Megan Thee Stallion denies owing stylist $1.2 million

Megan Thee Stallion denies a $1.2 million lawsuit from stylist Eric Archibald, calling the invoices fraudulent after two years of dispute.

Megan Thee Stallion has fired back at a lawsuit filed by her former celebrity stylist Eric Archibald and his company, Six K, who are claiming more than $1.2 million in alleged unpaid wardrobe fees for work done between January 2024 and August 2025.

The lawsuit was filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court and alleges that the unpaid balance, $1,243,501.98 in total, represents nearly two years of styling services for appearances and events that Megan never settled, as reported by The Shade Room.

Archibald’s team says attempts to resolve the matter privately over that same two-year period produced no settlement.

The Megan Thee Stallion lawsuit: what Archibald claims

According to the filing, Six K provided wardrobe styling for a wide range of Megan’s appearances and events from the start of 2024 through mid-2025.

The lawsuit does not specify individual engagements but describes a sustained professional relationship during one of Megan’s more active public periods, which included promotional runs, performances and award season appearances.

Archibald and Six K maintain that they raised the outstanding balance repeatedly before resorting to legal action.

The court filing positions the lawsuit as a last resort after what they describe as years of unreturned effort to recover payment through informal channels.

Megan’s response to the Megan Thee Stallion lawsuit

Megan did not stay quiet. In a direct public statement, she said:

“My finance team conducted a comprehensive audit of Eric Archibald’s wardrobe expenses and uncovered fraudulent invoices, unsupported charges, and styling shipments tied to addresses that could not be verified.”

She stopped short of calling the lawsuit frivolous outright, but the framing of the response, accusing Archibald of inflating or fabricating charges, sets up what looks likely to become a contested court process.

No third-party audit results have been filed publicly, and neither side has indicated willingness to negotiate.

What comes next in this case

The case is at an early stage in Los Angeles County Superior Court.

No hearing date had been publicly confirmed at the time of publishing. Megan Thee Stallion has faced a series of legal disputes over the past two years, making this the latest in a run of courtroom entanglements that have accompanied her public profile.

Whether Six K files additional documentation to support the invoice claims, or Megan’s team produces the audit findings in court, will shape how this proceeds in the weeks ahead.