Kevin Spacey, the two‑time Academy Award winner whose career once stood at the pinnacle of Hollywood, has now revealed a deeply personal struggle: a transient lifestyle borne out of financial collapse and professional exile. In a recent interview, he disclosed that he currently has no permanent residence, instead staying in hotels and Airbnbs as he follows work opportunities. “I literally have no home,” he said, adding that he is “going where the work is.”
The underlying cause of this upheaval, he says, lies in the years of legal, reputational and financial fallout stemming from sexual misconduct accusations that emerged in 2017. Though Spacey was cleared of criminal allegations in London in 2023 and found not liable in a U.S. civil case in 2022, the impact on his career and earnings has been profound.
Spacey revealed that his Baltimore home was sold at auction after foreclosure proceedings, part of an ordeal he described as having “astronomical” costs and very little incoming cash. “Everything is in storage … I hope at some point … I’ll be able to decide where I want to settle down again,” he said.
Despite these challenges, Spacey still maintains a sense of optimism. He believes the door to the film industry may reopen if key figures signal their support. “If Martin Scorsese or Quentin Tarantino call tomorrow … it will be over,” he declared. And while a full‑scale mainstream comeback remains uncertain, he insists he is still working— albeit in smaller productions — and awaiting the right moment.
This chapter in Spacey’s life marks a dramatic shift from his earlier stature: from leading roles in major films and the widely‑celebrated television series “House of Cards” to a public admission of homelessness and career limbo. It underscores the long‑term consequences of scandal and the precarious nature of fame and fortune in Hollywood.