Tyga has been named in a 134 million lawsuit by

Tyga has been named in a $1.34 million lawsuit by a company that says it defaulted on payments for Lamborghini and Bentley

Tyga is named in a $1.34 million lawsuit by a company that says it has defaulted on payments for Lamborghini and Bentley

Tyga is being sued for $1.34 million by a company called Choice Motors Credit, which alleges the rapper defaulted on payments for two luxury vehicles.

The 33-year-old Rack City rapper, who was spotted visiting Cher last November, was named in documents verified by The Blast about the balance owed on the cars.

Choice Motors Credit in the lawsuit is demanding that Tyga, whose real name is Michael Ray Stevenson, pay for the two luxury cars they negotiated a deal for — a 2013 Lamborghini Aventador and a 2014 Bentley Mulsanne.

The latest: Tyga, 33, is being sued for $1.34 million by a firm called Choice Motors Credit, which says the rapper has defaulted on payments he owed for two luxury vehicles.  He was pictured in LA in 2022

The latest: Tyga, 33, is being sued for $1.34 million by a firm called Choice Motors Credit, which says the rapper has defaulted on payments he owed for two luxury vehicles. He was pictured in LA in 2022

The company is also demanding accrued interest on each of the vehicles: he owes the Lamborghini $1,085,421.63, with more than $695,000 of the total accountable for interest.

He owes a total of $255,950.52 for the Bentley. The lawsuit was filed in California with a “sister state judgment,” the outlet reported.

Tyga was involved in a similar circumstance in November 2021 when a Ferrari and a Rolls Royce he had were confiscated after he defaulted on payments, Radar reported.

He was sued by a company called Midway Rent A Car for an outstanding amount of $127,789.73 for the two vehicles he leased in 2015.

The rapper has a penchant for luxury cars as he posed next to a Ferrari in 2019

The rapper has a penchant for luxury cars as he posed next to a Ferrari in 2019

Tyga was photographed at a GQ party in West Hollywood, California in November

Tyga was photographed at a GQ party in West Hollywood, California in November

The rap artist was also embroiled in legal entanglements over his payments for furniture he agreed to buy.

He was sued by home furnishings company Showroom Interiors in October 2021, Radar reported, alleging he failed to pay them a sum of $84,000 for “design, decorating, supplying, installing and renting furniture and other merchandise” at his home in Lot Angeles in 2019.

Expenses included $69,000 for furniture rental for six months, a $10,000 security deposit, and $5,000 in installation fees. The company also ordered Tyga to pay an additional $27,000 with interest to reimburse her efforts to receive a payment.