Kristen Foxen Net Worth 2026: Career Earnings, 6 WSOP Bracelets & Poker Bio
Kristen Foxen is the most decorated woman in World Series of Poker history. Born in St. Catharines, Ontario in 1986, she holds six WSOP bracelets: twice as many as any other woman.
Her tracked live tournament earnings total ~$18,970,494 across 295 cashes. She sits atop the women’s all-time money list with a lead of roughly $8 million over Vanessa Selbst.

This profile separates what’s verifiable from what’s estimated. Foxen’s tracked results are public record, but net worth figures found online carry no disclosed methodology. We use multiple databases and flag where figures diverge to give the most transparent picture available.
Below you’ll find quick facts, a net worth breakdown, her complete WSOP bracelet record, career earnings tables, online poker history, GPI awards, coaching work, controversies, personal life, and answers to the most searched questions about poker’s record-breaking female player.
Player Quick Facts

- Full Name: Kristen Foxen (née Kristen Bicknell)
- Nicknames: krissyb24, Ultimate Grinder
- Born: December 29, 1986 (age 39)
- Nationality: Canadian
- Hometown: St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada
- Residence: Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
- Education: Carleton University (criminology, incomplete)
- Net Worth (Estimate): $5M to $10M (not publicly confirmed)
- Live Tournament Earnings: ~$18,970,494 (295 cashes, per Hendon Mob)
- WSOP Bracelets: 6 (most by any woman in history)
- Primary Format: No-Limit Hold'em tournaments
- Known For: Most WSOP bracelets by a woman (6); #1 women's all-time money list; five-time GPI Female POY; Women in Poker Hall of Fame (2024)
- Current Sponsor: WePoker (ambassador)
Kristen Foxen's Net Worth
Kristen Foxen’s net worth is not publicly confirmed. The most commonly cited third-party estimate places it between $5 million and $10 million. Nobody outside Foxen’s inner circle knows the real number.
What we can do is show what’s verifiable, explain where the popular estimates come from, and break down why gross tournament earnings never equal take-home wealth.
What is Kristen Foxen’s net worth?
A handful of poker media outlets and biography sites publish “Kristen Foxen net worth” figures, but none explain how they arrive at their numbers. Here is what the landscape looks like:
- 888poker / poker media: $5 million to $10 million (no methodology disclosed)
- Various biography sites: $3M to $10M range (no primary sources cited, figures likely recycled from 888poker)
- VIP-Grinders assessment: not possible to verify. Foxen's private cash game results, staking splits, coaching income, and ambassador deals are all off the public record
The $5M to $10M range reflects that gross payouts are not profit. Buy-ins, staking splits, travel, taxes, and coaching expenses eat into Foxen’s ~$19M in tracked cashes. The estimate is a rough ballpark at best.
What we can verify: tracked live tournament earnings
Foxen’s tracked live tournament earnings total ~$18,970,494 across 295 recorded cashes, per The Hendon Mob. That figure is real, publicly auditable, and updated after every tracked event.
Card Player’s database lists a higher figure of $20,729,755 because it includes more confirmed online results. Both numbers are legitimate. The gap is methodological, not an error.
That figure puts Foxen at roughly 80th on poker’s all-time money list and 5th in Canada. She overtook Vanessa Selbst’s career total in September 2025 to become the highest-earning female tournament player ever.
Her lead now sits at roughly $8 million.
The missing piece: staking, coaching, and sponsorships
The reason Foxen’s net worth is difficult to pin down comes down to five factors that are impossible to verify from the outside:
- Tournament buy-ins and expenses: A player who cashes for $1.7M in a $25,000 event has not profited $1.7M. Entry fees, re-entries, travel, and coaching costs reduce take-home substantially.
- Staking and backing: High-roller fields require significant bankroll management. Foxen sells action via PokerStake, meaning a percentage of every cash goes to investors. The splits are never disclosed.
- Coaching income: As a Chip Leader Coaching instructor and private coach, Foxen earns from group sessions and one-on-one coaching. These figures are not public.
- Sponsorship and ambassador deals: Foxen was a partypoker pro from 2018 to 2021 and signed with WePoker in 2025. Neither deal's financial terms have been reported.
- Online poker results: Foxen's online career spans millions of hands at stakes up to $2/$4. Her tracked online earnings are partially captured by Card Player but not fully public.
Career Earnings & Tournament Results
Foxen’s tournament record spans live high rollers, WSOP events, Triton super high rollers, and the PokerGO Tour. She recorded four seven-figure cashes in a single twelve-month stretch from September 2025 to June 2026.
Her results split across two databases. Hendon Mob is the primary source for the figures below unless stated otherwise.
Top 10 live tournament cashes
| # | Amount | Event | Finish | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $1,773,083 | WSOP 2026 $25K High Roller | 1st | Jun 2026 |
| 2 | $1,449,000 | Triton Jeju $100K Main Event | 4th | Mar 2026 |
| 3 | $1,104,000 | Triton Jeju $125K NLH 7-Handed | 3rd | Sep 2025 |
| 4 | $1,039,000 | Triton Montenegro $50K NLH 8-Handed | 2nd | May 2026 |
| 5 | $600,000 | 2024 WSOP $10K Main Event | 13th | Jul 2024 |
| 6 | $408,000 | 2019 Poker Masters $25K NLH | 1st | Nov 2019 |
| 7 | $384,000 | Triton Montenegro $200K Invitational | 16th | May 2026 |
| 8 | $356,412 | 2020 WSOP Online $2,500 6-Handed | 1st | 2020 |
| 9 | $348,300 | 2025 PokerGO Cup $15,100 | 1st | Feb 2025 |
| 10 | $343,000 | Triton Montenegro $30K NLH 8-Handed | 4th | May 2026 |
Five of her top ten are from Triton events. The $356,412 at row 8 is an online result included in overall totals. In a strictly live-cash ranking, it would drop off.
WSOP bracelet results
Foxen holds six WSOP bracelets, all in no-limit hold’em. That is twice as many as any other woman: Vanessa Selbst, Barbara Enright, and Nani Dollison are tied for second with three each. Her full WSOP bracelet record is tracked on WSOP.com.
| # | Year | Event | Prize |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2013 | $1,000 Ladies NLH Championship | $173,922 |
| 2 | 2016 | $1,500 NLH Bounty | $290,768 |
| 3 | 2020 | $2,500 NLH 6-Handed (Online, GGPoker) | $356,412 |
| 4 | 2023 | $888 NLH Crazy 8’s (Online) | $92,142 |
| 5 | 2024 | $1,000 NLH 6-Max (Online) | $56,703 |
| 6 | 2026 | $25,000 High Roller NLH (Event #19) | $1,773,083 |
The 2024 online win made her the first woman with five bracelets. The 2026 win made her the first with six. It was also her first live bracelet since 2016 and her career-best cash.
How did Kristen Foxen win the WSOP 2026 $25K High Roller?
Event #19 drew 345 entries across two starting flights, building an $8,107,500 prize pool. Foxen entered the final table second in chips behind Galen Hall.
Key eliminations included Zdenek Zizka in 6th ($300,942), Ignacio Moron in 5th ($413,389), Joey Weissman in 4th ($577,326), and Biao Ding in 3rd.
In the final hand, Foxen limped A♥ A♦ on the button. Hall jammed A♣ 4♦ and the board ran out K♦ 9♣ 8♦ 5♥ 2♣ to change nothing.
Hall earned $1,182,050 as runner-up. The result is logged in the WSOP 2026 daily results tracker.
The win earned Foxen 750 PGT points and 1,680 Card Player POY points, lifting her to 2nd in the Card Player Player of the Year race.

Triton Poker: three seven-figure cashes in twelve months
Foxen has 16+ cashes on the Triton Poker circuit. Three of those reached seven figures between September 2025 and May 2026.
The $1,104,000 third-place finish at Triton Jeju in September 2025 cemented her position atop the women’s all-time money list. The $1,449,000 fourth at the March 2026 Triton Jeju $100K Main Event was her career-best cash until the WSOP win three months later.
At that March final table, Foxen folded pocket kings preflop in an extreme ICM spot. The kings would have made top set. The fold sparked wide debate across poker media and remains one of the most discussed hands of 2026.
PokerGO Tour dominance
Foxen is one of the most active players on the PokerGO Tour circuit. Her PGT wins include repeat victories in the PGT Kickoff Event #5 ($165,000 in 2024, $197,625 in 2025), the 2025 PokerGO Cup Event #7 ($348,300), and the 2025 U.S. Poker Open Event #1 ($158,025).
After the WSOP 2026 $25K High Roller win, she sat 2nd on the 2026 PGT leaderboard with 1,258 points, roughly 13 behind leader Brock Wilson.
WPT and other notable wins
Foxen’s WPT record includes a win at the 2017 WPT Five Diamond Series Event #13 ($199,840 at the Bellagio). Card Player credits her ~$610,533 in WPT winnings with three final tables but no WPT Championship title.
Other career highlights: the 2018 APPT National High Roller in Macau ($279,549, beating David Peters heads-up) and the 2019 Poker Masters $25K title ($408,000, beating Chance Kornuth heads-up). The Poker Masters win made her the first woman to win a Poker Masters event.
WSOP 2024 Main Event: 13th place for $600,000
Foxen’s 13th-place finish in the 2024 WSOP Main Event was the highest by a woman since 2012. She narrowly missed becoming the first woman at the Main Event final table since Barbara Enright in 1995.
She busted to Joe Serock and faced some online criticism of her exit hand, which she addressed candidly. The $600,000 payout remains her fifth-largest career cash.
Online Poker Career
Foxen built her game online before she ever sat in a live high-roller field. Her online volume across PokerStars and Full Tilt Poker gave her a speed of development that few live-only players can match.
Supernova Elite: 2.5 million hands per year
Foxen played under the screen name “krissyb24” on PokerStars and “krissy24” on Full Tilt Poker. She achieved Supernova Elite status in 2011, 2012, and 2013: three consecutive years at the highest tier of the PokerStars VIP programme.
Reaching Supernova Elite required playing approximately 2.5 million hands per year. One secondary source estimates she logged 7.5 million+ hands across those three years combined.
Her primary stakes were $1/$2 to $2/$4 cash games, running as many as 24 tables at once. The volume was extreme but deliberate. She has said the sheer number of hands helped her develop pattern recognition in a fraction of the time older pros needed.
How did Kristen Foxen earn the ‘Ultimate Grinder’ nickname?
Foxen gave herself the nickname in 2012, using it as the title of her Card Player blog. It described her approach at the time: grinding mid-stakes cash games across dozens of simultaneous tables for hours on end.
She was studying criminology at Carleton University in Ottawa when her online results hit six figures. She left university roughly two classes short of a degree to play poker full time. The decision paid off within months.

Online bracelets and screen names
Three of Foxen’s six WSOP bracelets came from online events. The 2020 bracelet was won on GGPoker during the pandemic-era online series. The 2023 and 2024 bracelets were both won in WSOP Online events.
For the 2024 win she played under the screen name “Saraswati”. The complete bracelet details, including prizes, are listed in the Career Earnings section above.
Poker Career Timeline
Foxen’s career arc runs from watching poker on television as a teenager in Ontario to holding more WSOP bracelets than any woman in the game’s history. The timeline below traces the key turning points.
Early life and the road to poker
Foxen grew up in St. Catharines, Ontario. She was drawn to poker watching Poker After Dark and has cited Jennifer Harman as her earliest inspiration.
Harman was the first woman to win two open WSOP bracelets. Her composure at the table convinced Foxen that a woman could compete at the highest level.
She enrolled at Carleton University in Ottawa around 2005 to study criminology. By the time her online cash game earnings cleared six figures, she left university to play full time. The Supernova Elite years that followed are covered in the Online Poker Career section above.
2013 to 2016: first two bracelets and the live pivot
Foxen won her first WSOP bracelet in 2013 in the $1,000 Ladies Championship. It was her first major live result after years of online grinding.
Three years later she took down the 2016 $1,500 NLH Bounty for her second bracelet. The win signalled her shift from online volume player to live tournament competitor.
2017 to 2019: three straight GPI Female Player of the Year titles
This stretch established Foxen as the dominant female tournament player of her generation. She won the GPI Female Player of the Year award in 2017, 2018, and 2019: three consecutive titles.
Key results during this run: the 2017 WPT Five Diamond win at the Bellagio, the 2018 APPT National High Roller in Macau, and the 2019 Poker Masters $25K title.
In 2018 she signed with partypoker as a sponsored pro and appeared on Poker After Dark’s “Femme Fatale” week, finishing as a top earner. The same network that had inspired her as a teenager now featured her at the table.

2020 to 2022: pandemic bracelet, partypoker exit, and marriage
Foxen won her third bracelet in the 2020 WSOP Online series on GGPoker: a $2,500 NLH 6-Handed event that ran during the height of COVID lockdowns.
In August 2021 she and partypoker parted ways with no stated reason. That same year, both Foxen and husband Alex Foxen were vocal opponents of the WSOP’s vaccine mandate, calling for a boycott. The controversy is covered in the Controversies section below.
She married Alex Foxen in April 2022 in a small ceremony in the Florida Keys. Days later the couple was back at the felt for the WPT Seminole Hard Rock Poker Open.
2023 to present: the record-breaking run
From 2023 onward Foxen’s results accelerated sharply. She won back-to-back online bracelets in 2023 and 2024, becoming the first woman with four and then five WSOP bracelets.
In July 2024 she finished 13th in the WSOP Main Event for $600,000. In December 2024 she was inducted into the Women in Poker Hall of Fame.
She signed with WePoker as an ambassador in 2025 and won her fifth GPI Female Player of the Year title. In September 2025 a Triton Jeju cash pushed her past Vanessa Selbst on the women’s all-time money list.
On June 7, 2026 she won the WSOP $25,000 High Roller for $1,773,083 and her record sixth bracelet. The full final table breakdown is in the Career Earnings section above.
Playing Style & Reputation
Foxen’s game was forged in the extreme volume of online multi-tabling. That foundation shows in how she plays live: fast reads, minimal hesitation, and a discipline built on millions of repetitions.
Volume-built pattern recognition
Running up to 24 tables simultaneously for three years gave Foxen a speed of pattern recognition that most live-only players take a decade to develop. She has described the online grind as compressing years of experience into months.
At the table she is known for relentless attentiveness. A coaching student described her as “a hawk.” She rarely uses her phone during hands and maintains focus across long tournament days. That discipline carries over from the multi-tabling era, where any lapse across two dozen screens meant lost EV.
Why does Kristen Foxen play high rollers?
Foxen is a no-limit hold’em specialist. All six of her WSOP bracelets are in NLHE. She now plays primarily in high-roller and super-high-roller fields where female representation is lowest.
That is deliberate. She has spoken openly about choosing those fields to challenge the assumption that women do not belong in top-tier events.
“Just because you’re a female doesn’t mean you don’t belong there or that you can’t do it.” – Kristen Foxen
Her earlier career included mixed-game and cash exposure, including a Poker After Dark appearance in 2018. But her elite results are concentrated in NLHE tournaments, and that is where she continues to focus.
The mindset shift: playing without fear
After painful near-misses in 2024 and early 2026, Foxen described a change in her mental approach. The 2024 Main Event bustout in 13th and the folded pocket kings at Triton Jeju both stung. But she framed the pain as a release.
“I’ve had some big moments that didn’t go my way, and in a way it’s a blessing because the worst case happened. I didn’t have any fear anymore.” – Kristen Foxen
That fearlessness showed at the WSOP 2026 $25K High Roller final table, where she limped pocket aces on the button heads-up and let Galen Hall jam into her. The trap was clinical.
GPI Records & Player of the Year Awards
Foxen’s consistency across seasons is measured most clearly by the Global Poker Index. No woman has won the GPI Female Player of the Year award more often, and the margins of her best seasons were not close.
How many times has Kristen Foxen won GPI Female Player of the Year?
Foxen has won the GPI Female Player of the Year award five times: 2017, 2018, 2019, 2023, and 2025. No other woman has won it more than twice.
- 2017: 2,627.75 points. First title. Ranked ahead of Maria Ho as the highest-ranked female live player.
- 2018: Back-to-back title during her partypoker sponsorship era.
- 2019: 3,175.37 points. Third consecutive title, cementing a three-year run no other woman has matched.
- 2023: First title in four years, coinciding with her fourth WSOP bracelet win.
- 2025: 3,734.64 points across 39 cashes and 3 outright victories. Won by 700+ points over runner-up Cherish Andrews.

The 2025 title was her most dominant. The 700-point gap over Andrews was the largest winning margin in the award’s recent history. The overall 2025 GPI Player of the Year went to Punnat Punsri, the first Asian player to win the main award.
Where does Foxen rank among female poker players historically?
By the measurable criteria, Foxen holds three records no other woman has matched: most WSOP bracelets (6), highest career live earnings (~$18.97M), and most GPI Female POY titles (5).
Maria Ho was runner-up to Foxen in the 2017 GPI race and remains one of the most consistent female tournament players. Vanessa Selbst held the women’s earnings record from her 2017 retirement until Foxen passed her in September 2025.
The Global Poker Awards ceremony was cancelled for 2026, though GPI rankings continued to publish. Foxen’s combined bracelet, earnings, and POY records make her the strongest statistical case for the most accomplished female tournament player in poker history.
Coaching & Chip Leader Coaching
Beyond her own results, Foxen coaches other tournament players. She is part of the instruction team at Chip Leader Coaching and takes private students alongside her playing schedule.
What is Chip Leader Coaching?
Chip Leader Coaching (CLC) is an MTT training programme founded by Chance Kornuth and Alex Foxen. Foxen features in the CLC Inner Circle group-coaching programme and offers one-on-one sessions through her own coaching contact.
Her approach draws on the volume-built foundation covered in the Playing Style section: pattern recognition drilled across millions of hands, applied to modern high-roller fields. Her Instagram bio lists “Coach @clcpoker.”
Philip Chun: a coaching success story at WSOP 2026
Philip Chun, himself a CLC coach, won the 2026 WSOP $550 Mini Mystery Millions (Event #1) for $400,000. Before the final day he called Foxen for an hour-long coaching session. He had texted her at 3 a.m.
“I would not be here holding the bracelet if it wasn’t for Kristen as my coach.” – Philip Chun
The anecdote captures the dual role Foxen now fills: competing at the highest buy-in levels while actively developing tournament players through CLC.
Controversies & Public Disputes
Foxen’s career has drawn public scrutiny on three occasions. Each involved the dynamics of competing as one half of a high-profile poker couple. The section below reports what was alleged, what Foxen said in response, and where each matter stands.
The 2021 WSOP vaccine mandate controversy
In 2021 the WSOP introduced a COVID-19 vaccine mandate for all players. Both Kristen and Alex Foxen were among the most vocal opponents, calling for a boycott of the series.
Alex tweeted that it was “really unfortunate to see the WSOP become the next arm of pharmaceutical influence.” Kristen publicly echoed anti-mandate views. Critics including Vanessa Kade challenged their position. Max Silver accused Alex of using the campaign to promote a poker-tracking app.
The mandate was enforced. The Foxens did not play the 2021 WSOP live series. The controversy faded after the mandate was dropped for 2022, but the episode remains part of their public record.

Softplaying allegations at the 2018 MSPT Venetian
After Kristen and Alex finished first and second at a $5,000 MSPT Venetian event in 2018, Australian pro James Obst publicly accused the couple of soft-playing each other during three-handed action.
Kristen denied the allegation. She explained that her table conversation with Alex was unrelated to strategy. The episode was later discussed in a Doug Polk video and has resurfaced whenever the couple makes a deep joint run in the same event.
Ghosting accusations after the 2020 WSOP Online bracelet
After Foxen won her third bracelet in the 2020 WSOP Online series, some on social media suggested that Alex may have “ghosted” the win: secretly played the account on her behalf.
The claims were widely condemned as sexist. Players including Danielle Andersen and Jason Koon defended Foxen, noting she was the more accomplished player when the couple began dating. Foxen had two bracelets and Supernova Elite status before Alex’s career took off.
Foxen responded that the misogyny within the industry was what bothered her most about the episode. No evidence of ghosting was ever presented.
Personal Life
This section covers personal details not already listed in the Quick Facts card above. For biographical basics (birthdate, hometown, nationality, education), see the Quick Facts.
How old is Kristen Foxen?
Foxen was born on December 29, 1986. She is currently 39 years old.
Who is Kristen Foxen married to?
Foxen married fellow poker professional Alex Foxen in April 2022 in a small ceremony in the Florida Keys. They forwent a honeymoon and were back at the felt days later for the WPT Seminole Hard Rock Poker Open.
They met through poker. Kristen was already a two-time bracelet winner when they began dating. That counters the “sidekick” framing that some observers have applied.
The couple are described as poker’s premier “power couple,” alongside Jennifer Tilly and Phil Laak, and Liv Boeree and Igor Kurganov in our poker power couples guide. Their combined live earnings exceed $70 million. No children have been reported as of early 2026.
Life away from the table
Foxen lives in Las Vegas, Nevada. She keeps her personal life relatively private compared to her public poker presence.
Her social media activity centres on poker results, coaching, and her WePoker ambassadorship. She was inducted into the Women in Poker Hall of Fame in December 2024, accepting the honour via video while playing WSOP Paradise.
Latest News & Updates
As of June 2026, Foxen is in the middle of the WSOP schedule at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas. On June 7 she won the $25,000 High Roller (Event #19) for $1,773,083: her record sixth bracelet and career-best cash.
That win capped a twelve-month run that reshaped the record books. In September 2025 a $1,104,000 Triton Jeju cash pushed her past Vanessa Selbst on the women’s all-time money list. In March 2026 she finished fourth in the Triton Jeju $100K Main Event for $1,449,000.
May 2026 brought three more cashes at Triton Montenegro, including a $1,039,000 runner-up finish in the $50K NLH 8-Handed. Four seven-figure cashes in twelve months lifted her PGT standing to 2nd on the 2026 leaderboard.
Away from the felt, she was inducted into the Women in Poker Hall of Fame in December 2024 alongside Jeanne David. In 2025 she won her fifth GPI Female Player of the Year title and signed with WePoker as ambassador.
She remains active on the Triton Poker, PokerGO Tour, and WSOP circuits. For the latest bracelet results and standings, see our poker news page.
Frequently Asked Questions About Kristen Foxen
Quick answers to the most searched questions about Kristen Foxen’s net worth, earnings, personal life, and poker career.
What is Kristen Foxen's net worth?
Kristen Foxen’s net worth is not publicly confirmed. The most commonly cited third-party estimate places it between $5 million and $10 million. That range reflects her ~$18.97M in tracked live earnings minus buy-ins, staking splits, taxes, and expenses. The real figure depends on private cash game results, coaching income, and ambassador deals that are off the public record.
How old is Kristen Foxen?
Kristen Foxen was born on December 29, 1986. She is currently 39 years old.
How much has Kristen Foxen earned in poker?
Foxen has ~$18,970,494 in tracked live tournament earnings across 295 cashes, per The Hendon Mob. Card Player’s database lists $20,729,755 because it includes more confirmed online results. Both figures are gross payouts before expenses.
How many WSOP bracelets does Kristen Foxen have?
Foxen holds six WSOP bracelets, all in no-limit hold’em. That is the most by any woman in history. Vanessa Selbst, Barbara Enright, and Nani Dollison are tied for second with three each. Her most recent bracelet came at the 2026 WSOP $25,000 High Roller.
Who is Kristen Foxen married to?
Foxen is married to fellow poker professional Alex Foxen. They married in April 2022 in the Florida Keys. Their combined live earnings exceed $70 million. Before marrying, Kristen competed under her maiden name Kristen Bicknell.
Is Kristen Foxen still playing poker?
Yes. As of June 2026, Foxen is actively competing on the WSOP, Triton Poker, and PokerGO Tour circuits. She won the WSOP $25,000 High Roller in June 2026 and sits 2nd on the 2026 PGT leaderboard.
What is Kristen Foxen's real name?
Her birth name is Kristen Bicknell. She took the surname Foxen after marrying Alex Foxen in 2022. Her online screen names include “krissyb24” (PokerStars), “krissy24” (Full Tilt Poker), and “Saraswati” (2024 WSOP Online).
Where is Kristen Foxen from?
Foxen was born and raised in St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada. She attended Carleton University in Ottawa before leaving to play poker full time. She currently lives in Las Vegas, Nevada.
What is Supernova Elite?
Supernova Elite was the highest VIP tier on PokerStars, requiring approximately 2.5 million hands per year. Foxen achieved it in 2011, 2012, and 2013, playing $1/$2 to $2/$4 cash games across up to 24 tables simultaneously. The programme no longer exists.
Does Kristen Foxen offer coaching?
Yes. Foxen is an instructor at Chip Leader Coaching (CLC), the MTT training programme founded by Chance Kornuth and Alex Foxen. She offers group coaching through the CLC Inner Circle and private one-on-one sessions.
Has Kristen Foxen won the WSOP Main Event?
No. Foxen’s best Main Event result is 13th place in 2024 for $600,000. That was the highest finish by a woman since 2012. She narrowly missed becoming the first woman at the Main Event final table since Barbara Enright in 1995.
How many GPI Female Player of the Year titles does Kristen Foxen have?
Foxen has won the GPI Female Player of the Year award five times: 2017, 2018, 2019, 2023, and 2025. No other woman has won it more than twice. Her 2025 title was the most dominant, with a 700+ point margin over runner-up Cherish Andrews.
Sources and Methodology
This player profile separates verifiable facts from estimates and public claims. We cannot accurately calculate any player’s net worth, but we aim to publish transparent, verifiable information.
How we handle ‘net worth’
We do not treat any net worth figure as fact. Third-party estimates are reported with their source and caveats. Where no credible methodology is disclosed, we say so.
Foxen’s $5M to $10M range comes from 888poker and poker media. We present it as an estimate, not a confirmed figure.
How we report earnings
Tournament earnings figures come from The Hendon Mob (live results) and Card Player (broader database including some online results). We cite both where they diverge.
All figures are gross payouts before buy-ins, staking splits, taxes, and expenses. We update earnings after each major series.
How we cover controversies
We report what was alleged, what the player said in response, and where the matter stands. We do not take sides.
Where claims were investigated, we note the outcome. Where no evidence was presented, we say so. The vaccine mandate, softplaying, and ghosting sections above follow this approach.
References
The sources below were used in researching this profile. Social media links are included for verification and attribution.
- The Hendon Mob - verified live tournament earnings, cashes, and all-time rankings
- WSOP.com - official bracelet record and WSOP event results
- Triton Poker - super high roller series results
- PokerGO Tour - PGT leaderboard and event results
- Global Poker Index - GPI rankings and Female Player of the Year records
- Wikipedia - basic biographical context (cross-checked where possible)
- Instagram: @kristenfoxen - official account
- X (Twitter): @KristenBicknell - official account
