covers everything a new player needs: the rules, how bidding works, and how to get from "never played" to sitting down at a real table.
Why Bridge?
Bridge has been captivating players for over a century. Here's why millions of people around the world love it.
Mental Workout
Bridge is one of the best games for keeping your mind sharp. Memory, logic, probability — it exercises everything.
Social & Teamwork
Bridge is a partnership game. You'll communicate through bids, read your partner's signals, and win together — or learn together.
Endlessly Competitive
From casual club games to world championships, bridge scales with your ambition. There's always a new skill to master.
A Lifelong Game
Bridge players range from teens to nonagenarians. It's a game you can play — and keep improving at — your entire life.
Bridge basics: how the card game works
Bridge is played by four people at a square table. You sit across from your partner. The pair opposite you are your opponents. North and South play against East and West — those are just the conventional seat names.
The deck is a standard 52-card pack, no jokers. Deal the whole thing: each player gets 13 cards. Suits rank in this order — spades (♠) highest, then hearts (♥), diamonds (♦), clubs (♣) lowest.
Each hand plays out in two phases: the auction, then the play.
The auction happens first. Players take turns bidding, passing, or making other calls. When the auction ends, whichever team bid the highest has committed to winning a certain number of tricks. That commitment is the contract.
Then the play begins. One player from the winning team — called the declarer — tries to win enough tricks to make the contract. The player sitting across from them (the dummy) lays their cards face-up on the table so everyone can see them. The two defenders do everything they can to stop declarer from reaching the target.
A trick is one round of four cards — one played by each person, going clockwise. The highest card in the suit that was led wins the trick. Exception: if there's a trump suit, a trump card beats everything in the other suits, even an ace.
The trump suit is whichever suit was named in the winning bid. If the contract is 4♠, spades is trump. A 2♠ would beat an A♦. Bid "no trump" and there's no trump suit at all — highest card in the led suit wins every trick, period.
One number you'll use constantly: High Card Points (HCP). Each ace is worth 4, king 3, queen 2, jack 1. Add them up and you have your hand's HCP. An average hand has about 10. You need 12 or 13 HCP to open the bidding. When you and your partner's points combine to 25 or more, you can usually make a game contract.
Scoring: contracts in bridge are worth different amounts depending on the suit and level. Making 3NT (nine tricks, no trump) or 4♠/4♥ (ten tricks in a major suit) scores "game" — a significant bonus. These targets drive most of the bidding logic beginners learn first.
Related: How to Play Bridge: Complete Guide — the full rules with examples.
Bidding fundamentals: what the auction is and why it matters
Bidding is what makes bridge different from every other card game. You can't show your cards to your partner or talk about them. But you can bid — and each bid carries a meaning your partner can interpret.
The auction starts with the dealer and goes clockwise. Each player has four options: bid, pass, double, or redouble. Most of the time, it's bid or pass.
A bid consists of a level (1 through 7) and a denomination (clubs, diamonds, hearts, spades, or no trump). The level tells your partner how many tricks above six you think your side can win. A 1♠ bid means "I think we can take at least 7 tricks with spades as trump." A 3NT bid means 9 tricks, no trump.
Each new bid must outrank the last. 2♣ outranks 1♠. So the auction is always climbing upward — which creates natural pressure.
Opening the bidding: the first player to make a real bid (not pass) is the opener. Most hands require 12+ HCP to open. The most common opening bid is 1NT with 15-17 HCP and a balanced hand (no voids, no singletons, no more than one doubleton). With an unbalanced hand and a 5-card suit, you open at the one level in your best suit.
Responding: once your partner opens, you respond based on what you hold. Support their suit if you have at least three cards in it. Jump to game (4♠, 4♥, 3NT) if your combined points are clearly enough. Bid a new suit to show your cards and learn more about theirs. Pass with fewer than 6 HCP if they opened at the one level.
The auction continues until three players in a row pass. Whoever made the last real bid is the declarer.
Conventions are agreed-upon bids that mean something different from their face value. Stayman (bidding 2♣ after partner opens 1NT) asks "do you have a 4-card major?" It has nothing to do with clubs. Jacoby Transfers, Blackwood for aces — these are tools partnerships agree to use in advance.
As a beginner, you need exactly three: Stayman, Jacoby Transfers, and Blackwood. Those three handle the vast majority of situations you'll face at the table. Don't try to learn 50 conventions before your first game.
Related reading: Bridge Bidding Basics: Beginner's Guide and 5 Bidding Mistakes Beginners Make.
How to practice bridge and improve faster
Reading about bridge helps. Playing bridge teaches you. The gap between knowing the theory and applying it at the table is real — the only way across is reps.
Start with a few core articles. Don't try to read everything at once. Pick two or three beginner-level articles, read them, then play a hand with that specific focus. Here are the ones worth starting with:
- How to Play Bridge: Complete Guide — full rules and structure
- Bridge Bidding Basics for Beginners — point count, opening bids, responses
- Bridge Scoring for Beginners — what makes a game, partscores, vulnerablility
- How to Learn Bridge Bidding Online — tools and methods that actually work
- 5 Bidding Mistakes Beginners Make — what to avoid from day one
Use Brian as your always-on coach. Describe any hand — your cards, what everyone bid, how it played out — and Brian explains what the right bid was and why. No judgment, no jargon. Most players use Brian in two modes: before playing to learn a concept, and after playing to review what they got wrong. Both work. The post-game review is especially powerful because you're replaying real decisions you made under real pressure.
Brian is free at app.bridgetastic.com.
Play online. Bridge Base Online (BBO) is the largest online bridge platform. You can play against robots any time, or sit at a table with real players from around the world. Playing against robots is ideal for beginners — they don't get frustrated when you make an odd bid, and you can play as slowly as you need.
Find a local club. The American Contract Bridge League (ACBL) has thousands of affiliated clubs across North America. Most clubs run beginner-friendly games or have dedicated beginner nights. Playing in person with experienced players accelerates learning in ways that online play can't replicate — you pick up the social conventions, the tempo, the table feel. Clubs actively want new players. Don't be put off by the idea that bridge clubs are intimidating. They're not.
One lesson per session. After every game, identify one hand where you weren't sure what to do. Ask Brian. Look it up in the encyclopedia. That one deliberate review per session builds knowledge fast — better than reading theory without any application.
Next steps: where to go from here
Here's an honest sequence for getting from complete beginner to competent club player. Follow it in order. Don't skip ahead.
- Learn the play of a hand. Understand tricks, trump, and how the dummy works before worrying about any bidding. The Getting Started Guide covers this in about 20 minutes.
- Learn point count. HCP is the foundation of all standard bidding. Count your hand before you try to understand any bids.
- Learn four opening bids. 1NT, 1♠, 1♥, and 1♣/1♦. That's it. You don't need to memorize every response to every sequence — just the most common starts.
- Learn three conventions. Stayman, Jacoby Transfers, and Blackwood/RKCB. The Essential Conventions page explains each with clear examples. These three cover 90% of the situations a beginner will face.
- Play a game, then debrief with Brian. After your first real game (online or in person), pick the two or three hands that felt uncertain. Ask Brian. You'll learn more from that review than from an hour of reading.
- Explore the encyclopedia. The bridge encyclopedia has 275+ articles on every concept and convention you'll encounter. When something comes up you don't recognize, look it up. It's organized by topic and skill level.
Bridge takes time to get genuinely good at. That's part of what keeps players coming back for decades. But the early stages — going from zero to ready for your first game — are shorter than most people expect. Stick with it for a month and you'll wonder why you didn't start sooner.
Which Path Is Right for You?
Everyone starts somewhere. Pick the track that fits where you are right now.
Beginner
Never played before
Start from zero. Learn the rules, how the auction works, and how to play your first hand — at your own pace.
- 6-module structured course
- No jargon, no assumptions
- Play your first game in weeks
Intermediate
Play casually, want to improve
You know the basics but your bidding is inconsistent. Fill the gaps, build a solid system, and start winning more hands.
- Core conventions explained
- Bidding system guide
- Guided practice with Brian
Advanced
Club player wanting to compete
You play regularly. Now it's time to tighten your game — advanced bidding, defensive strategies, and tournament preparation.
- Advanced bidding theory
- Declarer play & defense
- Tournament-ready strategies
Not sure which fits? Ask Brian — he'll point you in the right direction.
Your Path to Playing Bridge
Follow these steps in order. Most beginners go from zero to playing their first game in a few weeks.
Learn the Basics
Understand how bridge is played: the 4 players, dealing, the auction, and playing tricks. The rules are simpler than they seem.
Read the Getting Started Guide →Understand Bidding
Bidding is the language of bridge — how you and your partner describe your hands before playing. Start with counting points and basic opening bids.
Explore Beginner Articles →Practice with Brian
Ask Brian questions about any hand. Get instant, jargon-free explanations. It's like having a patient expert available 24/7 — at no cost.
Try Brian Free →Learn Essential Conventions
A handful of conventions — Stayman, Jacoby Transfers, Blackwood — make a huge difference. Learn these before anything else.
See Essential Conventions →Play Your First Game
Find a partner, sit down, and play. Mistakes are normal — even expected. Every hand teaches you something. Bridge clubs welcome beginners.
How to Find a Game →Keep Improving
Use Brian to analyze hands after every session. Read one article a week. In a few months, you'll be the one explaining conventions to newcomers.
Start with Brian →Essential Beginner Resources
Everything you need to get started — all free, all in one place.
Getting Started Guide
The complete introduction to bridge — rules, setup, your first hand, and everything in between. Start here if you've never played.
Read the guide →Beginner Articles
275+ articles covering everything from basic rules to advanced strategy. Filter by "Beginners" to find content matched to your level.
Browse the encyclopedia →Essential Conventions
The 10 conventions every beginner should know. Stayman, Jacoby Transfers, Blackwood — explained clearly with examples.
Learn the essentials →Ask Brian Anything
The fastest way to learn bridge is to ask questions while you play. Brian answers any bidding question instantly — no jargon, no textbook hand-waving. Just clear explanations that actually stick.
- "What should I bid with this hand?"
- "How does Stayman work?"
- "My partner bid 2♥ — what does that mean?"
- "Did I make the right bid?"
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What Bridge Players Are Saying
From complete beginners to club regulars — players at every level learn faster with Brian.
I've been playing bridge for 15 years and always struggled with slam bidding. Brian walked me through cue bids vs Blackwood better than any book I've ever read — in about 10 minutes.
I use Brian after every club game to go over hands where I wasn't sure what to bid. It's like having a director and coach in one — without the $100/hour price tag.
Enjoying Brian? We'd love to hear your story.
Share your experience →Common Questions from Beginners
New to bridge? These are the questions we hear most from players just starting out.
Have more questions? Brian can answer them right now — for free.
Ask Brian a QuestionReady to Start Playing Bridge?
The best time to learn bridge was years ago. The second best time is today. Start with our free guide and ask Brian anything along the way.