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Kenya Moore’s business was ordered to pay $87,976 in unpaid rent and utilities amid the legal battle with the landlord. In 2024, the Real Housewives of Atlanta star opened Kenya Moore Hair Spa. A year later, the landlord (Northland Chamblee LLC) filed a lawsuit against her, claiming there were unpaid utilities and rent.
According to the LLC, the spa stopped paying rent in December 2024. But Kenya’s business denied it, alleging that the landlord didn’t make the improvements they requested.
TMZ obtained court docs showing that Kenya’s company, Moore Vision Media, was ordered by a judge to pay $43,988 by the end of March and another $43,988 by the end of February over unpaid rent and utilities, totaling $87,976.
Moore Vision Media was also ordered to pay $5,500 each month for rent, unless she vacates. Weeks after the judge’s decision, the landlord alleged that Kenya’s business did not meet the deadline and provide money for the first installment. The landlord demanded to have immediate possession of the said property, though the court hasn’t yet ruled.
In November 2024, Kenya addressed rumors that she was filming again for RHOA.
“I think it’s wishful thinking from the fans. I really have a great fanbase — real, not followers, but real fans and people who really care about me and that want to see me, that miss me. Listen, like I said, I’m not going anywhere. I’m here,” she told Entertainment Tonight at the time. “Honestly, I’m so busy, and there are projects that I can’t talk about right now, but when I tell you, I have not been busier. And being a businesswoman also I’m learning that it’s really tough right now because having a distraction from your business is sometimes just that.”
“Now that I can really focus on all of the things that I really love and want to do, especially with my daughter involved, it’s a good time. The holidays are coming up. I’m excited,” added Kenya, who then discussed her children’s book, Brooklyn Bound: Paris. “I think this project is so personal for me because I was watching [my daughter Brooklyn] make her own little books. She would come home, and she would have these papers stapled together, and she would write her own stories and draw her own illustrations.”