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Americas Cardroom runs one of the busiest free-tournament calendars I track, and the single thing that costs players a seat is the password. ACR fires free events almost around the clock, but plenty of them are locked. No code, no seat. You sit in the lobby, the late-reg clock ticking, and the field fills without you.
That is the whole reason this page exists. Below I cover where to grab today's ACR freeroll passwords the moment they go live, how the different ACR freeroll types actually work, and how to register without fumbling at the cashier. I also give you my honest read on ACR as a poker room. It is not all upside, and I would rather you know that before you deposit a cent. (Updated June 2026.)
Quick version: ACR (Americas Cardroom) runs daily, often password-protected freerolls, and the codes change every day. The fastest way to get the current ones is our live page for today's ACR freeroll passwords, refreshed daily and shown in UK time plus your local time. Do not memorise a password from a blog post. It is almost certainly dead by the time you read it.
Here is the part most "ACR freeroll password" articles get wrong. They paste a code into the body text once and never touch it again. ACR rotates passwords daily on a lot of its free events. A code that worked last Tuesday is just noise today, and a static article quietly lies to every reader who lands on it a week later.
So I do not hard-code passwords here. Instead, our daily grabber pulls live ACR freeroll codes onto one page and keeps it current:
→ Today's ACR freeroll passwords
What you get on that page:
One small habit saves more seats than any strategy tip: open the live list 20 to 30 minutes before the freeroll you want, then register early. ACR free events fill fast, and some are capped. From what I see on the live schedule, the headline daily events run a 2,000-entry cap with a 30-minute late-registration window, so late-reg buys a little slack, but on the better free seats it disappears quickly.
If a password field shows blank on the live page, it usually means one of two things. Either the event is open and needs no code, or the room has not published the code yet. The ACR client settles it for you: a locked tournament shows a small lock icon and prompts for a password the moment you click Register. Open events let you straight in.
A word on trust, because it matters here. Passwords that float around Twitter, Discord and random forums are the ones most likely to be wrong, stale, or simply made up for clicks. I would rather pull from one maintained source than chase ten unverified ones. That is the whole point of a daily-refreshed list versus a static blog dump.
ACR does not run one kind of freeroll. Looking at the live schedule and ACR's own promotions, these are the patterns that repeat. Knowing which bucket an event falls into tells you whether you actually qualify before you waste time hunting a code.
These are the bread-and-butter free events. They run on a "starts when it fills" basis rather than a fixed clock, seeding throughout the day, and they pay a small prize pool to the top finishers. Tiny money, fast structure, and ideal if you just want hand volume and reps. These are usually the most open events on the calendar, which is exactly why they are also the most popular.
These are the scheduled headline freerolls. On the live list I see them firing every few hours through the day in UK time, Hold'em format, with that 2,000-entry cap and a 30-minute late-reg window. Many of these are the password-protected ones. They carry a guaranteed prize pool, so the value per seat is better than the On-Demand grind, which is exactly why a code can gate them.
ACR runs a freeroll aimed at fresh accounts that have made a qualifying deposit, with a larger added prize pool than the open daily events. The catch is in the name. You will not get into this one on a brand-new, never-funded account, so do not treat it as a true open freeroll. If you have no intention of depositing, skip it and stick to the On-Demand and open $50 events.
Two more buckets worth knowing. ACR runs a leaderboard tied to its On-Demand events, where top finishers earn points toward a tournament ticket rather than cash. Separately, there are free or near-free satellite paths into ACR's big series, The Venom, the Online Super Series (OSS) and the Sun Run, where the prize is a seat or a ticket, not a payout. These are the most valuable "freerolls" on the site by far, and predictably they tend to carry the most eligibility strings.
Two honest caveats before you build a routine around any of this. First, exact times and prize pools move. ACR reshuffles its schedule and its series calendar regularly, so treat any fixed "fires at X every day" claim, including older schedules floating around the web, as a starting point and confirm it in the live client. Second, the truly open, anyone-can-enter events are mostly the small ones. The bigger the prize, the more likely there is a deposit, a loyalty tier, or a points threshold attached.

The flow is short once you have done it once. Here is exactly how I do it, in order.
If the password is rejected, in my experience it is almost always one of three things: a stale code (they rotate daily, so re-copy the current one), a typo or trailing space (case-sensitive, remember), or the tournament has already hit its cap. Re-copy from the live page and try once more. If it still fails, the published code may simply have been wrong, which happens occasionally with socially-shared codes. That is one more reason I lean on a maintained list rather than a screenshot someone posted in a chat.
A few things would have saved me grief when I started tracking these:
I am rating ACR as a place to actually play the freerolls you find here, not as a five-star marketing brochure. This is my editorial assessment based on ACR's published information and what I can see in the live lobby and schedule, not a paid-deposit cashout test.
My overall rating: 3.7 / 5
| Category | My score (1 to 5) | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Freeroll volume and variety | 4.5 | Near-24/7 free events, multiple types, series satellites |
| Tournament series and value | 4.0 | The Venom, OSS and Sun Run give freerolls something to feed into |
| Software and stability | 3.0 | Dated desktop client, recurring stability gripes around WPN |
| Cashier and payouts | 3.5 | Fast crypto is a real plus; fiat is slower |
| Trust and transparency | 3.0 | International licences only, no tier-1 regulator front and centre |
What I like. Volume, first and foremost. ACR has been open since 2001 and sits on the Winning Poker Network, billed as the largest US-facing poker network, with more than 1.5 million registered players per the room's own figures. The free-tournament and series calendar backs that up: daily On-Demand and $50 GTD freerolls, plus big-ticket series like The Venom ($5.5M guaranteed) and OSS that satellite freerolls can feed into. Crypto cashouts are a genuine strength. ACR's own payments page states that 90% of crypto withdrawals complete in under 15 minutes, with Bitcoin listed at around 10 minutes (the room's published figures, not a withdrawal I have personally timed).
What annoys me. The desktop client has always felt dated next to the slicker modern rooms, and stability and bot-detection complaints follow WPN around the poker forums. That is the main reason software only gets a 3 from me. The flip side: soft, recreational-heavy traffic is great for your win rate, even if the platform is not winning design awards.
Soft criticism, read this before you commit money. ACR operates under international gaming licences without a tier-1 regulator like the UKGC or MGA front and centre. The wider WPN ecosystem has had its share of player-trust debates over the years, covering game integrity and bonus terms. For freerolls, where you risk nothing, that matters far less. But if you plan to deposit and grind, go in with realistic expectations. Read the current terms, start small, and do not park a big bankroll there on day one. I would not call ACR a scam, plenty of players cash out fine, but it is not a tier-1-regulated room and I am not going to pretend otherwise.
Pros
Cons
This is the question that should decide whether you deposit, so I will be plain about it. ACR has run since 2001 and is one of the larger US-facing rooms, with RNG certification and independent audits referenced on its own site. That is reassuring on the fairness front. What it does not have is a tier-1 regulator. It operates under international gaming licences, which give you far less recourse than a UKGC or MGA licence would if a dispute went sour. For freerolls, this is close to irrelevant, you are risking time, not money. For deposits, it is the single biggest thing I would weigh. My honest stance: fine for free play and small recreational stakes, due diligence required before any serious bankroll.
Who it is for: freeroll grinders and recreational players who want maximum free volume, soft fields, and fast crypto, and who do not mind a no-frills client.
Who it is not for: players who need a tier-1-regulated room and a polished, modern platform above everything else. If regulatory protection is your top priority, ACR will not be your room.
ACR is not the only room running daily free seats, and most grinders I know do not stick to one site. More rooms means more free tournaments per day, which means more shots at a cash or a series ticket. Here is how I slot ACR against the other rooms whose codes we publish.
| Room | Free volume | Standout | Main catch |
|---|---|---|---|
| Americas Cardroom | Very high | Series satellites, crypto speed | No tier-1 regulator |
| 888poker | High | Established brand, regular free seats | Tighter eligibility on some events |
| PokerStars | High | Biggest network, big fields | Huge fields dilute small prizes |
| BetOnline | Moderate | Solid US-facing alternative | Smaller calendar than ACR |
If you want to widen the net beyond ACR, the 888poker freeroll passwords and PokerStars freeroll passwords pages are the obvious next stops, with BetOnline freeroll passwords as a third US-facing option. All of them feed off the same daily grabber, so you can check every room's codes from the live freeroll table in one place rather than bouncing between sites.
My honest take on spreading volume: it is worth it if you have the hours, because each room's open daily freeroll is a separate free shot. But do not register for six freerolls that overlap and then play none of them well. Pick the ones with the best structure or the series value, and treat the rest as backups.
ACR earns its 3.7 from me on the strength of one thing: free volume. If your goal is to play as many free tournaments as possible, build hand experience, and occasionally satellite into a real series, it is one of the best rooms going, and the daily password rotation is the only real friction. Solve that friction with a maintained, daily-refreshed list and the room is genuinely good value for a grinder.
Where it loses points is trust and polish. The client is dated, WPN carries some baggage, and there is no tier-1 regulator behind it. None of that should stop you from playing free events. All of it should make you cautious before you deposit. Play the freerolls, enjoy the soft fields, and keep your bankroll decisions separate and conservative.
Bottom line: bookmark our daily ACR password tracker, register early, and treat the deposit question as a separate decision you make with eyes open.
What is the ACR freeroll password today? ACR freeroll passwords change daily, so there is no single fixed answer. The current ones are published on our live ACR freeroll passwords page, updated every day with start times in UK and your local time. Any password pasted into an old article is almost certainly expired.
Are ACR freerolls really free? Yes, a freeroll has a $0 buy-in, and the open daily freerolls cost nothing to enter. Some bigger free seats are only "free" if you meet conditions such as a deposit, a loyalty tier, or a promo, so check the specific event's requirements before you count on a seat.
Why does my ACR freeroll password not work? Usually one of three reasons: the code is stale because passwords rotate daily, there is a typo or trailing space since codes are case-sensitive, or the tournament hit its player cap. Grab the latest code from the live page and try once more.
Do I need to deposit to play ACR freerolls? Not for the open daily On-Demand and $50 freerolls, which are open to registered accounts. The New Depositor freeroll and some higher-value events do require a deposit or loyalty status. The event's lobby description spells out the eligibility.
What time are ACR freerolls? ACR runs free events throughout the day, and the schedule changes periodically, so we do not hard-code times here. The live passwords page lists each day's events with start times in UK time, converted to your local time so you do not miss late registration.
Is Americas Cardroom safe and legit? ACR has operated since 2001 on the Winning Poker Network and is one of the larger US-facing rooms, with RNG certification on its own site. It runs under international gaming licences rather than a tier-1 regulator. For risk-free freerolls that is a minor concern; if you plan to deposit, read the current terms and start small. See my honest 3.7/5 rating above.
Can I play ACR freerolls on mobile? Yes. ACR's own site confirms dedicated iOS and Android apps, so you can register and play tournaments from a phone or tablet, though many grinders still prefer the desktop client for serious multi-tabling. For registering a password-protected freeroll, the steps are the same: find the event, click register, paste the current code exactly.
Freerolls are free to enter, but real-money poker is not risk-free. 18+ only. Play within your limits and never chase losses. If gambling stops being fun, take a break. Free help and self-assessment tools are available at BeGambleAware.org. Set deposit and time limits before you play. This page is not a guarantee of any specific freeroll, prize, or password. Schedules and codes are set by the poker room and can change without notice.
Affiliate disclosure: freerollsdb.com may earn a commission if you sign up to a poker room through our links. This never affects our ratings or the freeroll passwords we publish.
About the author. Rafael Costa is the poker and tournaments editor at FreerollsDB. He built a bankroll from nothing grinding online freerolls and micro-stakes MTTs, and now he tracks the best free tournaments and codes so players can do the same.