Maybe Jennifer Lopez, not Alex Rodriguez, covered the bill for the super-luxe, $15.3 million Park Avenue condo the two reportedly purchased in March.

Or maybe the former baseball star doesn’t really have a net worth of $300 million, after earning an estimated $480 million over his 22-year career in Major League Baseball.

Whatever is going on, the 43-year-old retired New York Yankees player is claiming he’s destitute — by super celebrity standards.

He said he took such a massive hit to his income when he retired in 2016 that he can no longer afford to pay his ex-wife Cynthia Scurtis $115,000 a month, tax free, in combined spousal and child support, TMZ reported Tuesday.

According to TMZ and other outlets, A-Rod has been locked in a bitter legal battle with Scurtis for months, which follows the theme of their bitter divorce 10 years earlier.

Rodriguez and Scurtis were married from 2002 to 2008 and are parents of two daughters, 13-year-old Natasha and 10-year-old Ella. They divorced among cheating rumors, Miami.com reported. Rodriguez and Lopez, 49, began dating in the spring of 2017.

Rodriguez has long presented himself as a loving, devoted hands-on father, regularly sharing photos of himself with his daughters on Instagram:

Rodriguez claims that the deal he originally reached with his ex-wife would allow his monthly payments to be adjusted after he retired from the Yankees, TMZ reported. He said his income has dropped 90 percent since 2016 — from $30 million a year, while he was on the team, to around $3 million a year.

What’s really annoying Rodriguez is that, thanks to him, his ex-wife has become a rich woman with “millions in the bank,” three homes and multiple cars, TMZ’s sources said. Meanwhile, she chooses not to work, despite the fact that she has a master’s degree in psychology.

On top of that, she has a new child with her new fiance, leaving Rodriguez feeling like “he’s now bankrolling all of them,” TMZ added.

Rodriguez believes his daughters only need about $7,000 to $12,000 a month in child support, though he would be happy to pay $20,000, according to TMZ.

Scurtis reportedly is willing to lower the payments to $50,000 a month, but no lower, leaving the ex-spouses at an impasse, TMZ reported. Scurtis did not respond to TMZ’s requests for comment.

Rodriguez’s efforts to cut his monthly payments to Scurtis is nothing new. In April, the New York Daily News reported that he threatened to cut his child support payments due to ongoing disputes with Scurtis’ brother over a business deal gone bad.

In response to the Daily News report, Rodriguez released a statement saying he has always paid “far more than the maximum in child support and that will never change. My daughters are my number one priority and always will be.”

As for Rodriguez saying his income took a massive hit, the Daily News reported in the spring that the former athlete-turned-businessman is “on a roll.”

Not only is he traveling the world and purchasing luxury real estate with Lopez, he was paid $21 million by the Yankees in 2017, the final year of his contract, without a single at-bat, the Daily News pointed out. He also works on ESPN’s “Sunday Night Baseball” coverage team, and offers business advice to athletes on CNBC’s “Back in the Game.”