Mahjong tile iconHow to Play Mahjong

3. Building winning hands

Keywords:
winning handsmahjong winvalid handcomplete hand

Understanding what makes a winning hand is the key to playing Mahjong. Learn the structure and requirements for a valid win.

What is a Winning Hand?

A winning hand in Mahjong consists of a specific combination of tiles that follows a standard pattern. The first player to complete a valid hand wins the round.

Standard Winning Hand Structure

Every winning hand must contain:

  • Four Sets - Combinations of three or four tiles
  • One Pair - Two identical tiles (also called "eyes")

Total: 14 tiles (13 tiles in hand + 1 tile to complete the hand)

Types of Sets

Your four sets can be any combination of:

Chow (Sequence)

Three consecutive tiles of the same suit. Example: 1-2-3 of Bamboo.

Pung (Triplet)

Three identical tiles. Example: Three 5 of Dots.

Kong (Quad)

Four identical tiles. Example: Four East Wind tiles.

Examples of Winning Hands

Example 1: Basic Hand

  • Chow: 1-2-3 Bamboo
  • Chow: 4-5-6 Characters
  • Pung: Three 7 Dots
  • Pung: Three Red Dragons
  • Pair: Two East Winds

Example 2: All Pungs

  • Pung: Three 1 Bamboo
  • Pung: Three 5 Characters
  • Pung: Three 9 Dots
  • Pung: Three Green Dragons
  • Pair: Two South Winds

How to Win

You can win in two ways:

1. Self-Draw Win

Draw a tile from the wall that completes your hand. This is worth more points than winning from a discard.

2. Win from Discard

Claim a tile discarded by another player that completes your hand. You must declare "Mahjong!" immediately.

Important Rules

  • You must have exactly 14 tiles to win
  • All sets must be valid (no incomplete combinations)
  • You can only win with a tile that completes your hand
  • If you can win, you should declare it immediately

Practice Tips

Use the interactive game above to practice building valid winning hands. This will help you recognize winning opportunities during actual gameplay.