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    Home » The Porsha Williams Divorce Settlement That Left Simon Guobadia Paying From Another Country
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    The Porsha Williams Divorce Settlement That Left Simon Guobadia Paying From Another Country

    Errica JensenBy Errica JensenApril 14, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    The Porsha Williams divorce settlement played out in a way that was almost cinematic: a judge browsing through Instagram profiles during the hearing, a man being questioned via Zoom from another continent, and a hearing that lasted from 9:30 in the morning until the evening. Watching this unfold felt like the last chapter of a story Porsha Williams had been quietly writing since her first marriage ended more than ten years ago, for anyone who has followed her journey on Real Housewives of Atlanta over the years.
    The union with Simon Guobadia lasted precisely fifteen months. However, it took much longer to resolve the divorce. It involved more than a year of legal back and forth, a 250-page prenuptial agreement, an ICE detention, a deportation, and enough courtroom drama to fill multiple seasons of television by the time a Georgia judge finalized it in June 2025.

    On their own, the Porsha Williams divorce settlement’s fundamentals are striking. She received $40,000 a month in spousal support for 15 months, the right to remain in their $7 million Atlanta home for 36 months with Guobadia paying the mortgage, 50% of the property’s equity, her 2021 Rolls-Royce Ghost, and about $224,000 in legal fees that were fully covered by her ex-husband. For a marriage that hasn’t even reached its second anniversary, it’s a substantial package. It’s difficult to claim it was unearned, though, given the complete context.

    The prenuptial agreement was the main point of contention. Guobadia had been arguing for months that the deal should be revoked, saying Williams had deceived him during the negotiations by implying that she was leaving RHOA permanently. However, Guobadia returned to the show in early 2024, reportedly earning between $8 and $9 million that year. There was some surface logic to his argument. Under one set of presumptions, he signed a document, but later things changed. However, the judge did not believe it. Before the wedding, both parties had negotiated those 250 pages for almost a year. Guobadia was not a gullible party to a hurried agreement. The judge’s reasoning was straightforward: you signed it, you negotiated it, and your social media posts don’t support your claim that your financial situation has since deteriorated.

    The Porsha Williams Divorce Settlement: $40K a Month, a Rolls-Royce, and a Lesson Learned Twice

    CategoryDetails
    Full NamePorsha Dynevor Williams
    Date of BirthJune 22, 1981
    NationalityAmerican
    ProfessionTelevision Personality, Actress, Businesswoman
    Known ForReal Housewives of Atlanta (RHOA), Bravo Network
    Ex-HusbandSimon Guobadia (m. November 2022 – divorced June 2025)
    Previous MarriageKordell Stewart (m. 2011 – divorced 2013)
    ChildrenPilar Jhena McKinley (daughter, with Dennis McKinley)
    Monthly Alimony Awarded$40,000/month for 15 months
    PropertyRight to occupy $7M home for 36 months; 50% equity
    Vehicle Awarded2021 Rolls-Royce Ghost
    Legal Fees CoveredApproximately $224,000 paid by Simon Guobadia
    Divorce FinalizedJune 2025
    Appeal DeniedSeptember 9, 2025
    The Porsha Williams Divorce Settlement That Left Simon Guobadia Paying From Another Country
    The Porsha Williams Divorce Settlement That Left Simon Guobadia Paying From Another Country

    The judge opening Instagram and looking through Guobadia’s profile during the session may have been the most telling moment of the entire proceeding. It seems almost ridiculous, but it’s also perfectly fitting for a case involving two individuals whose lives were so widely publicized. Guobadia posted something, but it didn’t seem to support his claims of financial difficulties.

    For her part, Porsha was scrutinized during the hearing. Her demeanor wasn’t always the best during her testimony, and some of her responses drew criticism. One such instance was when she acknowledged that her accountant handled the mortgage on a $7 million house, so she didn’t know how much it was. That particular detail hung in the air. The judge acknowledged that neither party had perfect hands, that Porsha had publicly discussed Guobadia in ways that probably violated the confidentiality clause of the prenuptial agreement, and that both parties had acted badly in some areas. However, none of that was sufficient to negate the agreement’s basic validity.

    When you piece the whole story together, you’ll notice how much of it relates to Porsha’s 2013 first divorce from NFL quarterback Kordell Stewart. Both financially and publicly, that breakup was infamously harsh for her. She emerged from it with virtually nothing and, rightly or wrongly, a reputation as someone who had failed to defend herself. She obviously learned that lesson. It took a year to negotiate the 250-page prenuptial agreement with Guobadia. Porsha stated in her testimony that she specifically needed that security due to her experiences with Kordell. For someone who has frequently been undervalued by critics, it’s an incredibly self-aware move.

    The story is made more complicated by Guobadia’s predicament. He had already been arrested by ICE and deported to Nigeria for immigration offenses, including credit card and bank fraud, by the time of the final hearing. He was attending the hearing via Zoom from a distance. How precisely does Porsha get $40,000 a month from a man who has been deported and has no immediate way to return to the United States? This question loomed over the Atlanta courtroom, Reddit threads, and social media posts that followed. Whether the payments will go smoothly or turn into a constant enforcement nightmare is still up in the air. By August 2025, Williams had already submitted a petition alleging that Guobadia owed her over $667,000 in unpaid debts, including alimony, property taxes, mortgage payments, and the remaining balance on the Rolls-Royce, which had not yet been transferred with a clear title.

    Guobadia filed an appeal even after the divorce was finalized. That appeal was rejected by a Georgia appellate court in September 2025. His response was characteristically defiant — he told People magazine he hadn’t exhausted all legal remedies and said, with what seemed like genuine patience or perhaps strategic calm, that he expected the matter to drag on another one to two years. Additionally, he brought up a federal defamation lawsuit that Williams has refuted.

    Williams, meanwhile, uploaded a video of herself getting on a private jet while Destiny’s Child was playing. “Free,” the caption said. It was a bit self-aware, theatrical, and probably just what the situation demanded.
    The Porsha Williams divorce settlement will probably be talked about for a long time, not just as celebrity rumors but also as an example of what it really means to take legal precautions before getting married. Rarely are reality TV stars regarded as strategic thinkers. It turns out that Porsha was playing a longer game than most people thought. A different question that might take years to fully resolve is whether Guobadia eventually pays what he owes. However, the prenuptial agreement was upheld, the judgment is documented, and the house that resulted from that drawn-out, convoluted hearing is hers, at least for the foreseeable future.


    Disclaimer

    Nothing published on Creative Learning Guild — including news articles, legal news, lawsuit summaries, settlement guides, legal analysis, financial commentary, expert opinion, educational content, or any other material — constitutes legal advice, financial advice, investment advice, or professional counsel of any kind. All content on this website is provided strictly for informational, educational, and news reporting purposes only. Consult your legal or financial advisor before taking any step.

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    Errica Jensen
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    Errica Jensen is the Senior Editor at Creative Learning Guild, where she leads editorial coverage of legal news, landmark lawsuits, class action settlements, and consumer rights developments and News across the United Kingdom, United States and beyond. With a career spanning over a decade at the intersection of legal journalism, lawsuits, settlements and educational publishing, Errica brings both rigorous research discipline, in-depth knowledge, experience and an accessible editorial voice to subjects that most readers find interesting and helpful.

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