Another courtroom battle is now closing in on Future, and this one could force one of the rapper’s most private disputes into a far more public and consequential phase. According to court documents obtained by TMZ and summarized by multiple outlets, Future is being challenged by his ex, Layla Sanad, in a paternity case centered on a 9-year-old boy she says is his son.

The case reportedly began with Sanad filing in Florida, where she asked the court to formally establish paternity and order child support. She is also seeking two years of retroactive support, a detail that immediately raises the financial and legal stakes. In the filing, Sanad allegedly says she and Future, whose legal name is Nayvadius Cash, were once in a romantic relationship and had a son together, identified in reports as K.W., who was born in 2017. She also claims Future has admitted he is the child’s father.

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That is where the case turns from rumor into something much more serious. This is not just a vague accusation from someone hoping to stir headlines. What has been reported suggests a direct legal effort to lock the matter into official court findings, with child support attached and the question of fatherhood pushed toward formal recognition. If that happens, the case would no longer live in whispers, blog speculation, or social media chatter. It would become a documented part of Future’s legal record. This is an inference based on the reported purpose of the lawsuit and the relief Sanad is seeking.

Future, however, is not reportedly accepting the Florida case without a fight. In January 2026, he filed documents asking that the Florida action be dismissed in favor of what he called a more convenient forum. His position, according to the reports, is that Sanad and the child live in Arizona and that he had already started his own case there. As of the latest reporting, the Florida court had not yet ruled on his request.

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That Arizona detail may be the most revealing part of the entire dispute. In that separate case, Future reportedly acknowledged being the father of a son named Kash Wilburn and said he has already been voluntarily paying Sanad $3,500 a month in child support. That shifts the story in a dramatic way. The legal conflict may not be about whether he knows the child, or even whether he has some level of responsibility, but rather about where the matter should be handled, how it should be formalized, and what the long-term obligations will look like once a court fully steps in. That reading is an inference from the reported Arizona filing and the contrast between the two court actions.

For someone like Future, whose personal life has repeatedly generated public scrutiny, the optics are brutal. Reports note that he is believed to have at least seven children. His most publicly known co-parenting history remains his past relationship with Ciara, with whom he shares son Future Zahir. That history already made the rapper’s family life a recurring topic in entertainment coverage, but this new dispute threatens to reopen the entire conversation in a much harsher way.

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What makes the situation especially explosive is the possibility that both sides may be operating from partially overlapping versions of the truth. On one side, Sanad is reportedly going to court in Florida to establish paternity and seek support. On the other, Future is said to be arguing that he already initiated proceedings in Arizona and is already paying monthly support. When two versions of the same family dispute collide in different states, the battle stops looking simple. It starts looking like a power struggle over control, jurisdiction, timing, and who gets to define the narrative first. That is an inference drawn from the reported filings in both states.

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There is also something colder underneath the legal language. A child born in 2017 is now old enough for the adults around him to be fighting over his place in the world with years of history already behind them. Retroactive support, competing court venues, and questions of formal acknowledgment all suggest this is not a fresh misunderstanding. It feels more like a dispute that has been simmering quietly until it could no longer stay out of court. That conclusion is an inference based on the child’s reported age, the request for retroactive support, and the existence of parallel filings.

For now, one major question remains unresolved: which state, if either, will end up controlling the fight. Until a judge rules on the venue issue and the reported claims move further through court, the case remains stuck in a tense and messy limbo. But even at this stage, the damage is already underway. Future is once again staring down a legal battle tied not to music, not to business, but to the part of celebrity life that can become the most unforgiving of all: the children, the past relationships, and the responsibilities that fame can never drown out.