The gloves are off for Floyd Mayweather’s former landlords.
The boxing legend is being sued for breach of contract by the owners of his former Baccarat Hotel and Residences rental.
A company tied to the unit claims Mayweather owes more than $330,000 in unpaid rent and other damages. The allegations were laid out by in a New York State court filing this month, the Real Deal reported.
The pad is owned by Miami-based entrepreneurs Leila and David Centner, the outlet reported.
Mayweather rented their luxury duplex in the Midtown tower in 2024. He allegedly stopped paying his $100,000-per-month rent in the middle of 2025.
Mayweather’s home along 53rd Street spans the tower’s 18th and 19th floors. It includes five bedrooms and five bathrooms.
The lawsuit claims the undefeated fighter began to fall behind on his six-figure rent in July, and racked up more than $515,000 total in back rent and other damages.
Mayweather agreed to a settlement to clear the debt by early December, according to the lawsuit, but allegedly failed to make the full repayment in time.
Instead, Mayweather only paid one of the the five months of rent, according to Pulse International Realty’s Rena Kliot.
Mayweather now allegedly owes a sum of $337,736, the suit claims, together with interest, fees, costs and attorneys’ fees.
The couple plans to re-list the property this spring with Kliot. The vacant unit is in the process of being restaged, Kilot The Post, including its 4,000-square-foot wraparound balcony. Mayweather finally vacated the property in December, according to Kliot.
The unit will likely be priced to sell between $22 and $24 million, or offered as a rental at around $150,000 per month.
This news follows work reported by Business Insider that introduced doubt over Mayweather’s financial claims, identifying foreclosures on commercial properties owned by Mayweather and other lawsuits in which he failed to make millions in payments on luxe goods.
Mayweather has taken his more than $1 billion in career winnings into the real estate world in recent years, including launching a real estate firm in 2024 and purchasing a minority interest in a New York City-based portfolio last year for $402 million.
The plaintiff’s lawyer, Marc Scolnick of Scolnick Law, declined to comment further on the filing. Representatives for Mayweather did not respond to The Post’s requests for comment.

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