Erik Seidel’s Life: Biggest profits and losses, Private life and Net worth

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

Erik Seidel is an American professional poker player born on November 6, 1959 in New York City. He has nine WSOP gold bracelets, one WPT title, and a career that spans over three decades at the highest levels of the game. He is a Poker Hall of Fame inductee (2010) with a total live tournament record placing him among the most accomplished players in history. His estimated net worth is between $15 million and $25 million.

You can view his full poker profile on Somuchpoker here .

Nicknamed “Sly” and “Seiborg” by fans, Seidel is known for his understated table demeanour, his reluctance to show hole cards on camera, and a consistency of elite performance across formats and eras that almost no other player can match. He was a founding member of Full Tilt’s design team, mentored New York Times bestselling author Maria Konnikova through her poker journey, and remains a dedicated family man who lives in Las Vegas with his wife Ruah and their two daughters.

Erik Seidel | Key Facts (2026)

PersonalPokerCareer
Erik Seidel (“Seiborg”)
Born November 6, 1959, New York City
Based in Las Vegas (since 1995)
Married to Ruah, two daughters
Estimated net worth: $15M–$25M
9 WSOP Gold Bracelets, 1 WPT Title
130 WSOP ITM finishes
36 WSOP final tables
Poker Hall of Fame inductee (2010)
Biggest live cash: $2,472,555
Former Full Tilt founding team member
Full Tilt owes him ~$5 million
Mentor to author Maria Konnikova
1988 WSOP Main Event runner-up
Backgammon professional before poker

Who Is Erik Seidel?

Erik Seidel
Credit: APT

Seidel’s competitive nature showed early - he appeared on the TV game show To Tell the Truth at age 12. As a college student in the 1970s, he began playing backgammon seriously, dropped out of school to play professionally, and spent the better part of eight years as a successful professional backgammon player. When the gaming circuit began to wear on him, he made an unlikely detour into stockbroking in 1985.

The 1987 stock market crash cost him that job. He returned to the Mayfair Club - New York’s famous card room - but this time turned to poker instead of backgammon. He was immediately good at it. So good that regulars at the club offered to back most of his buy-in for the 1988 WSOP Main Event. He finished runner-up to defending champion Johnny Chan for $280,000. He returned to New York and Wall Street after that, but the poker pull was too strong.

He moved his family to Las Vegas in 1995 to play full time - a risk, by his own account. The results since have made that move look straightforward.

What Does Erik Seidel Do for a Living?

Seidel earns primarily through live tournaments across a schedule that has remained active across multiple decades.

  • Live Tournaments: His primary professional activity, with a record that includes nine WSOP bracelets, 130 WSOP cashes, 36 WSOP final tables, and consistent performances across the EPT , Aussie Millions , Triton , and various Super High Roller events across more than 30 years of elite competition.
  • Full Tilt / Early Online: A founding member of Full Tilt’s design team and early poker TV presence for the site. Became disillusioned with management and has not been active online since. Full Tilt reportedly still owes him approximately $5 million from the Black Friday collapse.
  • Mentoring and Media: His mentorship of journalist and author Maria Konnikova resulted in the 2020 New York Times bestseller The Biggest Bluff, which described her year-long immersion in high-stakes poker under his guidance.

Erik Seidel Net Worth 2026 - What the Numbers Actually Show

Erik Seidel
Credit: WSOP

The $15 million to $25 million estimate is a range, not a confirmed figure. One external source has put it as high as $41.9 million, which likely reflects gross live earnings rather than a realistic net figure. The more conservative estimate accounts for buy-ins, taxes, and the years of poker investment that any three-decade career at this level requires.

His live record is genuinely exceptional - nine bracelets across five different decades, a 2011 season alone worth $6.53 million, and results across virtually every major series in the world. The Full Tilt situation is the most significant financial complication in his history: the $5 million reportedly still owed to him by the site following Black Friday has never been recovered.

The online cash game database shows a $350,762 loss across a brief Full Tilt stint between 2007 and 2009 - a small, unrepresentative sample that reflects his general lack of interest in online play rather than a meaningful data point about his game.

Erik Seidel’s WSOP Bracelet Wins

YearEventPrize
1992$2,500 Limit Hold’em$168,000
1993$2,500 Omaha 8 or Better$94,000
1994$5,000 Limit Hold’em$210,000
1998$5,000 Deuce to Seven Draw$132,700
2001$3,000 No Limit Hold’em$411,300
2003$1,500 Pot Limit Omaha$146,100
2005$2,000 No Limit Hold’em$611,795
2007$5,000 World Championship No Limit Deuce to Seven Draw$538,835
2021$10,000 Super MILLION$ High Roller Online (Natural8-GGNetwork)$977,842

Nine Bracelets Across Five Decades: Seidel’s bracelet collection stretches from 1992 to 2021 - three in a row from 1992 to 1994, then further additions in 1998, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2007, and finally 2021. Only Doyle Brunson, Phil Hellmuth, Phil Ivey, and Johnny Chan have more; Johnny Moss matches his nine. It is one of the most sustained records of bracelet-winning across different eras and formats in the history of the game.

The 2011 Season

Seidel’s 2011 calendar year is recognised as one of the greatest single-year performances in poker history, producing $6.53 million in live tournament earnings. Within a single twelve-month stretch he won the Aussie Millions A$250,000 Super High Roller for $2,472,555 - his biggest career score - finished 3rd in the Aussie Millions $100K for $618,139, won the NBC National Heads-Up Championship for $750,000, won the LA Poker Classic High Roller, and won the $100,000 Super High Roller at the Five Star World Poker Classic for $1,092,780.

Top Career Scores (Selected)

YearEventFinishPrize
2011A$250,000 Super High Roller, Aussie Millions 1st$2,472,555
2015€100,000 Super High Roller, EPT1st$2,222,222
2016$300,000 Super High Roller Bowl, Aria3rd$2,400,000
2011$100,000 Super High Roller, Five Star World Poker Classic1st$1,092,780
2011$25,000 NBC National Heads-Up Championship1st$750,000
2008$10,000 NLHE, WPT Foxwoods Poker Classic1st$992,890

The Full Tilt Story

Seidel was not simply a sponsored player for Full Tilt - he was part of the founding design team, alongside Howard Lederer and others, who helped build the site from the ground up. He appeared in TV advertisements for the platform and was deeply embedded in its early success.

When Full Tilt’s management collapsed following Black Friday and it emerged that the site had not adequately segregated player funds, Seidel became disgusted with the people involved. He has not been active in online poker since. The site reportedly still owes him approximately $5 million that has never been recovered.

The Ali Fazeli Ponzi Scheme

In 2016, Seidel, John Juanda, and Zachary Clark were victims of a fraud perpetrated by Seyed Reza Ali Fazeli, a poker player who claimed to be purchasing Super Bowl tickets for resale at profit through his company Summit Entertainment Group. He raised $1.3 million from the three players, promised 50/50 profit sharing, and delivered nothing. A lawsuit filed in Clark County District Court described the arrangement as a Ponzi scheme.

The Unanswered Questions

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

  • Whether the Full Tilt debt is ever recovered: Approximately $5 million reportedly owed. The status of any ongoing claim is not publicly documented.
  • What his staking and backing arrangements have looked like across his career: At buy-ins of $25,000 to $250,000, the degree to which his live record reflects his own net profit versus shared action is not publicly known.
  • Whether a tenth WSOP bracelet arrives: He won his ninth in 2021. At 66 in 2026, continued bracelet contention would be historically remarkable - but his record suggests the game has not left him.
  • The full scope of his live cash game activity: He is not known as a cash game player primarily, but decades of private and televised sessions add a layer to the financial picture that tournament records do not capture.

Erik Seidel Career Timeline

DateMilestone
Late 1970sDrops out of college to play backgammon professionally. Spends eight years as a successful professional backgammon player.
1985Transitions to stockbroking on Wall Street.
1987Loses his job in the stock market crash. Returns to the Mayfair Club in New York and begins playing poker seriously.
1988Backed by Mayfair regulars to play the WSOP Main Event. Finishes runner-up to Johnny Chan for $280,000.
1992Wins his first WSOP bracelet - $2,500 Limit Hold’em for $168,000. Begins a run of three consecutive bracelet years.
1995Moves his family from New York to Las Vegas to play poker full time.
2007Wins his eighth bracelet at the time - $5,000 World Championship No Limit Deuce to Seven Draw for $538,835. Joins Full Tilt’s founding design team.
2008Wins the WPT Foxwoods Poker Classic for $992,890 - his only WPT title. Finishes runner-up at the Aussie Millions Main Event for $879,028.
2010Inducted into the Poker Hall of Fame.
2011Produces one of the greatest single-year performances in poker history, winning $6.53 million across multiple events including the Aussie Millions Super High Roller ($2.47M) and the NBC Heads-Up Championship ($750K).
2016Victimised in the Fazeli Ponzi scheme alongside John Juanda and Zachary Clark.
2021Wins his ninth WSOP bracelet in the online $10,000 Super MILLION$ High Roller on Natural8-GGNetwork for $977,842.

What Is Erik Seidel’s Outlook in 2026?

At 66 in 2026, Seidel has been competing at the elite level for over 35 years. His ninth bracelet arrived in 2021, proving that he remains capable of winning against the best players in the world even at an age when most professional careers have long since wound down.

The game he has built is quiet and understated by the standards of his peers - no social media persona, no controversy for its own sake, no coaching empire. He plays, he wins, he goes home to his family. The results across more than three decades speak without needing amplification.

A tenth bracelet would put him in a conversation with very few players in history. Whether the schedule and variance align for that milestone remains to be seen. What is already certain is that Erik Seidel’s career belongs among the most complete and sustained in the history of poker.

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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.