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Credit: KOI SOJER/startraksphoto.com/Forsidebilder
The Real Housewives of Atlanta star Pinky Cole‘s income has been revealed in her bankruptcy case.
According to the information that has been released, it doesn’t look like Pinky has a ton of revenue coming in.
TMZ obtained legal documents that listed her monthly income as a paltry $6,000. This was listed as part of the proposed reorganization plan she recently filed in her ongoing bankruptcy case.
In the plan, Pinky stated that she would budget $200 for children’s expenses, $800 for groceries, $300 for medical expenses, $80 for gas, $1,574 for Georgia state taxes, and $1,343 for federal taxes. This leaves her with $1,500 in disposable income per month.
Seam previous reportedPinky broke down her $4 million debt in bankruptcy documents she filed.
In them, she detailed her debts, which include over $80,000 in credit card bills and hundreds of thousands of dollars in bills from a real estate agency, a restaurant supplier, toll authorities and medical providers. These are all currently unpaid.
In an initial bankruptcy filing she filed in February, Pinky claimed she owed $1.2 million to the Small Business Administration for a Covid-era disaster loan she took out. She also stated that she owed $192,000 in Georgia taxes and had other debts.
After filing for bankruptcy herself, Pinky then hired a lawyer Jamie Christywho submitted amendments to his case.
The changes state she still owes more than $70,000 across two American Express credit cards and $12,000 on an Apple credit card. It was also revealed that Pinky owes $107,625 to a Norcross-based restaurant supply store called Edward Don & Company.
Edward Don & Company filed a lawsuit against Pinky in October 2025, alleging that she owes them $107,625 in unpaid invoices, $12,312 in legal fees and $15,498 in interest on the money she owes them.
The latest bankruptcy filings also noted that real estate agent JLL Realty owes $363,399 in unpaid rent and that investment management firm CIH Group owes $250,000.
Additionally, they detailed smaller amounts of money owed to Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, Dentistry for Children, Henry County EMS and the Georgia and Ohio toll agencies.