Floyd Mayweather is officially the father of a 4-year-old girl named Price Moorehead, and the courts had to drag him kicking and screaming to that conclusion. A Nevada judge legally declared the retired boxing champion the father of the child in March 2026, according to court documents obtained by TMZ Sports. The ruling carries a financial gut punch that includes $933,050 in back child support and $32,860 per month going forward, and it lands at a moment when Floyd’s money picture is looking shakier than it has in years.
The mother is Paige Moorehead, a former stripper at Girl Collection, the Las Vegas strip club Floyd owns. She filed for paternity in June 2023, six months after giving birth to Price in December 2021. According to her court filing, she and Floyd carried on an intimate relationship for roughly eight years that ended abruptly when she told him she was pregnant in April 2021. She alleges he pressured her to terminate the pregnancy and then fired her from Girl Collection, where she had worked for four years.
The reason Floyd is now stuck with a default judgment naming him as the father is simple. He ignored the case. Court records show he was served with paperwork twice and ordered to submit to a DNA test, and he never showed up and never took the test. When a defendant refuses to participate in a paternity case, the judge can rule against them by default, and that is exactly what happened. There is no DNA result on the books. There is only Floyd’s refusal to take one, and a court that decided his silence was answer enough.
The financial math is where this story gets sharper. Floyd has reportedly paid only $151,000 of what he owes so far, which left the judge enough room to grant Paige permission to place a lien worth up to $2 million on his California properties. That lien is not symbolic. It is a legal mechanism that ties his real estate to this child’s support and gives Paige a hard claim on those assets if he keeps stalling. For a man whose entire brand is built on flexing his wealth and broadcasting his real estate portfolio, having a property lien filed against him because he would not pay his child’s mother is a particular kind of public humiliation.
Price Moorehead is Floyd’s fifth child, joining Koraun, Iyanna, Zion, and Jirah. His daughter Yaya Mayweather has not publicly commented, and fans have flooded social media asking her to weigh in given how loud she has been about family matters in the past.
The paternity ruling does not sit in a vacuum. It arrives during what is shaping up to be one of the messiest financial stretches of Floyd’s post-boxing career. The IRS filed a $7.3 million federal tax lien against him in Las Vegas in April 2026, covering unpaid balances from 2018 and 2023. Reports have circulated about additional 2026 lawsuits over unpaid bills, including a $105,690 private jet bill, a $330,000 rent claim, and a $1.4 million jewelry bill. A February lawsuit in Clark County District Court alleged Floyd and an associate defaulted on a $900,000 loan payment last year. None of this is the look of a man whose accountants are sleeping well.
There is also the inconvenient timing of his return to the ring. Floyd has been publicly chasing exhibition bouts and a rumored professional rematch with Manny Pacquiao on Netflix, and boxing media sources have openly questioned whether he is fighting for sport or for liquidity. The court ruling, the IRS lien, and the unpaid bills lawsuits all sketch the same picture, and it is not the one Floyd usually sells on Instagram.
For Paige Moorehead, the case is technically a win, but the real test is collection. Securing a judgment against a man with Floyd’s litigation history is one thing. Actually getting paid is something else. The $2 million property lien gives her leverage, and a monthly $32,860 obligation is now legally enforceable, but Floyd has shown a willingness to ignore court orders when it suits him, and there is no reason to expect that to change without continued legal pressure.
What the public gets out of this is a reminder of how the family courts work when someone with money decides to play games. Refusing to take a DNA test does not make the case go away. It makes the judgment automatic. And when child support goes unpaid long enough, the courts can and will reach into real estate, bank accounts, and any other asset they can identify. Floyd Mayweather is one of the richest athletes of his generation, and his daughter still had to wait four years and force a default judgment before he was legally on the hook for her care.
