Michaels Cuebid: Showing Two-Suited Hands Economically

Your RHO opens 1. You have five spades and five clubs with 10 HCP. You want to compete, but bidding both suits will get you too high.

Solution: bid 2.

That’s a Michaels Cuebid. You’re not showing hearts. You’re showing spades (the other major) and an unspecified minor, at least 5-5.

Michaels lets you show two suits at once, cheaply. It’s aggressive, but when it works, you preempt the opponents and find your fit fast.

What is Michaels?

A Michaels Cuebid is an immediate overcall in the suit the opponent opened, showing a two-suited hand:

After they open a major (1 or 1):

  • 2 over 1 = Spades + a minor (5-5 or better)
  • 2 over 1 = Hearts + a minor (5-5 or better)

After they open a minor (1 or 1):

  • 2 over 1 = Both majors (5-5 or better)
  • 2 over 1 = Both majors (5-5 or better)

You’re bidding their suit to show two specific suits. It’s artificial and forcing partner to pick one.

Strength Requirements

Michaels has two ranges:

Weak (6-11 HCP): You’re preempting. You have shape, not strength. You’re trying to disrupt their auction and find a cheap sacrifice.

Strong (16+ HCP): You have game interest. You’ll bid again over partner’s response to show extras.

The gap (12-15 HCP): Most pairs skip this range. With 12-15 and two suits, overcall one suit and bid the other later. Michaels works best at the extremes.

Why the gap? Because with intermediate values, you want to explore more carefully. Michaels commits you to both suits immediately. If partner has a misfit, you might be too high.

Responder’s Bids

After your Michaels Cuebid, partner knows you have two suits (or both majors). They pick their better fit.

Basic responses:

Preference at the 2-level = Weak, wants to play there
Preference at the 3-level = Invitational (9-11 HCP), three-card support
Preference at the 4-level = Game values, four-card support
2NT = Asks which minor (when Michaels showed a major + minor)
Cue-bid their suit = Strong, forcing, asking for more info

Asking for the Minor (2NT)

When you bid Michaels over a major (showing the other major + a minor), partner often doesn’t know which minor. They can bid 2NT to ask.

Example:

RHO opens 1, you bid 2 (spades + a minor).

Partner bids 2NT: “Which minor?”

You respond:

  • 3 = Clubs
  • 3 = Diamonds
  • 3 = Both minors, strong hand (16+)

If you have a weak Michaels, you just bid your minor. If you have a strong Michaels, you can jump or show both minors.

Common Mistakes

1. Using Michaels without 5-5 shape

You have 5-4 shape. You bid Michaels anyway.

Bad idea. Partner expects 5-5. If they have three cards in one suit and two in the other, they’ll pick the three-card fit. If your second suit is only four cards, you’re in a 4-3 fit when you could have played in a better spot.

Michaels promises 5-5 minimum (some pairs allow 5-4 with strong hands, but that’s partnership-dependent).

2. Using Michaels with the wrong strength

You have 13 HCP and 5-5 in the majors. You bid Michaels.

Partner has a weak hand and passes 2. You have game, but you can’t force partner to bid again. You’re stuck.

With 12-15 HCP, overcall one suit and bid the other later. Michaels is for 6-11 (preemptive) or 16+ (game-forcing after partner responds).

3. Bidding Michaels with bad suits

You have 8 HCP with 5-5 in spades and clubs. Your spades are J8542, your clubs are 96432.

Don’t bid Michaels. You’ll buy the contract and go down. Michaels is aggressive, but you need some substance in your suits.

4. Forgetting to bid again with a strong hand

You bid Michaels with 17 HCP. Partner bids 2 (weak, preferring spades). You pass.

Wrong. You have a strong Michaels. Bid again to show extras. Invite or force to game.

Example Hands

Hand 1: Classic Weak Michaels

RHO opens 1<span style="color:#CC0000;">♥</span>. You hold:
<span style="color:#000000;">♠</span> KQ1064
<span style="color:#CC0000;">♥</span> 7
<span style="color:#CC0000;">♦</span> 85
<span style="color:#000000;">♣</span> AJ1063

Bid 2 (Michaels, showing spades + a minor). You have 9 HCP and 5-5 shape. If partner bids 2NT to ask, bid 3.

Hand 2: Both Majors

RHO opens 1<span style="color:#CC0000;">♦</span>. You hold:
<span style="color:#000000;">♠</span> AJ1053
<span style="color:#CC0000;">♥</span> KQ864
<span style="color:#CC0000;">♦</span> 7
<span style="color:#000000;">♣</span> 92

Bid 2 (Michaels, showing both majors). You have 10 HCP and 5-5 shape. Partner will pick their better major.

Hand 3: Strong Michaels

RHO opens 1<span style="color:#000000;">♠</span>. You hold:
<span style="color:#000000;">♠</span> 7
<span style="color:#CC0000;">♥</span> AKJ64
<span style="color:#CC0000;">♦</span> AQ1053
<span style="color:#000000;">♣</span> K8

Bid 2 (Michaels, showing hearts + a minor). You have 17 HCP. When partner bids 2NT, bid 3 to show diamonds and extras (or jump to show strength). You’re forcing to game.

Hand 4: Don’t Use Michaels - Wrong Strength

RHO opens 1<span style="color:#CC0000;">♥</span>. You hold:
<span style="color:#000000;">♠</span> AQ1064
<span style="color:#CC0000;">♥</span> 7
<span style="color:#CC0000;">♦</span> KQ853
<span style="color:#000000;">♣</span> A8

You have 14 HCP and 5-5 shape. Don’t bid Michaels. Overcall 1, then bid diamonds later. This shows your shape without overstating or understating your strength.

Hand 5: Don’t Use Michaels - Bad Suits

RHO opens 1<span style="color:#CC0000;">♥</span>. You hold:
<span style="color:#000000;">♠</span> J8642
<span style="color:#CC0000;">♥</span> 7
<span style="color:#CC0000;">♦</span> 85
<span style="color:#000000;">♣</span> K9632

You have 3 HCP and 5-5 shape. Pass. Your suits are terrible. Michaels will just get you to a bad contract.

Unusual vs Michaels

Unusual Notrump shows the two lower unbid suits (usually both minors). Michaels shows a major + a minor, or both majors.

Example:

RHO opens 1.

  • 2NT = Unusual, showing both minors
  • 2 = Michaels, showing hearts + a minor

RHO opens 1.

  • 2NT = Unusual, showing both minors
  • 2 = Michaels, showing spades + a minor

Both conventions show two-suiters. Michaels includes a major. Unusual shows minors.

Advanced: Top and Bottom Cuebid

Some pairs play “Top and Bottom” instead of Michaels over minors:

After 1:

  • 2 = Hearts (top) and diamonds (bottom), not both majors

After 1:

  • 2 = Spades (top) and clubs (bottom), not both majors

This is rare. Most pairs play standard Michaels (both majors over minors).

When Not to Use Michaels

1. You have only one good suit

You have five spades and five clubs, but your clubs are worthless. Just overcall 1.

2. You have defensive values

You have 5-5 shape with 15 HCP and balanced honors. You might want to defend. Don’t commit to offense with Michaels.

3. You’re vulnerable against not

Vulnerability matters. At unfavorable vulnerability, Michaels can be expensive if partner has a misfit. Be conservative.

4. Your suits are weak

You need some quality. Two five-card suits with all small cards will just donate points to the opponents.

Why This Matters

Two-suited hands are hard to show. If you bid one suit and then the other, you’re at the 3-level or higher. Michaels gets both suits in at the 2-level.

It also disrupts the opponents. They opened, but now you’ve taken up their bidding space. They have to guess if you’re weak or strong, and partner has to decide whether to compete or defend.

Michaels is aggressive. It won’t always work. Sometimes you’ll go down in a phantom sacrifice. Sometimes partner will have a misfit and you’ll play a bad contract.

But the times it works, you’ll steal the contract or push them into a bad spot. That’s worth the risk.

Learn Michaels. Use it with the right shape (5-5 minimum) and the right strength (weak or strong, not medium). And remember: once you bid Michaels, you’ve committed. Partner’s picking one of your suits. Make sure both are playable.