Luis Ruelas is reportedly requesting more time to tackle his loan amid ongoing tax troubles.
Teresa Giudice’s husband received an extension on Monday regarding the $1 million he borrowed in March 2024, according to the US Sun.
The outlet reported Tuesday that while the businessman’s final payment is due, court documents show that this deadline was extended to March 25 of next year.
Ruelas, who paid the lender $5,0000, allegedly requested and received an additional $250,000 loan, also due in 2026.
The mortgage modification comes as Page Six confirmed that the 49-year-old and his wife, 52, have been hit with a $3 million tax lien.
Giudice owes $303,889.20, while Ruelas owes nearly $2.6 million — on top of the $163,523.94 tax lien that made headlines late last year.
The “Real Housewives of New Jersey” stars have yet to comment on the scandal.
Giudice already spent time behind bars in 2015 after she and then-husband Joe Giudice were convicted of mail, wire and bankruptcy fraud.
The former couple ended their 20-year marriage after his 2019 release from prison.
Teresa wed Ruelas in August 2022, two years after the pair met vacationing.
The following year, Teresa had a $17,000 unpaid tax balance — but the reality star’s attorney insisted to Page Six in 2023 that she was making “significant timely monthly payments.”
At the time, James J. Leonard Jr. claimed, “Ms. Giudice has been aware of her tax obligations for years.”
On Monday, Bethenny Frankel slammed Teresa via TikTok for being in “another marriage with financial legal issues.”
The “Real Housewives of New York” alum said, “I feel terrible but, like, fool me once, you’re a fool, fool me twice, I’m a fool. There’s never been a worse picker in the history of pickers than myself besides Teresa.”
The Skinnygirl creator, 54, questioned the couple being on TV with a “dead body in [their] trunk,” adding, “It’s almost like it’s being made up, like it’s unfathomable. It doesn’t make any sense.”
The post Teresa Giudice’s husband, Luis Ruelas, requests $1M loan extension, more money amid tax troubles: report appeared first on Page Six.