Celebrity News

Todrick Hall sued for $60K in back rent

Cynthia Bailey and Todrick Hall on "Celebrity Big Brother."
Todrick Hall is reportedly facing a lawsuit for $60,000 in unpaid rent.CBS

The hits keep coming for Todrick Hall.

The “Celebrity Big Brother” alum’s landlords are suing him for $60,000 in unpaid rent, Us Weekly reported Thursday.

Hall, 36, had agreed to pay $30,000 a month for a five-bedroom, eight-bathroom house in Sherman Oaks, Calif., but failed to cough up the money in February and March, according to the civil complaint filed Tuesday and obtained by the magazine.

Owners Avi and Orna Lavian claimed to have served the YouTuber with a pay-or-quit notice on March 3 by giving it to another occupant of the house, per the filing.

In addition to the $60,000, the landlords requested attorney fees, forfeiture of the agreement, damages of $1,000 per day and “all other relief the court deems just and reasonable,” Us Weekly reported.

Hall’s rep did not immediately return Page Six’s request for comment.

Hall showed off a home on social media in February 2021, claiming he had bought it. todrickhall/Instagram

Hall posted an 11-minute video to YouTube in February 2021 of himself giving a tour of a massive home, which includes a private movie theater, an infinity pool, an elevator, a walk-in closet and many more amenities.

However, in the video, he claimed he had bought the house, so it is unclear whether it is the same one he is being sued over.

The news comes shortly after the entertainer’s turbulent stint on Season 3 of “Celebrity Big Brother.” Prior to the finale in February, houseguests including Todd Bridges, Lamar Odom and Teddi Mellencamp turned on Hall and accused him of backstabbing them to get to the end.

Hall upset many of his housemates on “Celebrity Big Brother.” CBS

Hall went on to receive only one vote, from Cynthia Bailey, and lost the game to his sole ally, mixed martial artist Miesha Tate, who snagged the other seven votes.

Amid the backlash, he canceled press interviews, later explaining that he felt the need to “protect myself and my mental health.”

Hall posted a lengthy statement in March about how he’s a “work in progress.” CBS

The performer also admitted that he was “not always nice” on the show in an Instagram statement posted in March.

“I am a human being, a real one…I’m not always nice, not always kind nor have I ever claimed to be,” he wrote.

“I’m very flawed, I’m a work in progress, but that’s the beauty of being human. I have made a ton of mistakes in my life and I will continue to make mistakes, some publicly and some privately.”