
Kylie Jenner is facing another legal storm from inside her household staff operation. A second former housekeeper, Juana Delgado Soto, has filed a lawsuit alleging discrimination, harassment, wage violations and retaliation. The Kylie Jenner lawsuit arrives just weeks after another former housekeeper brought similar workplace claims. Jenner’s representatives have not publicly given a detailed response to Soto’s allegations.
Kylie Jenner Lawsuit Adds New Pressure
Soto says she worked as a housekeeper connected to Jenner’s home from 2019 until 2025. In her complaint, she alleges supervisors and staff created a hostile work environment. She also claims she faced racial discrimination, missed legally required breaks and later endured retaliation after speaking up.
The lawsuit names Jenner, Kylie Jenner Inc., supervisor Itzel Sibrian, Tri Star Services and La Maison Family Services. Forbes reported that Soto’s complaint includes claims of harassment, failure to prevent harassment, labor violations and emotional distress. The outlet also noted that a second former housekeeper had sued Jenner’s team shortly before Soto filed.
“Disappear” Claim Drives The Backlash
One of the most startling allegations centers on Soto’s attempt to alert Jenner directly. Soto claims she wrote a letter describing her distress and left it where Jenner would see it. After that, she alleges staff told her not to contact Jenner again.
According to reports on the complaint, Soto claims she was told not to look at or smile at Jenner. She also alleges she had to “disappear” if Jenner saw her. Those claims have now become the loudest part of the case because they cut straight into the celebrity-household power gap.
Soto also describes several incidents she says caused emotional distress. Reports say she claimed a supervisor told her, “No one cares about your birthday; Kylie is having a dinner,” when Soto wanted to leave work. She also alleges she struggled to get time off after her brother’s death.
Second Housekeeper Suit Raises Stakes
The case follows an earlier lawsuit from former housekeeper Angelica Vazquez. People reported that Vazquez alleged harassment, discrimination and wrongful termination after working at Jenner’s Hidden Hills home. The lawsuit did not directly accuse Jenner herself of personal misconduct, but named her and related companies as defendants.
Entertainment Weekly reported that both lawsuits allege discrimination and hostile working conditions. It also noted that neither complaint makes direct allegations against Jenner personally. That detail matters because the claims center heavily on supervisors, staffing companies and household management.
Still, the optics are brutal for Jenner’s brand. Her public image rests on beauty, luxury and tight control. These lawsuits push a different story into view, one about workers who say they felt ignored inside that same polished world.
For now, the cases remain allegations, not proven facts. Soto and Vazquez are seeking damages tied to their claims. Jenner’s side has not yet publicly answered the lawsuits in court in a way that resolves the dispute. Until then, the legal fight keeps growing around one uncomfortable question: who really controls the culture inside a celebrity home?