Floyd Mayweather’s Net Worth: How Much Money Does He Have?
Floyd Mayweather’s Net Worth: How Much Money Does The Boxing Legend Have?
- Mayweather's boxing earnings exceeded $1 billion, but his net worth is lower due to spending, taxes, and legal issues.
- Mayweather's business ventures, like Mayweather Promotions, allowed him to capture more of his fight revenue.
- Mayweather's recent exhibition fights and rumored financial troubles have sparked speculation about his current financial status.

Floyd “Money” Mayweather Jr. built an entire brand on looking untouchable — so much so that many believed his bank account was undefeated, too. So when people see him lining up multiple fights in 2026, at the age of 49, the conversation flips fast: “Why is Floyd back outside like this…is he broke?” ≠
Here’s the real reason the chatter is loud: this isn’t just one random exhibition. It’s a whole rollout. The first date that made headlines was an exhibition featuring Mike Tyson, originally scheduled for April 25th, 2026, in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo. But that’s also the one with the most uncertainty now — veteran boxing reporter Dan Rafael has since said it lost that date and the Congo location isn’t locked the way it initially sounded. When Floyd events are truly “fully baked,” they’re usually crystal-clear. So when the biggest date on the board gets shaky, people start filling in the blanks with rumors.
Fight two is cleaner: Floyd is set to fight Greek kickboxing legend Mike Zambidis in an exhibition on June 27th, 2026, in Athens, Greece. Then the one that made this feel like more than “just exhibitions” — Mayweather vs. Manny Pacquiao II on Saturday, September 19th, 2026, live on Netflix, from the Sphere in Las Vegas. That’s not a random appearance fee situation — that’s a global streaming event, the kind of stage that screams real money is involved.
And the “is he broke?” noise isn’t just because he’s booked. Two things are feeding it. One: Floyd has publicly stayed active via exhibitions, but he’s been retired from professional boxing since August 2017 (the McGregor fight) — meaning this “coming back to real boxing” talk is happening almost nine years later, depending on how you count it. Two: the internet never lets a money rumor die, and Logan Paul just threw fresh gasoline on it by claiming Mayweather still owes him $1.5 million stemming from their 2021 exhibition business. Add in the fact that Mayweather is currently suing Showtime, claiming he’s owed at least $340 million, and fans start treating every new fight announcement like a bill collector knocking. But being in money disputes — or chasing more checks — doesn’t automatically equal “broke.” With Floyd, it can also be what it’s always been: keeping the Mayweather machine running, because the machine prints when he’s the event.
***Right now, one of the most-cited “updated” estimates has Floyd sitting around $100 million — and the key part is why that number exists. Celebrity Net Worth lists him at $100M and literally says they lowered the estimate. At the same time, more information comes out about his Showtime-related claims (they mention alleged missing/unaccounted-for fight earnings). But the “classic” number you’ve seen for years and what Sports Illustrated’s KO has him at is closer to $400M and even cites Celebrity Net Worth while presenting that higher figure, which shows how messy these public estimates can get depending on timing and what the outlet chooses to count (cash on hand vs. assets, debts, pending disputes, etc.).
That’s really the core of Floyd’s whole money story: his earnings were astronomical, but net worth is what’s left after spending, taxes, deals, investments, and any financial headaches.
Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s Net Worth
1) Fight Money (The Engine)
If we’re talking pure earning power, Floyd is in a different universe. Celerity Net Worth pegs his total estimated ring earnings at $1.2 billion. And that tracks with the public story we all know: Floyd didn’t just win — he turned fights into events where he controlled the economics. Some of the biggest paydays repeatedly cited:
- Manny Pacquiao (May 2015): $250M
- Conor McGregor (Aug 2017): $300M
- Celebrity Net Worth also claims that, after taxes on the McGregor windfall, Floyd’s net worth at that point was around $560M.
2) Owning The Business Side (Why His Checks Were Bigger Than Everyone Else’s)
A huge part of Floyd’s money story is cutting out middlemen. Business Insider notes that in 2007, he bought himself out of a promoter contract and founded Mayweather Promotions, setting himself up to negotiate bigger shares of the pie (PPV, tickets, and other event revenue). That move is basically the blueprint for how he went from “Pretty Boy” to “Money.”
3) Exhibitions (High Pay, Lower Risk)
Even after retiring from pro boxing in 2017, Floyd kept cash flowing with exhibitions. Celebrity Net Worth groups his exhibition run (including names like Nasukawa/Paul/Deji) as $69M and separately says he earned $35M for the Logan Paul exhibition (their math is based on a guarantee + PPV split).
4) Business Ventures

- Mayweather Promotions (core business asset) — founded to keep more fight revenue in-house.
- The Money Team (TMT) — Sports Illustrated lists TMT as one of his business ownership buckets, along with Mayweather Promotions and “50 Karats.”
- Commercial real estate + property plays — Sports Illustrated frames commercial real estate as part of his wealth mix, and Business Insider goes deep on his real-estate claims/holdings and disputes around them.
- Girl Collection (strip club property in Las Vegas) — Business Insider reports he’s been at risk of losing a building housing the club over $52,000 in back property taxes/penalties, and also notes foreclosures and creditor issues around some properties.
5) The “Why People Think He’s Broke” Section (Debts, Taxes, Disputes)
This is the part that makes the net worth number feel confusing but more real:
- IRS/tax issues: Business Insider reports Floyd paid $22.2M in back taxes in 2017 and, in 2023, settled to pay $5.5M in back taxes plus $1.1M in penalties.
- Logan Paul money claim: Multiple outlets have reported that Logan Paul says Floyd still owes him $1.5M from their 2021 exhibition business.
- The net worth “lowering” explanation: Celebrity Net Worth explicitly says they lowered Floyd’s net worth estimate (to $100M) until the Showtime-related situation becomes clearer.
At the end of the day, the truth is Floyd’s money situation sits in that gray area where the public can’t call it clean either way. On one hand, the man has documented, historic earning power — the kind of career that produced nine-figure nights and a brand that still sells tickets, streams, and spectacles. On the other, the reason his net worth estimates are bouncing from outlet to outlet is because there’s smoke in the financial picture: tax issues, real-estate leverage, lawsuits, and a huge Showtime dispue that could change the math depending on how it ends. So no, we can’t honestly say “Floyd is broke” like it’s a confirmed fact — but we also can’t pretend the speculation came out of nowhere. What we can say is this: booking multiple fights in 2026, while money claims and legal battles are floating around him, is exactly the kind of combo that makes people watch closer — not because Floyd is definitely down bad, but because even “Money Mayweather” isn’t immune to cash flow, obligations, and the reality that net worth isn’t the same thing as what you earned.
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