Miki Sudo Family, Age, Nationality, Instagram, Stats, Wins
Christopher Martinez
Published Jan 07, 2026
Miki Sudo was born in 1985/1986 and is an American competitive eater. She won the women’s competition at the Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest every year from 2014 to 2020, unseating Sonya Thomas, who had won the women’s competition since its inception in 2011. She captured her ninth title in 2023.
Sudo was born to a European American mother and a Japanese father. At the age of five, she moved to Japan with her family and lived there for seven years before returning to the United States.
Sudo entered the competitive eating circuit in 2013, winning a pho eating contest.
In 2014 she became Major League Eating’s top-ranked female competitive eater, and in 2015 reached the top three overall.
She is ranked 3rd in the world with Major League Eating as of 2022 and holds 4 world records in Kimchi, Hotdish, ice cream, and the women’s record for hot dogs.
Miki Sudo Family
Miki Sudo was born in New York to a Japanese father and an American mother. At the age of five, she moved with her family to Japan.
Miki Sudo Age
Miki Sudo is about 38 years old she was born in 1985
Miki Sudo Nationality
Miki Sudo is an American competitive eater. She won the women’s competition at the Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest every year from 2014 to 2020, unseating Sonya Thomas, who had won the women’s competition since its inception in 2011. She captured her ninth title in 2023.
Miki Sudo Instagram
Miki Sudo (@omgitsmiki)
Miki Sudo Stats
| Event Name | Placement | Total | Unit | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Silver Slipper World Meat Pie Eating Championship | 2nd | 21.5 | meat pies | 10 min |
| World Chili Eating Challenge | 3rd | 6 | 32 oz. bowls | 6 min |
| Foxwoods World Turkey‑Eating Championship | 1st | 8.8 | pounds | 10 min |
Miki Sudo Wins
Sudo beat Mayoi Ebihara’s 33 1/2 hot dogs in 10 minutes Tuesday in a contest that appeared to be much closer until the final count was announced. The unofficial real-time counter showed the two women tied throughout much of the competition. A final count of plates settled the score.