In late February, Corey Harrison was lying in a hospital in Mérida, Mexico, convinced he was going to die.
A motorcycle crash in January had put him there. Surgeons drained nearly three liters of blood from his chest cavity after a rib separated and pressed into his lung. He checked himself out of the first hospital in Playa del Carmen because the bills were climbing too fast. He went home to Tulum hoping to recover. Instead, his oxygen levels dropped and, according to the GoFundMe description, a house doctor was called to administer IV fluids and morphine. The fundraiser says Corey was hesitant to take heavy pain meds after his brother Adam died of a fentanyl overdose in January 2024.
Credit: @thecoreyharrisonshow/Instagram
“I’m just going to die out here,” he reportedly said. “I don’t have the money to keep paying these people.”
He survived and made it back to Tulum. A friend started a GoFundMe. Then, on March 6, Corey told TMZ that his father, Rick Harrison, had helped cover roughly half of the six-figure hospital bill.
What Rick Said
Hours later, Rick Harrison told a different story to the same outlet.
“As far as I know, I paid all of Corey’s medical bills long before he put the GoFundMe out,” Rick said. He added that Corey “is a grown man in his 40s and is responsible for how he handles his finances.”
Not half. All. And, pointedly, not a debt.
Both statements were made to TMZ on March 6, 2026.
Credit: Rick Harrison/Instagram
The Contradiction That Neither of Them Is Resolving
There are two ways to read what happened here.
The charitable version: Rick and Corey are operating from different definitions of the same transaction. Rick may have paid the hospital directly, while Corey is counting other costs tied to the ordeal. Medical billing across multiple facilities in Mexico is not a clean single invoice.
The less charitable version: A father and son who built their public identity around the Pawn Stars dynamic are now playing it out in competing TMZ statements while Corey is still recovering from a crash that nearly killed him.
Corey himself fed both readings in the same breath. “I love my dad to death,” he said, “but he doesn’t give me sh-t. My dad’s made me work for everything my whole life.” He also confirmed Rick had warned him for years to stop riding motorcycles.
Rick’s statement didn’t contradict the affection. It contradicted the accounting.
The GoFundMe Nobody Has Fully Explained
If Rick Harrison paid all of Corey’s medical bills before the GoFundMe launched, what is the GoFundMe for?
Corey Harrison’s GoFundMe campaign, screenshotted as of 4:00 p.m., March 7, 2026. (Screenshot: GoFundMe)
The campaign, which had raised $9,605 toward an $18,000 goal as of 4:00 pm Saturday, March 7, says Corey drained his savings during recovery and is currently unable to work. Lost income during weeks of hospitalization isn’t covered by a settled bill. Neither is the financial hole left by a prolonged inability to work in Tulum.
Rick’s statement doesn’t address any of that. It addresses the medical bill specifically and then delivers a brisk reminder about adult responsibility.
“He’s a grown man in his 40s” is technically accurate. It’s also a cold thing to say after your son just described thinking he’d die alone in a foreign country.
What the Harrisons Have Always Been
Rick and Corey Harrison on the set of Pawn Stars, the History Channel reality series that ran for fifteen seasons on the premise of Rick’s tough-love approach to business and family. Credit: Pawn Stars/Instagram
Pawn Stars ran on the premise that Rick Harrison built something real by never giving anything away. Rick was the authority. Corey was the inheritor who hadn’t quite earned the throne yet.
That dynamic made for good television. It is a harder thing to watch play out in dueling statements about who paid for the surgeries that kept Corey’s lung functioning.
Adam Harrison, the brother Corey invoked when describing his reluctance to take morphine, died at 39 after years of addiction that Rick has described publicly as a cycle of rehab, recovery, and relapse. “You try to give him tough love,” Rick said in a recent interview. “I never thought that would happen.”
Corey survived Mexico. The GoFundMe is still open. Rick says the medical bills are paid.
The question the Harrison family hasn’t answered publicly, and may not need to, is whether “paid” and “taken care of” mean the same thing when the person recovering is the one doing the crowdfunding.

