Former boxing champ Floyd Mayweather Jr. has been hit with three new lawsuits alleging that he failed to pay millions to two jewelry stores and owes hundreds of thousands of dollars in rent on a palatial luxury Manhattan apartment.
Mayweather rented the 4,629-square-foot duplex unit on the 18th and 19th floors of the Baccarat Hotel and Residences, a high-end condo tower in Midtown, in late 2024. The lease signing was reported in several outlets, including the New York Post and Architectural Digest.
The lawsuit filed in January in state court alleges that he fell behind on the $100,000-a-month rent for five months and agreed to pay up, then only gave them a portion of what was owed.
The apartment is owned by Leila and David Centner, a Miami couple who are wellness and tech entrepreneurs. The Centners purchased two condos at The Baccarat in 2016 for $15.3 million and combined them into the two-level unit later rented by Mayweather.
Leila Centner
Leila Centner told Business Insider that Mayweather initially paid the rent, then stopped in July 2025. She said she spoke to him in December about missed payments and that he appeared unaware he owed $500,000 in back rent.
“He was surprised,” she said. “He had no idea he was that far behind.”
Mayweather made one $100,000 payment, but didn’t settle the remaining balance, and didn’t respond to her further efforts to reach him, Centner said.
“He did say he’d pay, and then he disappeared. We don’t know why,” Centner said.
Leila Centner
The suit seeks $337,736.13. The sum represents the $500,000 in arrears plus late fees, minus a deposit Mayweather paid at the start of the lease and the $100,000 catch-up payment.
An attorney for Mayweather did not provide a comment by deadline. He has not responded to the lawsuit in court.
In a separate legal matter, a Miami jeweler sued Mayweather last month, alleging the boxer owes more than a million dollars for jewelry he took but never paid for.
AJ’s Jewelry said in a complaint filed in state court that Mayweather, described as a longtime customer, made two trips to the store in August and left with 26 Cartier, Patek Phillipe, Rolex, and Audemars Piguet watches, and 15 gold chains. The suit claims that Mayweather agreed to pay the $1.675 million bill later.
Brynn Anderson/AP
“Because of the parties’ long-standing relationship and prior transactions, AJ’s Jewelry reasonably believed and relied upon Mayweather’s promises to pay for the jewelry items that he took possession of in full,” the complaint says.
“To date, Mayweather has only paid AJ’s Jewelry $300,000 of the outstanding balance.”
The store alleged that five checks from Mayweather between August and November bounced.
“AJ’s Jewelry has repeatedly contacted Mayweather both orally and in writing, to request payment of the remaining balance for the Jewelry. Each time, Mayweather acknowledges the debt owed and promises to pay for the Jewelry, then never sends the monies owed,” the complaint said.
Mayweather’s attorney has not responded to the filing in court and did not offer a comment by deadline.
Mayweather is also facing legal action from another Miami jeweler. Leonard Sulaymanov sued him and associate Jona Rechnitz in federal court last month, accusing them of failing to honor the terms of a settlement they had reached last year over $3.9 million in watches and jewelry that Mayweather had been accused of taking and failing to pay for.
Mayweather’s attorney did not provide a comment on that suit. Rechnitz — who is awaiting resentencing in a federal corruption case — did not respond.
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The 48-year-old boxer racked up over a billion dollars in winnings over his undefeated career and has pivoted to business ventures, including real estate investment, since his 2017 retirement.
In December, Business Insider reported that Mayweather had taken out millions in mortgages on his homes in 2024 and 2025 and faced a string of lawsuits and liens. Two of Mayweather’s commercial properties have been foreclosed, and he is at risk of losing a Las Vegas building that houses his strip club over $52,000 in back property taxes and penalties.
In response to Business Insider’s story in December, Mayweather’s lawyer, Bobby Samini, said the athlete is not “experiencing financial strain.”
“Floyd Mayweather rose from poverty and hardship to become one of the greatest champions in boxing history, transforming his talent and discipline into an undefeated legacy and a highly successful business empire,” Samini said in a statement at the time. “Creating unfounded narratives misrepresents the truth and minimizes the achievements of an individual who has risen from adversity to become one of the most successful athletes and entrepreneurs of his generation.”
Earlier this week, Mayweather filed a lawsuit against Showtime Networks, which broadcast some of his biggest fights, and former executive Stephen Espinoza, seeking more than $340 million for “misappropriated funds” from decade-old bouts.
The complaint alleges that Showtime and Mayweather’s former manager, Al Haymon, diverted winnings from the boxer in what it called a “long-running and elaborate scheme of financial fraud.”
Haymon, described as a “father figure” to Mayweather in the complaint, is not named as a defendant in the suit. He could not be reached for comment, and a close associate did not return calls.
“These baseless claims lack legal or factual merit. We strongly reject them and will respond accordingly through the court process,” a spokesperson for Showtime parent Paramount wrote in a statement to Business Insider. Espinoza declined to comment.
Note: Floyd Mayweather filed a defamation lawsuit against Business Insider in connection with a previous story about Mayweather’s real estate investments. The case is pending, and BI stands by its reporting.
