| Rank | Player | WSOP Earnings | Cashes | Bracelets |
| 1 | Daniel Negreanu | $22,796,598 | 276 | 7 |
| 2 | Antonio Esfandiari | $21,917,242 | 49 | 3 |
| 3 | Phil Hellmuth | $18,287,714 | 214 | 17 |
| 4 | Justin Bonomo | $17,819,209 | 73 | 3 |
| 5 | Daniel Colman | $17,413,655 | 10 | 1 |
| 6 | Fedor Holz | $15,683,806 | 29 | 2 |
| 7 | Jonathan Duhamel | $14,599,175 | 40 | 3 |
| 8 | Ben Heath | $14,335,683 | 28 | 1 |
| 9 | Alex Foxen | $14,205,643 | 138 | 3 |
| 10 | Adrian Mateos | $14,185,084 | 69 | 4 |
The World Series of Poker Paradise featured several massive events with multi-million-dollar payouts awarded to the podium finishers. As a result, the decidedly high-stakes skew of this year’s WSOPP schedule helped to reshape the upper echelon of the WSOP’s all-time earnings leaderboard dramatically. Three new players joined the top 10, while two others made moves within the top ranks.
In one such example, Justin Bonomo improved from fifth place in our last update (made after the summer WSOP) to fourth place thanks to $1,496,500 in total earnings during this festival. The majority ($1.3 million) of that came when he finished seventh in the super main event. Bonomo has recorded 19 final-table finishes in bracelet events, with three wins. His largest payday came when he took down the 2018 $1 million buy-in Big One For One Drop for $10 million.
The runner-up in that same event was Fedor Holz, who took home $6 million for that result. The 31-year-old German wunderkind has jumped from eighth to sixth since our last update due to his two final-table finishes at Atlantis Island in the Bahamas. First, he finished third in the $100,000 Triton main event for $1.8 million. Less than a week later he placed sixth in the $50,000 buy-in for another $352,210. The two-time bracelet winner now has nearly $15.7 million earned in WSOP events.
The bottom three on this list are all new faces. Ben Heath made the biggest move, adding $8,160,000 via his runner-up finish in the $500,000 Triton Invitational. That one deep run more than doubled his total WSOP earnings, bringing his career haul to over $14.3 million. Hot on his heels is Alex Foxen, who also made a big jump thanks to a seven-figure score. Foxen captured his third bracelet as the last player standing in the $100,000 Triton main event. He cashed for $3,850,000, which was his second-largest WSOP score behind the $4,563,700 he earned as the winner of the 2022 $250,000 high roller in Las Vegas. Four-time bracelet winner Adrian Mateos also edged his way into the top 10. The Spanish superstar and POY leader cashed in three events, including falling just a few spots shy of the final table in the $500,000 invitational. ♠
