Fitness Influencer Claims He Owes $6M on House He Lost In Coin Flip

Fitness influencer Togi sat down with Graham Stephan and Jack on The Iced Coffee Hour podcast to discuss one of his most financially complicated bets: a coin flip that cost him his Miami home and left him on the hook for millions.

The bet grew out of a chaotic week in which Togi set out to make $100,000 but spiraled into a $2.3 million loss. Behind the scenes, he was under pressure to cover $900,000 in production costs for a Japanese game show. “In the back of my mind, I’m like, I need to make $900,000. They need it in two weeks,” he said. “That’s why the bets got so aggressive.”

With losses piling up, he turned to his friend Steve Will Do It. “I need money. Let’s just coin flip for my entire house in Miami because I don’t stay in it too often,” Togi explained. “I said it one time and whatever. Coin flip, lost.”

However, the financial situation was quite complex, with Togi still holding the mortgage on a house he no longer owns.

“I got to pay the mortgage on a house that I don’t own,” he said. At a 9% interest rate, the numbers are steep. “What I pay, $13,000 for 30 years? You do the math. I’m paying like $56 million for a $2 million house.”

He also revealed a second property creating strain: “I have another like $1.5 million owed on my house in Texas.”

Graham stepped in with a solution Togi admitted had never occurred to him. By selling the Miami house, handing Steve the proceeds, and walking away from the mortgage entirely, Togi could avoid years of compounding interest.

“What I need to do is sell the house, avoid $4 million of interest, then give Steve $2 million,” Togi said after working through the logic. “You just saved me three, four million. Wow. Thank you.”

Steve also gave Togi a Lamborghini Revuelto, valued around $700,000, as part of the arrangement. The catch: “I can’t sell it because it was a gift and I still needed money for the production.”

At the time of filming, the Miami house was sitting empty. “I believe it’s empty,” Togi confirmed when asked.

As for how he rates his finances through all of this, Togi put it at an eight out of ten. His reasoning: “In two years, I will be making $30 million a year. So say if I lost $2 million on that video but the video made more people stoked on Togi, and more people invested into Togi’s timeline, and then you spend $900,000 on a game show but the game shows are going really well. It’s no problem. It’s really a drop in the bucket.”