Mexican singer Paulina Rubio does not own any property in Miami-Dade County and faces no outstanding housing-related debts, sources close to the artist who asked not to be identified told EFE.
A person close to the artist’s team confirmed what the records of the county, to which Miami Beach belongs, also reveal: “Paulina has no legal problems with the mortgage or the landlord. She has not lived in the house she was supposedly evicted from for many months. That is false.
The information from both the source and the documents on file with the county contradicts recent entertainment media reports that the artist had been evicted from a Miami Beach home due to a mortgage default.
Official records indicate that Rubio has no real estate in the area. In recent years, he leased a property in front of Biscayne Bay to a person identified as Fang Wu, at a monthly cost of $35,000, but left it in mid-April of this year.
In September, Wu sued the so-called Golden Girl for two months’ rent, plus 15 days when she allegedly stayed there without authorization, for which she charged her double, for a total of $110,000, plus about $5,000 for damages, mainly to the kitchen and bathrooms, according to records.
Paulina Rubio and her latest scandals

The case was closed by a private and confidential settlement signed on November 3, so there is currently no other active legal action against the singer related to housing matters.
Paulina Rubio, one of the most recognized Latin pop stars since the 1990s, has faced several legal proceedings in the United States over the last decade related to the custody, support and parenting time of her children.
With her ex-partner, Spanish businessman Nicolás Vallejo Nágera, she has a decade-long dispute over their son. This year, the couple has returned to court on several occasions over disagreements and non-compliance over the time spent with each other by Andrea Nicolás Vallejo Rubio, 15, as well as the length and location of vacations.
Rubio has also had legal proceedings with Gerardo Bazúa, father of her second son Eros Bazúa Rubio. The two were at loggerheads over child support, visitation rights and international travel permits. The hearings went on for several years in Miami courts before concluding with a joint custody agreement.
The source also reiterated the information published by ¡Hola! magazine, reported Agencia EFE, which indicates that Rubio has no intention of making any statements about her housing situation or her children.
Find out more at ‘QueOnnda.com’.


