As Kanye West’s real estate empire faces foreclosure, he obtained a $3.5 million loan for the abandoned Yeezy headquarters.
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Kanye West’s $3.5 million desperation loan for an abandoned Yeezy headquarters has exposed the rapper’s growing financial woes as his once billion-dollar empire continues to collapse.
The 48-year-old took out an unconventional loan from the little-known Rediger Investment Mortgage Fund to buy the abandoned property on Melrose Avenue, which is now covered in graffiti and has its roof torn off.
In March 2023, he paid $6.3 million for the 7,400-square-foot space, which ironically is located next door to his former partner Adidas.
But this latest financial move reveals the extent of Ye’s fall since losing his partnership following an outbreak of anti-Semitism in 2022. The building has been unoccupied since late 2023, with homeless encampments sprung up outside and vandals painting swastikas on the walls.
“People often only seek alternative financing because they don’t qualify for traditional financing,” property expert Eddie Martini told the Daily Mail.
Traditional banks will no longer partner with the controversial rapper. The Yeezy HQ loan is just the latest sign that Ye’s real estate empire is crumbling.
His former mansion in Malibu, which he tore down and abandoned, is now facing foreclosure after the new owner defaulted on an $18.5 million mortgage.
West sold the property in 2024 for $21 million, resulting in a loss of more than $36 million on the $57 million property he originally purchased.
He also recently sold his Wyoming ranch to its original owner for $14 million after years of neglect left it in ruins. The ranch, once his creative retreat, was now another casualty of his financial difficulties.
Even his childhood home in Chicago’s South Shore neighborhood is facing tax problems, with reports showing he’s behind on payments. The property that launched his stardom now symbolizes his downturn.
The former church property he bought for $1.5 million burned down, was converted into a clothing factory, and is now a vacant lot listed for $1.35 million, $150,000 less than what he paid for it.
West’s real estate portfolio, once worth hundreds of millions of dollars, now consists largely of troubled properties and mounting debt.

