Mike Tyson lives in a large mansion with a swimming pool and garden, where he plays with his tiger cubs

Enthralled with Mike Tyson’s opulent Seven Hills estate, in which he resides beside his pet tigers

 

Despite earning over $400 million, Tyson—one of the greatest heavyweight boxers of all time—paid $2.5 million for his six-bedroom, seven-bathroom property in 2015.

 

In Henderson, Nevada, close to Sin City, it is owned by “The Baddest Man on the Planet.” The renowned boxer had to file for bankruptcy in 2003 because of $23 million in debt, according to The Post.

Tyson lavished $300 million on cars, homes, jewelry, and tigers for pets. Even yet, by American standards, it’s not exactly a half-billionaire’s estate. The average celebrity residence costs $20 million.

 

Spacious, the 10,400-square-foot home in Seven Hills sits on almost an acre. There are also two casitas, one of which has an apartment.

Among the features are a disappearing-edge pool, jacuzzi, outdoor kitchen, wide covered patio, two enormous master suites (one on the first floor and one on the second), a multimedia room, and a wine cellar.

Custom iron railings, arched doorways, vaulted ceilings, floor to ceiling windows, stone fireplaces, marble floors, and a marble staircase are features of this Italian-style residence.

Thermador stainless steel appliances, a large island with a breakfast bar, and bespoke cabinetry are features of the gourmet kitchen.

Wednesday night was Tyson’s second fight. Agents for Tyson claimed to have seen footage of him hitting a “aggressive” fellow traveler on a flight to Florida.

For the after-party of a cannabis conference, he took a JetBlue flight from San Francisco to Miami. Tyson creates hallucinogenic toads and encourages toad venom tripping.

 

A representative for Tyson told The Post, “Unfortunately, Mr. Tyson had an incident on a flight with an aggressive passenger who began harassing him and threw a water bottle at him while he was in his seat.”

Officers took two people into custody. At the site, one person sustained non-life-threatening injuries. According to San Francisco police, “that subject provided minimal details of the incident and refused to cooperate with the police investigation.”