We also offer free food from Chicago Gyro's during our afternoon $2-5 NL Live Games!
New Year, New Ride! Click here for more information. New Year, New Ride! Click here for more information.
Poker Union is THE premiere private poker club in the Phoenix area. As a members-only venue, we strive to promote the fun and entertainment of poker in a social gaming environment.
We will build the Poker Union brand as a place where friends can gather and play a “home game away from home”. We will provide the safest, cleanest, best-run facilities in the Valley, utilizing the most professional floor managers, dealers, security and cage personnel we can retain.
We will champion the cause of the Poker Players Alliance that poker is a sport; a game of skill more than mere chance or dumb luck, and not gambling in the same vein as other casino games where the house has an active stake and decidedly advantageous odds. Poker was played in Arizona long before casinos took over the game and claimed it as their own. It is time we take back what has always been ours and reclaim a game enjoyed around the world by men and women of every age, race and creed.
Poker Union gives back to the community and sponsors charity tournaments and special events. We offer weekly freerolls, high hands of the week bonuses, and much more! We also send players to the WSOP! Join The Poker Union!
Grand Canyon State residents are understandably proud of their casinos, which all operate on Native American Indian reservations. Although online poker is not regulated within the state, you can still prove your poker skills against regulars in more than 20 poker rooms. If you are a mid-stakes tournament grinder, you will be interested in Fort McDowell Casino’s tournament schedule, which is bursting with $100+ tournaments. Want to build your bankroll first? Savvy players love Tucson’s Casino Del Sol, which is famous its generous guarantee tournaments, where you can scoop a big win from a small buy-in. Success in these events is clearly a recipe for success. Arizona players are becoming very successful in major poker events — as shown by Arizona State University student Jake Balsiger securing third place in the 2012 World Series of Poker main event.