Track Your Poker Sessions Study Your Progress
Session & Study Bankroll Tracker
Track poker study sessions, review results, monitor variance and build better discipline over time.
Progress Over Time
New Session
Use this area to log a practice session, review session or age appropriate poker study activity.
Session saved.
All Sessions
Bankroll Settings
These settings are for tracking and education. They should not be treated as financial advice or a guarantee of results.
Settings saved.
Tip: A stop loss rule is useful only when you actually follow it. The goal is discipline, not chasing results.
Why Track Your Poker Sessions?
Tracking sessions helps you study your results with more structure. Instead of judging progress by one good or bad session, you can review patterns over time, including total result, session volume, hourly result, win rate, and bankroll movement.
This tracker is designed for poker study, play money practice, session review, and long term learning. Use it to organize your data, review decisions, and build better discipline away from the table.
How to Use This Tool?
Start by setting your starting bankroll in the Bankroll tab. Then log each session with the date, session type, practice level, starting amount, ending amount, duration, and notes.
After saving sessions, the Dashboard will update automatically. You can review your total result, number of sessions, hourly result, win rate, tracked bankroll, and progress chart.
Use the History tab to review past sessions, export your data to CSV, or import previous records.
What to Write in Session Notes?
The most useful session notes are not only about the final result. Try to write short notes about focus, decision quality, emotional control, hands you want to review, and spots where you were unsure.
Good notes can help you find patterns that numbers alone may not show. For example, you may notice that your results change when you play tired, rush decisions, skip review, or lose focus after a difficult hand.
Important: Tracking Is Not a Guarantee
This tracker helps organize poker study data, but it does not guarantee profit or replace responsible decision making. Results can be affected by variance, sample size, decision quality, format, player pool, and many other factors.
Use the tracker as an off-table review tool. The goal is to understand your sessions better, study your habits, and make your review process more consistent.