Leading strategy in Spades determines which card to play first in a trick. The opening lead sets the tone for the entire trick and communicates information to your partner.

Why Leading Matters

When you lead, you:

  • Choose the suit everyone must follow
  • Control the trick’s flow — high lead, low lead, or trump lead
  • Signal to your partner about your hand
  • Set up future tricks by establishing suit dominance

Early Game Leads (Tricks 1-4)

Lead Your Off-Suit Aces

Why: They’re guaranteed winners while everyone has cards in that suit. Later, opponents may be void and trump your Aces.

Order:

  1. Lead your shortest suit’s Ace first — helps void you for future tricks
  2. Then lead other Aces
  3. Follow up with the King if you have A-K in a suit

When NOT to Lead Aces Early

  • Your partner bid Nil — leading Aces forces them to play (might force a win)
  • Everyone seems to be following suit comfortably — your Aces are safe for later
  • You’re void in a suit and want to trump — lead something else to set up your void

Mid-Game Leads (Tricks 5-9)

Lead Established Suits

If you led A♦ and K♦ early, your remaining diamonds may be winners:

  • Opponents are thinning out in diamonds
  • Your Q♦ or J♦ might now win
  • Lead them before opponents develop more voids

Consider Leading Spades

If you have 5+ spades with A-K-Q:

  • Lead spades to “draw” opponents’ trump
  • After their spades are gone, your off-suit winners are safe
  • This is powerful but commits your trump resources

Avoid Leading Into Voids

Track who’s void:

  • If an opponent is void in hearts, don’t lead hearts — they’ll trump
  • Lead suits where all players still have cards

Late Game Leads (Tricks 10-13)

Count-Based Leading

By now you should know approximately what remains:

  • Lead suits where you have the highest remaining cards
  • If you have the only remaining spade, it wins everything
  • Plan 2-3 tricks ahead

Team Needs

SituationLeading Strategy
Need more tricksLead your winners aggressively
Made your bid, avoiding bagsLead low, lose tricks intentionally
Setting opponentsLead suits that deny them tricks

Special Leads

The Trump Lead

When to lead spades:

  • You have 5+ spades with high honors (A, K, Q)
  • You want to pull opponents’ trump before leading side suits
  • Spades must be broken first (someone must play a spade on a non-spade trick)

When NOT to lead spades:

  • Spades aren’t broken and you can’t break them
  • You have few spades — they’re too valuable to waste
  • Your partner may not want trump led

The Short-Suit Lead

Lead a suit where you have only 1-2 cards:

  • After playing them, you’re void
  • Future tricks in that suit let you trump
  • Creates offensive power

The Partner’s Suit

If your partner led a suit successfully earlier:

  • Lead it again — they may have more winners there
  • Shows support and coordination

Lead Quick Reference

SituationBest Lead
Start of roundOff-suit Ace
Have A-K in a suitLead Ace, then King
5+ spades with high cardsLead spades (draw trump)
Short suit (1-2 cards)Lead short suit (set up void)
Partner bid NilLead safe suits for them
Made contract, dodging bagsLead low — lose tricks
Setting opponentsLead suits they struggle with

Play Spades for free on Rare Pike and put these strategies into practice.