Nicknamed 'the Hitman', Hatton won the WBA, IBO and IBF light-welterweight titles and the WBA welterweight world championship during his 15-year professional career before retiring in 2012.
He had been due to make a comeback for an event in Dubai this year.
Greater Manchester Police said that a body had been found on Sunday morning at an address in Hyde in the northern English city.
Hatton had 45 wins in 48 bouts over his career but in the years after he retired he said he had tried to kill himself several times and had been open about his struggle with depression, drink and drugs.
Hatton became an ambassador for the mental health charity Campaign Against Living Miserably in 2023.
The crowning moment of Hatton's career in the ring came in 2005 when he stopped Australian Kostya Tszyu in a brutal duel in Manchester to add the IBF light-welterweight title to the WBU belt he already held.
He had a perfect 43-0 record until he was floored by Floyd Mayweather Jr in Las Vegas in 2007 and was never the same again. Hatton's second loss came in 2009, when Manny Pacquiao knocked him out.
Hatton was a lifelong Manchester City fan and wore sky blue shorts, matching the soccer club's colours, in most of his bouts. The Premier League club held a thunderous minute's appreciation ahead of their derby against Manchester United on Sunday with both sets of supporters paying their respects.
Source: www.reuters.com
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