WENDY Williams’ son, Kevin Hunter Jr., 23, was hit with an eviction notice on his luxury Miami, Florida, high-rise after he was cut off from his famous mom’s money.

The U.S. Sun can exclusively reveal Wendy‘s only son, who opened up in a Lifetime docuseries about being cut off from his mother’s money after she was placed in guardianship, was served with an eviction notice on his posh apartment in February.

 

Wendy Williams' only child, Kevin Hunter Jr., was served with an eviction notice on his luxury high-rise

On February 26, the Monday after Wendy’s Lifetime docuseries aired, which Kevin was also listed as an executive producer on, the building he had been living at for only a handful of months served him with an eviction notice after he allegedly failed to pay his rent.

The filing stated, “This is an action to evict the tenant from the premises.”

It went on to allege that Kevin, who signed the lease in November, had failed to pay February’s rent, and owed the building a total sum of $4,317.08.

His rent, according to the lease agreement was $3,731 a month.

Kevin was served a three-day notice of non-payment of his rent on February 6.

By March 5, however, it appears the matter was resolved, as the attorney for the building filed a notice to dismiss the case.

PAST EVICTION

This isn’t the first time Kevin faced eviction at an apartment in Miami.

The U.S. Sun exclusively reported in 2022 that Kevin had been evicted from his luxury $2 million apartment for failure to pay his rent.

That eviction came on the heels of his mother, and her finances, being placed in a financial conservatorship.

In those eviction papers, Kevin said his mother had always paid for his housing.

“As the lease approached the end, my mom went through some health issues that put the court in control of her finances,” Kevin said of the lease that ended in February 2022.

As The U.S. Sun previously reported, Wendy’s only child, who lived in the lap of luxury and enjoyed the financial perks of growing up as the son of a wealthy TV star, is now living a much different life.

This comes after her finances were taken over by a court-appointed guardian.

INSIDE KEV’S NEW LIFE

Kevin, who was previously fully financially supported by Wendy, 59, no longer has the extra cushion her credit cards had afforded him.

These days, Wendy’s son can be seen driving around Miami in a beat-up 2019 Honda Civic while attending school and promoting various parties he’s throwing around town for cash.

He is also currently enrolled as a full-time student at Barry University and court records reveal a 529 plan set up by his mother helps support him.

During the Lifetime docuseries about Wendy’s life which aired in late February, Kevin made statements about spending his mother’s money on her credit cards, which left Wendy fans stunned.

Kevin told Lifetime cameras, “When my mom was living down here, as one can imagine, it’s not a cheap lifestyle.

“The courts tried to frame it as though I was making all these charges for my own happiness.

“My mom has never been a cheap person so whether it be flying her back and forth on private planes or even paying for appointments,” he told cameras.

“It was all under one American Express.”

His cousin, Travis Finnie, then revealed that Kevin ended up spending over $100,000 of his mom’s money on food delivery apps.

“To put it into perspective, Kevin’s birthday party that his mom threw was $120,000,” Wendy’s nephew explained.

“Kevin’s rent was $80,000. Kevin’s Uber Eats probably exceeded $100,000 that his mom approves.

“So for them to have a court case and ripping him away from taking care of his mother is very questionable.”

WHERE IS WENDY?

As The U.S. Sun previously revealed, Kevin doesn’t know exactly where his mother is.

“Kevin has spoken to his mom occasionally, and he knows she’s in some sort of treatment facility, but he’s not sure exactly what it is, or where it is,” an insider said.

He is also unable to call her, but she can call him

Kevin was also evicted from an apartment in 2022 following his mother being placed in guardianship and admitted to the court that his mother had previously paid his rent