Opener’s Common Bidding Mistakes
The opening bidder sets the tone for the entire auction. Get it wrong, and you’re steering your side toward the wrong contract—or missing a good one entirely. These mistakes happen at every level of play, but once you recognize them, they’re surprisingly easy to fix.
Opening When You Shouldn’t
The Problem: Opening light has become fashionable in third seat, but some players take it too far in first and second seat.
Example Hand:
♠ K J 6 4
♥ Q 10 7 3
♦ A 8 5
♣ 9 2
You have 10 HCP and a doubleton. Some players open 1♥ “because partner might have a good hand.” This is wrong in first or second seat. When you open light and catch partner with values, you’ve described 12-14 HCP, not 10. Partner will push for game when you’re not close, and you’ll go down in contracts that should never be bid.
What to Do Instead: Pass hands under 12 points in first and second seat unless you have a sixth card or a strong five-card suit with two quick tricks. In third seat, you can shade to 10-11 with a good suit to direct a lead.
The 1NT Rebid Disaster
The Problem: Rebidding 1NT with the wrong shape or point range.
Example Hand 1:
♠ A Q 8 7 5
♥ K 3
♦ J 6
♣ K 10 7 4
You open 1♠, partner responds 2♣. Many players automatically rebid 2NT to show 15-17 HCP. But you only have 13 points! Now partner, holding 11 points, will drive to 3NT, expecting you to have 15-17. You’ll arrive in a failing game.
What to Do Instead: Rebid 2♠. Yes, it’s only a five-card suit, but it shows 12-14 points accurately. Partner can bid again with extras.
Example Hand 2:
♠ K J 10 8 6
♥ 4
♦ A Q 5
♣ K Q 7 3
You open 1♠, partner responds 1NT. You rebid 2♣, and partner returns to 2♠. Some players now bid 3♠ or even 2NT. Wrong! You’ve already shown your shape (at least 5-4 in the blacks). Bidding again overstates your strength.
What to Do Instead: Pass 2♠. You showed your hand—a minimum opening with spades and clubs. Partner chose spades. You’re done.
Rebidding the Wrong Suit
The Problem: Opening your longer suit instead of your better suit, then getting stuck.
Example Hand:
♠ K 3
♥ A Q 10 8 6
♦ K J 9 7 5 2
♣ —
You correctly open 1♥ (with 5-5 or 5-6, bid the higher-ranking suit first). Partner responds 1♠. Now what? If you rebid 2♦, showing 5-5, partner will place you with at least opening strength opposite their spade bid. But if you rebid 3♦ (showing 6+), you’ve overstated your diamonds.
Actually, this hand should reverse to 2♦! You have 12 HCP plus great distribution—16 total points with shortness and two good suits.
What to Do Instead: Learn reverse sequences. With 5-6 and minimum strength, open the six-card suit. With extra strength (16+), open the five-card suit and reverse.
The Reverse That Isn’t
The Problem: Thinking you’re reversing when you’re not.
Example Hand:
♠ A K 10 7 3
♥ 5
♦ A Q 8 6 4
♣ 6 2
You open 1♠, partner responds 2♣. You bid 2♦. Is this a reverse? No! A reverse shows your second suit at the three-level if partner gives simple preference. Here, if partner bids 2♠, you’re only at the two-level. This shows a minimum hand with 5-5 or better in the majors.
What to Do Instead: Understand that a reverse forces partner to the three-level for preference. The sequence 1♠-2♣-2♦ is not a reverse; 1♥-1♠-2♦ is not a reverse; but 1♦-1♠-2♥ IS a reverse (partner must bid 3♦ to return to your first suit).
Opening 1NT With the Wrong Shape
The Problem: Opening 1NT with a singleton or six-card major.
Example Hand 1:
♠ K Q 10 8 6 5
♥ A 3
♦ K J 7
♣ Q 4
You have 14 HCP and balanced shape. But opening 1NT with a six-card major is asking for trouble. Partner will use Stayman and transfers assuming you have at most a five-card major. You’ll miss spade fits and end up in weird spots.
What to Do Instead: Open 1♠. Rebid 2♠ over 1NT or 2♠ over a two-level response, showing six spades and minimum strength.
Example Hand 2:
♠ A K J 3
♥ 5
♦ K Q 10 8
♣ A 9 7 4
Some players open this 1NT because “it’s 16 points and balanced.” No! The singleton heart means you’re not balanced. Open 1♦ and plan to rebid spades, showing 5-4-1-3 or 4-5-1-3 shape.
What to Do Instead: Save 1NT for balanced hands: 4-3-3-3, 4-4-3-2, or 5-3-3-2 only (and the five-card suit should be a minor).
Misjudging Hand Strength After Partner Responds
The Problem: Not reevaluating your hand when partner shows strength.
Example Hand:
♠ A Q 10 7 3
♥ 6
♦ K Q 8 5
♣ K 7 4
You open 1♠, partner responds 2♠ (showing 10-12 support points with 3+ spades). You have 14 HCP, so you pass. Wrong!
Reevaluate: You now have a known 8+ card fit. Your singleton heart is golden (3 points for shortness in a side suit). Your ♠AQ10 means you’ll likely lose no trump tricks. You’re worth 17 points opposite a known fit.
What to Do Instead: Make a game try (3♣ or 3♦ help suit, or 3♠ asking about general strength). Partner with a maximum and fitting cards will accept and you’ll make 4♠.
Forgetting Your System
The Problem: Not remembering what your bids mean.
Example Hand:
♠ 7
♥ K Q J 10 8 6
♦ A 5
♣ A 9 7 3
You open 1♥, partner responds 1♠. What’s your rebid?
If you play standard, you rebid 2♣ (your second suit). If you play 2/1, you rebid 3♣ (jump shift showing a strong hand). But many players forget their system and rebid 2♥, which just shows a minimum hand with six hearts. Now when partner passes, you’ve missed game.
What to Do Instead: Write down your system agreements. Before every session, review: Do you play 2/1? Walsh? Bergen raises? Whatever your methods, know them cold.
The Dreaded 4-3-3-3 Rebid Problem
The Problem: Not knowing what to do with balanced minimum hands.
Example Hand:
♠ A 8 7 3
♥ K 6
♦ Q 10 5
♣ K J 7 4
You open 1♣, partner responds 1♥. You have 12 HCP and balanced shape. Do you bid 1♠? 1NT? 2♣?
Many players bid 1♠, treating this as “free.” But now if partner rebids 2♣ or 2♦, you’re stuck. You can’t bid 2NT (shows 18-19), and you can’t pass a potentially three-card suit.
What to Do Instead: Rebid 1NT immediately (showing 12-14 balanced). Yes, you “concealed” your spade suit, but partner can use new minor forcing or checkback to find a 4-4 spade fit if they have four.
Bottom Line
Opening bidder mistakes come in three flavors:
- Starting wrong (opening light, opening 1NT with wrong shape)
- Rebidding wrong (1NT with wrong points, reversing by accident, forgetting to reverse when you should)
- Reevaluating wrong (not adding points for fits, not downgrading flat minimums)
The fix is simple: Slow down. Count your points again after partner bids. Ask yourself: “What does my rebid promise?” Make sure your hand matches the promise. Bridge is a language—speak accurately, and you’ll reach the right contracts.