David Peters’ Life: Net Worth, Losses and Private Life

Legends of Poker
Csaba Szirják
Csaba SzirjákEditor-in-Chief
Reviewed by Callum Jury

David Peters is an American professional poker player born on April 16, 1987 in Toledo, Ohio - where he still lives. Known as the “Silent Assassin” for his quiet demeanour and deadly precision at the table, he has $38.85 million in live tournament earnings, sits in the top 10 on the Hendon Mob all-time money list, holds three WSOP gold bracelets, and has accumulated over $6.5 million in online MTT earnings. His estimated net worth is between $15 million and $25 million.

You can view his full poker profile on Somuchpoker here .

He taught himself poker in 2004 after watching the Moneymaker boom , played a few freerolls, won $600 from one of them, and began building toward a career that has produced one of the most consistent high-roller records in modern poker. He won the GPI Player of the Year award in 2016 - a year in which he earned $7.5 million in live tournament winnings alone - and plays as “dpeters17” on PokerStars .

David Peters | Key Facts (2026)

PersonalPokerOnline
David Peters (“Silent Assassin”)
Born April 16, 1987, Toledo, Ohio
Based in Toledo, Ohio
Self-taught poker player
Estimated net worth: $15M–$25M
$38.85M total live earnings
276 recorded live ITM finishes
3 WSOP Gold Bracelets, 1 WSOP Circuit Ring
64 WSOP cashes ($4.601M combined)
Biggest live cash: $2,700,000
“dpeters17” on PokerStars ($5.187M)
“Davidp18” on Full Tilt ($1.496M)
$6.683M total online MTT earnings
1 WCOOP title
2016 Sunday Million winner ($143,505)

Who Is David Peters?

David Peters
Credit: TLPT

Peters grew up in Toledo and has never left - a quietly unusual detail for a player who travels the world competing at the highest stakes in the game. He taught himself poker in 2004 in the wake of the Moneymaker boom, entered some freerolls, and won $600 from one of them. That was the beginning.

By 2006, he was a regular in big buy-in tournaments across the US and internationally. His first recorded live cash - 7th at the $5,000 NLHE event at the Ongame Network Poker Classic in Barcelona for $56,549 - arrived in December of that year. He won a Heartland Poker Tour Main Event in 2008 for $130,178. He won a WSOP Circuit ring the same year.

The quiet, methodical progression - without drama, without controversy, without social media noise - eventually produced one of the deepest live tournament records in the history of the game. 276 cashes, top 10 all-time on Hendon, three bracelets, and a 2016 season that stands as one of the most productive single years any tournament player has put together.

What Does David Peters Do for a Living?

Peters earns across live tournaments and online play, with a clear preference for the tournament circuit over cash games.

  • Live Tournaments: His primary focus and the source of almost all his earnings. With $38.85 million across 276 cashes and 16 years, Peters has been one of the most consistently productive players on the global circuit. He competes across the WSOP , Triton Super High Roller Series , PokerGO Tour, US Poker Open, and various partypoker LIVE events, consistently performing deep in high buy-in fields.
  • Online Tournaments: A secondary but substantial track record, with $6.683 million in tracked MTT earnings across PokerStars and Full Tilt. He has one WCOOP title, a 2016 Sunday Million victory, and a runner-up at the WCOOP $25,000 High Roller for $561,904.
  • Cash Games: He has always prioritised tournaments over cash games and has not appeared in any televised or streamed cash game productions.

David Peters Net Worth 2026 - What the Numbers Actually Show

David Peters Poker Player
Credit: Pokernews

The $15 million to $25 million estimate is a range, not a confirmed figure. His Hendon Mob profile shows $38.85 million in live earnings and his PocketFives profile shows over $6.6 million in online MTT results - a combined gross of over $45 million.

The gap between those gross figures and the net worth estimate reflects the economics of high-roller tournament play: buy-ins at $25,000 to $300,000 across hundreds of events over 16 years, taxes, staking and action-swapping arrangements, and the natural variance of competing at the very top of the game for an extended period.

Even at a conservative net of 40–50% of gross live earnings, the figure lands comfortably in the $15–25 million range. The online results add further. The absence of cash game income and the relatively quiet commercial profile - no long-running sponsorship, no major ambassador deals - means the tournament record tells most of the financial story.

David Peters’s Tournament Record – Top Career Scores

YearEventFinishPrize
2016$200,000 NLHE, Triton Super High Roller Series , Philippines2nd$2,700,000
2018€100,000 King’s Super High Roller, WSOP Europe, Rozvadov2nd€1,622,000
2021$200,000 NLHE Aria Super High Roller, PokerGO Tour3rd$1,387,000
2015$500,000 Super High Roller Bowl, Aria, Las Vegas5th$1,505,000
2018$250,000 NLHE Super High Roller, partypoker Caribbean Poker Party, Bahamas3rd$1,420,000
2019$100,000 Main Event, US Poker Open, Aria, Las Vegas1st$1,238,000

The 2016 Breakout: Peters earned $7.5 million in live tournament winnings in 2016 - a single-year performance that earned him the GPI Player of the Year award. His biggest score from that year, and the biggest of his career, was a runner-up finish at the Triton Super High Roller in the Philippines for $2.7 million, where he lost heads-up to Fedor Holz. He also won his first WSOP gold bracelet in the same year.

The WSOP Record

Peters has three WSOP bracelets across a span of five years - 2016, 2020, and 2021 - with the latter two coming from online events during and after the pandemic period. His WSOP record across 64 cashes and $4.601 million in combined earnings is one of the strongest active records in the game, though the bracelet from a live event remains the standout result for 2016.

He came particularly close to a fourth bracelet in 2018, finishing runner-up in the WSOP Europe €100,000 King’s Super High Roller at Rozvadov for €1.622 million - his biggest WSOP cash.

The 2016 Season


Peters’s 2016 season deserves its own section. The $7.5 million in live winnings across a single calendar year, the GPI Player of the Year award, a Triton Super High Roller runner-up for $2.7 million, a WSOP bracelet, and multiple other major final tables - it is the kind of year that defines a career, and for Peters it confirmed what had been building across a decade of steady progress.

The Unanswered Questions

The public record only goes so far. Here is what we genuinely do not know:

  • What his staking and action-swap arrangements look like: At buy-ins of $25,000 to $300,000 across hundreds of events, backing and action-swapping is standard practice. How much of the $38.85 million gross represents his own net profit is not publicly known.
  • Whether a fourth live WSOP bracelet arrives: He has three, two of which are from online events. A third live bracelet would be the natural next milestone. With 64 WSOP cashes and multiple runner-up finishes, the record suggests it is a matter of time.
  • Whether the GPI Player of the Year comes again: He has described it as a major personal goal. His consistent output gives him a realistic claim on the award in any strong year.
  • What his 2022–2026 volume has looked like: His peak documented results run through 2021. Whether that pace has continued or moderated since is only partially visible in the public record.

David Peters Career Timeline

DateMilestone
2004Teaches himself poker after watching the Moneymaker boom. Plays freerolls and wins $600 from one of them.
2006Begins competing regularly in big buy-in events. First recorded live cash - 7th at the Ongame Network Poker Classic in Barcelona for $56,549. Wins a $33 online tournament on PokerStars for $12,360 - his first tracked online result.
2008Wins the Heartland Poker Tour Main Event for $130,178 - his first live cash above $100K. Wins a WSOP Circuit ring at the Caesars Palace event for $86,908.
2014Wins his first WCOOP title on PokerStars.
2015Finishes 5th in the Aria Super High Roller Bowl for $1,505,000 - his first seven-figure live result.
2016Career-defining year. Earns $7.5M in live winnings including a runner-up at Triton Philippines for $2.7M. Wins his first WSOP gold bracelet for $412,557. Wins the GPI Player of the Year award. Wins the Sunday Million online for $143,505.
2018Finishes runner-up at WSOP Europe €100K Super High Roller for €1.622M. Finishes 3rd at the partypoker Caribbean Poker Party $250K Super High Roller for $1.42M. Runner-up at WCOOP $25K High Roller for $561,904.
2019Wins the US Poker Open $100K Main Event for $1.238M.
2020Wins his second WSOP gold bracelet - the $10,000 Heads-Up NLHE Championship Online for $360,480.
2021Wins his third WSOP gold bracelet - the $7,777 Lucky 7’s High Roller Online for $283,940. Finishes 3rd in the Aria Super High Roller on the PokerGO Tour for $1.387M.

What Is David Peters’s Outlook in 2026?

At 39 in 2026, Peters is in the heart of his most productive years. His trajectory - steady, methodical, unflashy - has put him in the top 10 all-time on the Hendon list without a single moment of viral controversy, celebrity crossover, or public drama. The Silent Assassin has let the results speak.

A fourth bracelet in a live event, a second GPI Player of the Year, or another $2 million+ score would each be natural next chapters. His 276 cashes and consistent presence at the top of high-roller fields suggest the pipeline remains full.

Toledo, Ohio still produces one of the best tournament players in the world. That has not changed.

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About the Editor
Csaba Szirják
Csaba Szirják

Chaar-Lee is the Editor-in-Chief and Technical Architect of SoMuchPoker. With over 20 years across poker media, television production, and enterprise software development (including WorldSkills and EuroSkills recognition as a mentor and expert) he brings rare depth to every editorial and technical decision on this platform. He works exclusively on international poker and iGaming markets.