Benny Hinn Ministries now faces garnishment after a court order opened the door to asset seizure. The legal move follows a lawsuit from PrintMailPro, a Texas direct mail company, over unpaid marketing work. PrintMailPro secured summary judgment in January, and the ruling set the stage for collection. The court fight centers on services delivered, but not fully paid, so the dispute has shifted from billing to enforcement.
PrintMailPro Claims Unpaid Marketing Services
PrintMailPro told the court it produced extensive printed materials and mass mail marketing services for Benny Hinn Ministries. The work allegedly ran from January through May 2025, and invoices followed. But the company said the ministry defaulted because it refused to pay the full amounts billed. The judge agreed with PrintMailPro’s position, and the decision formalized what the company can recover.
Judgment Amount Grows With Daily Interest
The court ordered Benny Hinn Ministries to pay PrintMailPro $144,617.52. The judgment also adds $64.93 per day starting November 6, 2025, and it continues until the judgment date. The ministry must also cover PrintMailPro’s legal fees, and that requirement raises the total financial hit. Those added costs matter, because they can widen the gap between the original invoices and the final payout.
Benny Hinn’s Long Record of Legal Disputes
Benny Hinn built fame through revival meetings and claims of miracle healing, and he has ties to Word of Faith and prosperity gospel circles. He has voiced caution about prosperity teaching, but he still promises divine financial blessings for donors. Legal conflict has followed him for years, and several companies have pursued payment claims. In 2011, Strang Communications sued over a $300,000 book advance, and it cited a morality clause dispute. In 2014, InfoCision sued over alleged payment defaults, and another mailing company filed a similar suit in 2021. Hinn has also faced IRS-related issues, so scrutiny has stayed close.
Supporters and Detractors Clash Over Accountability
Supporters say the ministry’s message helps people, and they view legal battles as distractions. They argue that financial giving remains voluntary, so donors act from faith. Detractors say the garnishment order shows a pattern, and they question accountability when vendors go unpaid. They also warn that donor-facing promises of financial blessings can pressure vulnerable people, because hardship can fuel desperate giving.
Benny Hinn Ministries Faces Asset Garnishment Following Lawsuit Over Unpaid Services





