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WSOP 2026 Rule Changes: Dealer Ratings, Chips in Play, and Anti-Collusion Updates

Four new rules drop less than three weeks before the WSOP kicks off on May 26.

Published 2026.05.08
7 min read
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The WSOP confirmed four rule changes on May 7, 2026, less than three weeks before the 57th annual World Series of Poker begins at Horseshoe Las Vegas and Paris Las Vegas. A new dealer rating system, revised pre-registration rules, a ban on third-party promotional payouts, and tougher stalling penalties all take effect when cards hit the air on May 26.

WSOP 2026 rule changes: dealer ratings, chips in play, and anti-collusion updates

This is the second summer under NSUS Group ownership following its $500 million acquisition of the WSOP brand. The series runs 100 bracelet events across 749 tables from May 26 to July 15, with a full schedule breakdown available here.

The May 7 package is the first formal attempt to address three recurring pain points at the same time: dealer quality, registration loopholes, and third-party promotional interference. Here is what changed and what it means if you are heading to Las Vegas this summer.

Dealer Ratings: Players Grade Every Dealer via the WSOP Live App

WSOP broadcaster and producer Jeff Platt confirmed the system in a video posted to the official @WSOP X account on May 7. From Day 1 of the series, every player seated at a bracelet event can open the WSOP Live app and rate the dealer in the box on a one-to-five scale.

Ratings are internal only. Players will not see each other’s scores. According to Platt, the data feeds directly into incentive decisions: high-rated dealers become eligible for performance bonuses, priority assignments to feature tables and the Main Event, and longer-term employment opportunities.

Platt also addressed the obvious concern head-on. He explicitly discouraged players from using low ratings as punishment for bad beats rather than genuine service feedback.

  • Jeremy Ausmus (6× bracelet winner): described the system as an idea to address 'one of the longest-standing issues at the WSOP' and called it 'a great start' on X.
  • Shaun Deeb (8× bracelet winner): raised concerns about the design, echoing wider industry worry that a 1-to-5 scoring system can be gamed by frustrated players or weaponised against dealers who enforce unpopular rulings.
  • Historical context: dealer-quality complaints have surfaced at every recent WSOP. Statistician Nate Silver publicly floated using the WSOP app for exactly this kind of feedback mechanism during the 2025 series.

Dealer-quality grumbling is not new. By Day 2 of the 2025 series, pro Christian Harder was already venting on X about the standard of dealing at the Horseshoe.

The scale of the staffing challenge explains why the problem persists. The WSOP needs hundreds of dealers to cover a 749-table footprint over seven weeks.

Many are seasonal hires with limited training time before cards hit the air. Until now, the series had no structured mechanism for identifying which dealers were performing well and which were creating problems at the table.

The WSOP Live app already handles registration, seating, and chip counts. Adding a rating function to the same tool keeps the feedback loop inside an ecosystem players are required to use anyway. That said, the WSOP has not yet published details on how ratings will be aggregated, what score thresholds trigger bonuses, or whether dealers can challenge individual reviews.

Without that transparency, the system risks becoming noise rather than signal. The difference between a useful tool and a vent button will come down to how seriously management acts on the data.

Rule 35: Pre-Registered Chips in Play from the First Hand

The 2026 official Tournament Rules rewrote Rule 35 to close one of the most exploited registration loopholes. Players who pre-register now have their chip stack put into play and blinded off from the moment the tournament starts, whether they are seated or not.

  • Old system: players could pre-register days in advance, then decide whether to claim their seat. No-shows could request refunds with minimal friction.
  • New system: pre-registered chips go live from the first hand. Blinds and antes are posted every orbit whether the player is seated or not.
  • Refunds: only granted if WSOP Tournament Management has been notified of extenuating circumstances. The default is no refund.
  • Knock-on effect: more players are likely to wait until late registration opens rather than pre-registering early, which could push heavier action into the back half of late reg.

WSOP 2026 championship bracelet and World Champion belt on display

The rationale is straightforward. The WSOP wants tables seated and balanced from card one rather than reshuffled throughout the day. Removing the “free look” angle also prevents players from registering purely to scout the field before deciding whether to play.

The rule also has a practical side for table balancing. In previous years, large batches of pre-registered no-shows created uneven tables during the early levels.

Tournament staff had to repeatedly break and merge tables as players trickled in throughout the day. With chips in play immediately, seating charts reflect actual stack counts from the start.

For grinders juggling multiple events across a seven-week schedule, this changes planning. Pre-registering for an event you might skip is no longer a zero-cost option. The official WSOP schedule lists 100 bracelet events with frequent overlaps, which means multi-tabling grinders will need to be more selective about when and where they commit entry fees.

Rule 40(e) and Rule 80: Cleaning Up 2025’s Controversies

Rule 40(e) bans third-party promotional payouts tied to WSOP results. This is a direct response to the ClubWPT Gold controversy from the 2025 Millionaire Maker, where players competing under a promotional arrangement drew scrutiny over incentive structures that could influence in-game decisions.

The 2025 situation involved players who had entered the Millionaire Maker through a ClubWPT Gold promotion that offered additional payouts based on finishing position. Critics argued that external financial incentives created a conflict of interest, particularly in situations where ICM considerations might push a player toward decisions that benefited the promotional structure rather than their own tournament equity.

The rule is deliberately broad. On paper, it could cover traditional side-bet culture: last-longers, bracelet bets, and similar player-to-player arrangements. WSOP staff have indicated that enforcement will target commercial third-party promotions rather than friendly wagers, but the rulebook gives tournament management wide discretion.

Rule 80 update: Floor staff can now impose a reduced shot clock or hand penalties on players suspected of deliberate stalling, particularly around the money bubble. Time-bank abuse has been a growing complaint at recent WSOP tournaments. This rule gives the floor a tool they previously lacked.

Taken together, Rules 40(e) and 80 are housekeeping with teeth. They address two of the most discussed integrity issues from the 2025 summer: promotional interference and deliberate time-wasting. How aggressively the floor enforces either rule in practice will determine whether they land as genuine fixes or symbolic gestures.

What This Means for Players Heading to Las Vegas

The practical impact depends on how you play. Pre-registering early now carries real risk if you are not certain you will take your seat. The dealer rating system gives players a formal feedback channel for the first time, though its effectiveness hinges on how the WSOP aggregates and acts on the data.

The rule changes also land in the context of a revamped Player of the Year race. The 2026 leaderboard spans three WSOP festivals (Prague, Las Vegas, and Paradise) with a $1 million prize pool distributed among the top 100 finishers. Only each player’s best 15 results count, which rewards consistency over volume.

For international players, GGPoker’s WSOP Express satellite ladder remains the primary qualification path into the summer. Step 1 starts at $0.50, with free entries available through daily logins and cash-game volume. Players looking for the best value on that route can check the latest GGPoker bonus and rakeback deals.

The broadcast side of the 2026 WSOP has its own story. Free daily YouTube streams begin from May 26, and a multi-year ESPN deal brings the Main Event back to primetime with approximately 100 hours of coverage and a delayed final table airing live August 3 to 5.

The series kicks off in 18 days. These rule changes will be tested under pressure from Day 1.

For ongoing coverage, follow our poker news page.

Professional Poker Journalist
Mark Patrickson is a poker journalist with over ten years of experience. He writes for VIP-Grinders.com, sharing his deep knowledge of poker. He creates interesting content about poker strategy, trends, and news for poker fans worldwide.
Filed Under: Live Poker News