Stephen Chidwick Net Worth 2026 – Career Earnings, Age & Bio
Stephen Chidwick is the second-highest earning live tournament poker player of all time. The Englishman from Deal, Kent has accumulated over $76 million in tracked cashes across 397 events, trailing only Bryn Kenney on poker’s all-time money list.
His net worth is not publicly confirmed, and the gap between gross payouts and actual profit is significant. We separate what is verifiable from what is estimated throughout this profile.
Below you will find quick facts, a net worth breakdown, career earnings and top cashes, playing style analysis, GPI ranking history, and a full FAQ.
Player Quick Facts

- Full Name: Stephen James Chidwick
- Online Aliases: stevie444, TylersDad64
- Born: 10 May 1989 (age 37)
- Nationality: British
- Hometown: Deal, Kent, England
- Net Worth (Estimate): $35M-$57M (not publicly confirmed)
- Live Tournament Earnings: $76,221,910 (397 cashes)
- WSOP Bracelets: 2 (both PLO)
- Triton Poker Titles: 3 (all Short Deck)
- Primary Formats: NLH, PLO, Short Deck, Mixed Games
- Known For: #2 all-time tournament earner; first British GPI world #1; 2022 PGT Player of the Year; 2018 USPO inaugural champion
- Current Sponsor: None (Octopi Poker ambassador)
Stephen Chidwick's Net Worth
Stephen Chidwick’s net worth is not publicly confirmed. Estimates from poker media and biography sites range from $35 million to $57 million, but none cite a verifiable source.
The figure depends heavily on assumptions about staking splits, expenses, and private income that only Chidwick himself can confirm.
What is Stephen Chidwick’s net worth in 2026?
Estimates place Chidwick’s net worth between $35 million and $57 million. The wide range reflects genuine uncertainty about how much of his $76 million in gross payouts he has retained after costs.
In January 2026, Chidwick answered this question directly during a Reddit AMA hosted through Octopi Poker. He estimated his actual net profit from poker at “somewhere in the 5-10 million range” across his entire career.
That figure covers 18 years of tournament play, meaning his average annual profit sits between roughly $280,000 and $555,000.
However, the $5-10 million figure refers to tournament profit alone. It does not account for any savings, investments, property, or other income accumulated over nearly two decades.
A total net worth above $10 million is consistent with 18 years of accumulated savings and investments, though the exact figure is unknown.
Note: the $5-10 million self-reported profit is not independently verified. Chidwick himself said he does not know the exact number.
Net worth estimates and why they vary
Several sites publish net worth figures for Chidwick, and none agree. 888poker’s January 2026 profile placed him in the mid-eight-figure range. Other biography aggregators cite similar estimates without disclosing methodology.
The core problem is that poker net worth depends on five private variables that no public database tracks:
- Private cash games: No public reporting exists for private or home game results
- Staking and backing: Chidwick rarely plays 100% of his own action, and split terms are never disclosed
- Travel and expenses: 18 years of global tournament travel, flights, hotels, and coaching costs
- Taxes: UK tax obligations on gambling winnings differ from US rules, but the exact liability is private
- Investments: Any returns from property, business ventures, or financial assets are unknown
Nobody outside Chidwick’s inner circle knows the real number. The published estimates remain the best available guide, but they carry significant uncertainty.

What we can verify: tracked live tournament earnings
According to The Hendon Mob, Stephen Chidwick has earned $76,221,910 across 397 tracked live tournament cashes. That places him second on the all-time money list behind all-time money list leader Bryn Kenney.
Kenney crossed the $80 million mark in December 2025. The gap between the two stands at roughly $4 million as of March 2026.
Chidwick passed Justin Bonomo for the #2 spot in May 2025 after a seven-figure haul at Triton Montenegro. Bonomo had held second place since August 2023.
These figures are gross payouts only. They do not reflect buy-ins paid, action sold to backers, or travel expenses. Even a player retaining just 10% of $76 million would have a profit above $7.6 million, which aligns with Chidwick’s own estimate.
Career Earnings & Highlights
Chidwick’s tracked live tournament record is defined by two things: volume and consistency. He has cashed in every calendar year since 2008 and has not earned less than $1 million in any year since 2013.
His career-best year was 2019 with $13,528,992 in live cashes, driven by deep Triton runs and his first WSOP bracelet. His second-best was 2025 with approximately $11-12.6 million, including his largest first-place finish.
How much has Stephen Chidwick won in live tournaments?
According to The Hendon Mob, Chidwick has earned $76,221,910 in tracked live tournament cashes as of March 2026. That figure places him #2 on poker’s all-time money list and #1 among all English players.
He has recorded 397 cashes and 50 tournament wins across WSOP, Triton, PGT, EPT, and WPT events. The total updates with each new result.
Note: this figure reflects gross payouts recorded by The Hendon Mob. It does not include online results, private games, or expenses.
Top 10 live tournament cashes
The table below lists Chidwick’s ten largest recorded live tournament cashes, sourced from The Hendon Mob.
| # | Year | Event | Finish | Prize |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2019 | Triton Million for Charity, London | 4th | $5,368,947 |
| 2 | 2025 | Triton Jeju $200K Short Deck | 1st | $3,455,000 |
| 3 | 2025 | Triton Jeju $125K NLH | 2nd | $1,927,188 |
| 4 | 2022 | Triton Madrid €100K SD Main | 1st | $1,916,463 |
| 5 | 2019 | WSOP $25K PLO High Roller | 1st | $1,618,417 |
| 6 | 2018 | Super High Roller Bowl V, Las Vegas | 3rd | $1,512,000 |
| 7 | 2025 | WSOP $50K PLO High Roller | 2nd | $1,430,938 |
| 8 | 2022 | Triton Madrid €75K NLH | 2nd | $1,357,140 |
| 9 | 2024 | WSOP Paradise $50K PLO | 1st | $1,357,080 |
| 10 | 2018 | partypoker MILLIONS €100K SHR | 2nd | $1,352,531 |
Five of the ten largest cashes came from Triton Poker events. Four resulted in outright victories. Three were recorded in 2025.
What is Stephen Chidwick’s biggest poker win?
This depends on the definition. Chidwick’s biggest single cash is $5,368,947 for finishing 4th in the 2019 Triton Million for Charity in London. That was not a win.
His biggest first-place finish is $3,455,000 from the $200,000 Short Deck event at Triton Jeju in September 2025. That is his largest outright victory to date.
The distinction matters because the Triton Million had a record-breaking prize pool. Chidwick’s 4th-place payout exceeded the winner’s prize in most other events on the circuit.
Annual earnings consistency
Chidwick has earned at least $1 million in every calendar year since 2013, a streak spanning 13 consecutive years. That includes the pandemic-affected 2020 season, when most live circuits shut down entirely.
His four highest-earning years are 2019 ($13.5M), 2025 (~$11-12.6M), 2018 ($10.2M), and 2022 ($6.3M). Two of the four came after his 33rd birthday.
Early Life & Background
Stephen James Chidwick was born on 10 May 1989 in Deal, Kent, a small coastal town in southeast England. He was drawn to intellectual games from an early age, spending much of his childhood playing chess and strategy board games.
He has no verified university record. After finishing school, Chidwick committed fully to poker as a career rather than pursuing higher education.
Where is Stephen Chidwick from?
Chidwick is from Deal, a town on the English Channel coast in Kent. Both The Hendon Mob and Wikipedia list Deal as his birthplace and current residence. He has remained based in England throughout his career.
How old is Stephen Chidwick?
Stephen Chidwick was born on 10 May 1989 and is currently 37 years old. He turned professional as a teenager and has been competing in live tournaments since 2008.

Online beginnings as “stevie444”
Chidwick discovered poker as a teenager and began playing online at around 15 or 16 years old under the alias “stevie444”. He built his bankroll from scratch by grinding freeroll tournaments, investing no money of his own to start.
By 18, he had won more than 100 packages to the $10,000 WSOP Main Event through online satellites. He could not use them himself because he was too young to play in Las Vegas at the time.
The satellite wins made him a millionaire before his 19th birthday. He later adopted a second online alias, “TylersDad64”, on various poker platforms.
First live tournament cash
Chidwick’s first recorded live result came in 2008 at the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure in The Bahamas. He won a $1,000 No Limit Hold’em event for $88,760 at the age of 18.
Within three years he was making deep runs at the WSOP, finishing 4th in the $10,000 Pot Limit Hold’em Championship in 2011 for $198,927. By 2012, he had a 6th-place finish in the $50,000 Poker Players Championship for $253,497.
The early results confirmed that his online skills translated directly to live play. From 2013 onward, his annual live earnings never dropped below $1 million.
Tournament Career
Chidwick’s tournament record is unusual for its range. He has won titles in No Limit Hold’em, Pot Limit Omaha, Short Deck Hold’em, and Mixed Games, often within the same series.
That versatility across formats, combined with consistent results at the highest buy-in levels, is what separates his career from players who dominate a single variant.
How many WSOP bracelets does Stephen Chidwick have?
Chidwick has won two WSOP bracelets, both in Pot Limit Omaha events. Neither came in his primary format of No Limit Hold’em.
His first bracelet came in the 2019 WSOP $25,000 PLO High Roller in Las Vegas. He topped a field of 230 entries and defeated James Chen heads-up for $1,618,417. It was his first gold bracelet after 54 prior WSOP cashes.
His second WSOP bracelet at Paradise in PLO followed in December 2024. He won the $50,000 PLO Championship at WSOP Paradise, beating Yang Wang heads-up from a field of 122 for $1,357,080.
Beyond the bracelets, Chidwick has recorded 87 WSOP cashes, 25 final tables, and $11,471,778 in WSOP earnings. He ranks 36th on the all-time WSOP money list. His best Main Event finish is 89th in 2021.
His success in a format built on PLO strategy fundamentals and starting hands sets him apart from most NLH-first tournament players.
How many Triton titles has Stephen Chidwick won?
Chidwick has won three Triton Poker titles, all in Short Deck Hold’em. No other format accounts for a Triton win on his record.
The three titles are the 2022 Triton Madrid €100,000 Short Deck Main Event ($1,916,463), the 2024 Triton Jeju $20,000 Short Deck Turbo ($265,000), and the $3.45 million Triton Jeju Short Deck victory in September 2025.
His Triton career earnings exceed $30 million across 34+ final tables. That places him third on Triton’s all-time earnings list behind Kenney and fellow Triton circuit regular Jason Koon, who holds 12 Triton titles.
Short Deck is a stripped-deck variant where hand values and equities shift compared to standard Hold’em. For a breakdown of the format, see our guide to short deck poker strategy and hand rankings.
Note: Triton does not publish a single definitive totals page. Figures are cross-checked with The Hendon Mob.
PGT and the U.S. Poker Open
Chidwick has won 11 PokerGO Tour titles and was named 2022 PGT Player of the Year after recording six wins, 32 cashes, and $6.3 million in PGT earnings across the season.
His PGT lifetime earnings stand at $66,572,758. He has accumulated 9,905 PGT points, approaching the 10,000 milestone.
Chidwick won the inaugural U.S. Poker Open in February 2018, taking two titles (the $25,000 NLH and the $25,000 Mixed Game Championship on consecutive days) and cashing in five of eight events for $1,256,600.
He holds multiple USPO all-time records: most individual event wins (five, tied with David Peters), most cashes (19), and highest career earnings from the series ($3,476,650).
In 2024, he returned to win the $25,200 USPO finale for $429,000, finishing second in the series standings behind Aram Zobian.

EPT and other major series
Chidwick won the 2017 PokerStars Championship Barcelona €25,500 event for $813,144 and the 2019 EPT €50,000 Super High Roller for $802,972. He has 14 EPT cashes and $864,465 in EPT earnings.
He finished 2nd in the 2018 partypoker MILLIONS €100K Super High Roller in Barcelona for $1,352,531 and 3rd in the $300,000 Super High Roller Bowl V in Las Vegas for $1,512,000.
On the WPT, he has seven cashes, two final tables, and $319,619 in earnings.
His results are not concentrated in any single tour. WSOP, Triton, PGT, EPT, and WPT events all feature among his 50 career titles.
Playing Style & Approach
Chidwick is known for a disciplined, calculation-heavy approach that combines GTO principles with targeted exploitation. He rarely speaks at the table, rarely shows emotion, and rarely deviates from his planned strategy under pressure.
His peers describe him as one of the hardest players to read and one of the most difficult to play against across multiple formats.
GTO foundation and exploitative adjustments
Chidwick’s game is rooted in GTO solver study and exploitative play. He has spoken about using solvers to build a strong baseline strategy, then adjusting against specific opponents based on live reads and tendencies.
That balance between theoretical preparation and in-game adaptation is central to his consistency. He does not rely on instinct alone and does not play a rigid, solver-locked style either.
Before sessions, Chidwick reportedly follows a routine of meditation, breathing exercises, and reviewing notes on opponents. The process reflects the same structured approach he applies to hand analysis.
Multi-format versatility
The defining feature of Chidwick’s career is that he wins across formats. His two WSOP bracelets are in PLO, his three Triton titles are in Short Deck, and his 2018 USPO run included a Mixed Game championship.
Few players compete at the highest buy-in levels in NLH, PLO, Short Deck, and Mixed Games simultaneously. Chidwick does, and his results in PLO and Short Deck alone would be career-defining for most specialists.
Is Stephen Chidwick the best poker player in the world?
In 2019, a Card Player peer survey named Chidwick the best tournament poker player in the world, voted on by fellow professionals. He won the magazine’s Player of the Year award twice (2018 and 2022).
German poker coach bencb included Chidwick in his widely discussed ranking of the top ten tournament players of all time. He referred to Chidwick as the “GOAT of tournament poker” in bencb’s ranking of the top tournament players, published on VIP-Grinders.
Comparisons often place him alongside 11-time WSOP bracelet winner Phil Ivey in discussions about the most complete players in the game. Ivey holds the edge in bracelets and cash game reputation; Chidwick leads in tracked tournament earnings and multi-format title count.
Note: “best in the world” is a subjective distinction. The evidence above represents peer opinions and verifiable results, not an editorial verdict.

Table presence and persona
Chidwick is one of the quietest players at the highest stakes. He does not engage in table talk, does not react to bad beats on camera, and maintains a flat expression throughout extended sessions.
That composure has earned him a reputation as a “silent assassin” among rail observers and commentators. It stands in contrast to more vocal high rollers who use speech play or psychological pressure.
Off the table, Chidwick kept an extremely low public profile for most of his career. He had no active social media presence until July 2025 and gave very few media interviews before his January 2026 Reddit AMA.
GPI Rankings & Awards
Chidwick’s ranking history on the Global Poker Index reflects two decades of sustained performance at the highest levels. He reached the top of the world rankings and held them for nearly half a year.
First British player to reach GPI world #1
On 18 April 2018, Chidwick became the first British player to reach #1 on the Global Poker Index. He climbed to the top of the world rankings following a run of deep finishes across high-roller events in early 2018, including his two USPO titles.
He held the #1 ranking for approximately 25 consecutive weeks, from April through early October 2018. The run coincided with his most prolific year for final table appearances, with 26 across the calendar year.
2018 GPI Player of the Year race
Despite holding the world #1 ranking for months, Chidwick did not win the 2018 GPI Player of the Year title. He finished as runner-up to back-to-back GPI winner Alex Foxen, who overtook him in the final stretch of the season.
Chidwick has never won the GPI world Player of the Year. It remains the one major individual award missing from his record, alongside a WSOP Main Event deep run.
UK GPI Player of the Year and other awards
Chidwick has won the UK GPI Player of the Year title ten times, including eight consecutive years from 2018 to 2025. No other British player has matched that streak.
He won the Card Player Magazine Player of the Year in both 2018 and 2022, based on points accumulated from live tournament results during each calendar year.
As of April 2026, Chidwick’s GPI ranking sits outside the world top 10. His focus on super high roller events, which carry fewer GPI points per dollar than mid-stakes tournaments, means his ranking does not always reflect his earnings volume.
Personal Life
Chidwick is one of the most private players in high-stakes poker. For most of his career, he shared almost nothing about his personal life publicly and gave very few interviews outside of tournament coverage.

Is Stephen Chidwick married?
Yes. Chidwick is married to Marine Chidwick. The couple have one daughter, born in approximately April 2019.
His online alias “TylersDad64” is a reference to his family life, though no further details about the name have been shared publicly.
Chidwick continues to live in Deal, Kent, the same town where he grew up. He has not relocated to a poker capital like Las Vegas or Malta, which is unusual among players at his earnings level.
Current Status & What's Next
As of 2026, Chidwick remains active on the global super high roller circuit. He has no poker room sponsorship and competes without a branded patch on his chest.
Does Stephen Chidwick have a poker sponsorship?
Chidwick has no poker room sponsorship. He is not affiliated with GGPoker, WPT Global, CoinPoker, ACR, or any other online poker room.
His only commercial affiliation is with Octopi Poker, a training platform where he serves as an ambassador and board member. He joined the Octopi team in approximately May 2025. Octopi is a poker coaching product, not a poker room.
Social media and public presence
After years of near-total silence online, Chidwick made his candid debut on social media in July 2025. His first post on X was a personal essay that received over 500,000 views and disclosed his experiences with potential ASD and mental health.
Since then, his posts have leaned philosophical, referencing thinkers like Iain McGilchrist and John Vervaeke. The tone suggests a shift in how he views poker’s place in his life.
His X account (@ChidwickStephen) had approximately 7,740 followers as of April 2026.
What’s next for Stephen Chidwick?
The gap between Chidwick and all-time leader Bryn Kenney stands at roughly $4 million. A single deep run at a Triton or WSOP super high roller could close that gap significantly.
The 2026 WSOP begins in late May. Chidwick’s PLO record at the Series makes him a contender for a third bracelet in that format.
For the latest results and coverage, see our top poker player profiles and career stats page.
FAQ
What is Stephen Chidwick's real name?
Stephen Chidwick’s full name is Stephen James Chidwick. He plays online under the aliases “stevie444” and “TylersDad64”.
Is Stephen Chidwick married?
Yes. Chidwick is married to Marine Chidwick. The couple have one daughter, born in approximately April 2019. He keeps his family life private.
What was Stephen Chidwick's GPI ranking?
Chidwick reached world #1 on the Global Poker Index on 18 April 2018, becoming the first British player to hold the top ranking. He held #1 for approximately 25 consecutive weeks. He has won the UK GPI Player of the Year ten times (2018-2025) but has never won the world GPI Player of the Year title.
What games does Stephen Chidwick play?
Chidwick competes in No Limit Hold’em, Pot Limit Omaha, Short Deck Hold’em, and Mixed Games. Both of his WSOP bracelets came in PLO, all three Triton titles in Short Deck, and his 2018 USPO run included a Mixed Game championship win.
Does Stephen Chidwick play online poker?
Chidwick built his early career playing online under the alias “stevie444.” His tracked PokerStars winnings total approximately $3.9 million. However, his online accounts have been inactive since mid-2020, and he now focuses exclusively on live tournaments.
How many tournament titles has Stephen Chidwick won?
As of March 2026, Chidwick has won 50 live tournament titles across WSOP, Triton, PGT, EPT, WPT, and independent events. The total updates with each new result.
Has Stephen Chidwick won the WSOP Main Event?
No. Chidwick’s best WSOP Main Event finish is 89th place in 2021. He has 87 WSOP cashes and 25 final tables across other events but has not made a deep Main Event run.
What is Octopi Poker?
Octopi Poker is a poker training platform, not a poker room. Chidwick joined as an ambassador and board member in approximately May 2025. He hosted a Reddit AMA through Octopi’s account in January 2026.
Does Stephen Chidwick have a poker nickname?
Chidwick has no widely established poker nickname. He uses “stevie444” and “TylersDad64” as online aliases. Commentators and rail observers sometimes refer to him as a “silent assassin” due to his quiet table presence.
Where does Stephen Chidwick live?
Chidwick lives in Deal, Kent, England, the same town where he was born and grew up. He has not relocated to a major poker centre like Las Vegas, London, or Malta.
Sources & Methodology
This profile draws on verified tournament results, official tour databases, and Chidwick’s own public statements. All earnings figures are sourced from The Hendon Mob unless otherwise noted.
We do not rely on a single source for any claim. Where figures conflict between databases, we note the discrepancy and cite the primary source used.
How we handle “net worth”
Net worth figures for poker players are estimates. No player in this profile has publicly disclosed a verified net worth. We present the best available range from credible sources, explain the methodology gaps, and distinguish clearly between gross earnings and net worth.
How we report earnings
Live tournament earnings are sourced from The Hendon Mob, the industry standard for tracked results. Online earnings are cited only when independently verified. We note that gross payouts do not equal profit due to buy-ins, staking, travel, and taxes.
How we cover controversies
Chidwick has no documented controversies, legal disputes, or cheating allegations on the public record. If relevant controversies emerge in the future, this section will be updated with sourced, factual reporting.
References
- The Hendon Mob – tracked live tournament cashes and results history
- WSOP.com – official bracelet record and series results
- Triton Poker – Super High Roller Series titles and results
- Global Poker Index – world ranking and Player of the Year standings
- PokerGO Tour – PGT player profile and season standings
- Wikipedia – basic biographical context (cross-checked where possible)
- @ChidwickStephen on X – official social media account
