How many homes do the world’s super-rich actually own?
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The property portfolios of the world's wealthiest
From Hawaiian islands to Japanese villas, these billionaires’ bulging real estate portfolios include some truly spectacular properties. Thanks to top secret trusts and shell companies, it's almost impossible to find out exactly how many homes the super-rich own, but we can give you a very good idea.
From Jeff Bezos and Larry Ellison's sumptuous collection to the unexpectedly humble offerings of another retail mogul, click or scroll to take a closer look...
* All figures accurate at the time of publishing.
Larry Ellison: 36+ homes
As Oracle co-founder and CEO, Larry Ellison has been called the "nation's most avid trophy-home buyer" by the Wall Street Journal, and while it is difficult to confirm the exact number of homes the billionaire currently owns, the figure is believed to be around 36 properties.
As of 2024, Ellison had a net worth of a $157 billion (£124bn) according to Forbes, so he certainly has the funds to splash out on flashy homes.
Larry Ellison has villas, golf clubs, mansions and more
The tech tycoon also owns an $86 million (£68m) historic villa in Kyoto, Japan, three stunning homes in Lake Tahoe, California worth tens of millions of dollars and a private golf club complete with a 16-bedroom mansion in Rancho Mirage, California.
Ellison himself admits that he has zero time or inclination to live in each and every one of his many homes. The property-loving billionaire seemingly collects statement homes and Forbes estimates his combined real estate portfolio to be worth around $1 billion (£787m).
John Chang / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 3.0 DEED]
Larry Ellison’s California estate
Elsewhere in California, Ellison also owns a 23-acre Woodside estate, into which he reportedly invested $200 million (£157m) to have the home remodelled to resemble Kyoto's 16th-century Katsura Imperial Villa (pictured).
Ellison also owns roughly two dozen properties in Malibu, including at least 10 on a stretch of Carbon Beach known as Billionaire's Beach. According to Insider, his total spending on properties in Malibu is estimated between $200 million (£157m) to $250 million (£197m).
Joseph Sohm / Shutterstock
Larry Ellison’s own personal art museums
In 2010, Ellison acquired the Gilded Age Beechwood Villa in Rhode Island (pictured) for $10.5 million (£8.3m). He then invested more than $100 million (£78.7m) to renovate the former Astor residence into an art museum for his personal collection of 18th and 19th-century European art.
Ellison reportedly owns two other properties which he has converted into museums. He told CNBC in 2012: "I'm going to start these art museums that are basically converted homes. I have one for modern art, and I have one for 19th-century European art, and one for French impressionism."
Felix Lipov / Shutterstock
Larry Ellison’s five-bedroom Newport mansion
Ellison went on to purchase the four neighbouring properties surrounding Beechwood on Newport’s ritzy Bellevue Avenue.
His most recent acquisition, the five-bedroom mansion known as Seacliff he bought in February of 2019 for $11 million (£8.7m), brought his compiled Newport estate up to nine acres in total.
Russell deJetley / Shutterstock
Larry Ellison’s Hawaiian island
In 2012, Ellison paid a reported $300 million (£236m) to acquire 98% of the Hawaiian island of Lanai, including 90,000 acres of land and a Four Seasons resort (pictured).
Ellison went on to refurbish the resort while investing in clean energy sources, and supposedly intends to use the island as an environmental experiment. Currently, the island remains largely undeveloped, with no traffic lights or shopping malls.
Frederick Millett / Shutterstock
Larry Ellison’s Hawaiian island
Since then, Ellison has submitted a 30-year proposal costing $340 million (£267m) to the Land Use Commission in Hawaii, where he owns 98% of the island called Lanai. This would potentially see 200 acres turned into an industrial park, with extra housing built to bring the population up to 6,000 people from its current population of just over 3,000 and new amenities developed such as a university, film studios and a tennis academy.
When the pandemic hit, Ellison made Lanai his full-time home and he still spends the majority of his time there.
Larry Ellison’s huge Palm Beach villa
Meanwhile, this property in the ultra-exclusive neighbourhood of Seminole Landing in North Palm Beach, Florida, is one the tech tycoon has been trying to offload for some time.
Ellison originally bought the magnificent Tuscan-style mansion, the third largest beachfront parcel in Palm Beach County, back in 2020 for $80 million (£64.7m). Despite its grandeur, he announced plans to demolish the home in 2021.
Sotheby's International Realty
Larry Ellison’s new Manalapan estate
However, after scooping up this $173 million (£136m) compound in nearby Manalapan in June 2022, Ellison listed the Seminole Landing home for $145 million (£114m) – a cool $65 million (£51m) more than he'd paid for it just one year earlier. There weren't any takers for the impressive pad and Ellison pulled it from the market.
His 15-acre Manalapan retreat includes a 12-bedroom main house, two beachside cottages, an additional seven-bedroom home, a pool, golf course, tennis court, botanical gardens and a pier for ocean watersports.
Jeff Bezos: 17 homes
As chairman and founder of Amazon, Jeff Bezos has built up an impressive net worth, which amounted to $193.6 billion (£152bn) in 2024 according to Forbes. He regularly jostles with Louis Vuitton owner Bernard Arnault and tech entrepreneur Elon Musk for the top spot on the world's richest list.
With commercial holdings scattered all over the world, Jeff is also no stranger to the personal property market and is believed to own around 17 homes. Let’s take a look at some of his priciest pads.
Jeff Bezos’s California compound
Bezos owns four homes alone in the coveted celebrity Beverly Hills enclave, and it seems he’s creating a massive compound for himself. He acquired his first property in the area, an 11,891-square-foot, seven-bed, seven-bath mansion (pictured), back in 2007 for $24.5 million (£19.3m).
In July 2019, he went on to buy the four-bed contemporary home next door for $12.9 million (£10.1m). Then, in 2020, Bezos snapped up two more Beverly Hills homes for $165 million (£129.7m) and $10 million (£7.9m) respectively.
Jeff Bezos’s two lakeside mansions in Washington state
In his home state of Washington, meanwhile, Bezos owns two properties, the first of which is a beautiful two-house estate that sits not far from Bill Gates’s Xanadu 2.0 mansion.
In 1998, Bezos splashed out $10 million (£7.9m) for the 5.3-acre Medina estate, which consists of a roomy six-bedroom house and an even larger 20,605-square-foot property. And as if two homes weren’t enough, Bezos also bought the house next door for $53 million (£41.7m) in 2005.
Jeff Bezos’s two lakeside mansions in Washington state
The main house was transformed in a 2010 renovation of the combined lots to create a beautiful 25,000-square-foot Tudor-style mansion with six bedrooms and nine bathrooms, costing a reported $28 million (£22m).
The beautiful grounds also include an indoor and outdoor pool, a guest house, plus waterfront access to Lake Washington with two jetties and a boathouse.
David Shankbone / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 3.0 DEED]
Jeff Bezos’s Manhattan apartments
A year later, over on the East Coast, the e-commerce billionaire bought three swanky apartments in Manhattan's Art Deco Century Tower from former Sony boss and Mariah Carey's ex Tommy Mottola for $7.7 million (£6.1m).
Courtesy Pembrooke & Ives
Jeff Bezos’s Manhattan apartments
A decade later, Bezos decided to expand his New York City real estate holdings, dropping $80 million (£62.9m) on three apartments in an upscale 5th Avenue building overlooking Madison Square Park. At the time, The Wall Street Journal reported that the purchase was one of the most expensive real estate transactions in New York City for the year.
Courtesy Pembrooke & Ives
Jeff Bezos’s Manhattan apartments
Over the course of the next two years, Bezos went on to acquire both a $16 million (£12.6m) and a $23 million (£18.1m) unit in the same historic building, making five apartments in total.
The apartments have a combined 20,000 square feet of living space and include a three-floor, 10,000-square-foot penthouse with a grand ballroom, 12 bedrooms, and numerous terraces.
Courtesy Pembrooke & Ives
Jeff Bezos’s Manhattan apartments
At the time it was suspected that the space would function as a home base for Bezos and his then-wife of 25 years, MacKenzie Scott, but the pair divorced in April of 2021.
The entire mega-mansion complex is housed on Fifth Avenue in the Flatiron district and boasts a fitness centre, golf simulator, games room and movie screening room.
AgnosticPreachersKid / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 3.0 DEED]
Jeff Bezos’s historic Washington DC mansions
A bit further down the east coast, Bezos also owns a former textile museum-turned 27,000-square-foot-mansion in Washington DC, which he purchased in 2012 for $23 million (£18.1m).
The impressive colonial-style brick building dates to 1912, and holds a spot on the National Register of Historic Places.
Jeff Hyland / Hilton & Hyland
Jeff Bezos’s historic Washington DC mansions
In 2020, Bezos purchased the home across the street for the far more modest sum of $5 million (£3.9m). At the time, it was suspected that the home was bought for privacy reasons, as it directly overlooks the previous buy.
That same year, he still had room in the budget to purchase his impressive $165 million (£129.7) Georgian-style manor in Beverly Hills (pictured).
Jeff and Lauren's new love nest
Jeff Bezos and media personality Lauren Sanchez have been an ‘item’ since 2019 – shortly after Bezos publicly announced his divorce from his wife of 25 years, MacKenzie Scott – and the pair announced their engagement in May 2023.
They made their temporary home in a Malibu compound owned by the Kardashians’ financial manager, Lester Knispel, while construction on their new love nest was underway.
Jeff and Lauren's new love nest
The couple’s new home will be a mega-mansion located in Beverly Hills on the 10-acre estate previously owned by ex-Warner Bros. president Jack Warner.
With an estimated value of $175 million (£137.5m), the palace will ultimately take the form of an 8,000-square-foot, three-storey main home, as well as a separate guest home, gym, pergola, and security headquarters.
Jeff Bezos' twin ‘Billionaire Bunker’ island mansions
As if that wasn't enough, in 2023 Bezos snapped up two neighbouring properties (pictured, centre and left) on Florida's Indian Creek Village. Known as ‘Billionaire Bunker’ island due to its extraordinary number of ultra-rich residents, the exclusive address is home to Jared and Ivanka Kushner, Tom Brady and DJ David Guetta.
Bezos bought the first home – a seven bedroom Italianate villa – in June 2023 for $68 million (£53.5m). Just four months later, he closed a deal on the neighbouring property – a modest three-bedroom home built in 1965 – for a record-breaking $79 million (£62.2m). The couple reportedly have plans to raze both houses – we can't wait to see what they built in their place.
Michael Bloomberg: 11 homes
Former mayor of New York City, Michael Bloomberg has many claims to fame, having expanded beyond the bounds of his political career to dabble in the fields of business, literature and even philanthropy – he was America's most generous donor in 2023.
With a net worth of $106.2 billion (£83.5bn) in 2024, Bloomberg has long boasted an impressive international property portfolio and appears to have a penchant for collecting homes with prestigious pasts.
Michael Bloomberg’s New York property portfolio
As the city’s former mayor, Bloomberg of course holds some impressive Manhattan properties. When he left office in 2013, his primary residence was a Beaux-Arts mansion on East 79th Street, just steps away from Central Park, which he reportedly purchased in 1986 for $3.5 million (£2.8m), and then sank $1.7 million (£1.3m) into renovating.
While the five-storey townhouse already offered 7,500 square feet of space, Bloomberg also bought up condos in the building next door in order to create a double-width mansion.
Sipa US / Alamy Stock Photo
Michael Bloomberg’s New York property portfolio
Bloomberg also owns a $3.8 million (£3m) condo in a Trump building just a few blocks down at 610 Park Avenue, but when he feels he needs a respite from the city, he just has to head out to Long Island, where he owns this spectacular Hamptons estate.
Known as Ballyshear, the 22,000-square-foot Georgian-style mansion set Bloomberg back a cool $20 million (£15.7m) when he purchased it in 2011, Vanity Fair reports.
Roberto Herrett / Alamy Stock Photo
Michael Bloomberg’s central London pads
A so-called "perennial figure in London society", Bloomberg also owns two homes in London, the first of which is a flat in the salubrious Cadogan Square, and the second a far more opulent $25 million (£19.6m) mansion in Chelsea once owned by the Victorian novelist George Eliot.
Bloomberg bought the latter seven-bedroom property in 2015, at a time when there was some speculation that he might be considering running for mayor of London.
Christie's International Real Estate
Michael Bloomberg’s Bermudian mega-mansion
In more temperate climes, Bloomberg also owns a spectacular mansion in Bermuda, where he regularly spent weekends during his tenure as mayor. He reportedly originally bought the estate back in 1998, only to replace the extant building with an even larger $10 million (£7.9m) mega-mansion and pool.
The property includes its own private beach, clustered around a sapphire blue cove (pictured), and Bloomberg remains a frequent visitor and prominent member of the local community.
Michael Bloomberg’s holiday homes
For the ski season, Bloomberg can be found retreating to his family vacation properties in Vail, Colorado (pictured), where he owns a four-bedroom condo in the exclusive Mountain Haus ski resort.
If warmer temperatures are preferred, he can also jet down to his 12-acre estate in the equally exclusive community of Wellington, Florida, which includes a seven-bed mansion and a 12-stall horse barn for his daughter, an avid equestrian, for whom he has also purchased three properties in the horse-riding heart of Westchester, New York.
KENZO TRIBOUILLARD / Getty
Mark Zuckerberg: 10 homes
Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg boasts a net worth of $173.1 billion (£136bn). Zuckerberg created Facebook, now under the parent company Meta, in 2004 at the tender age of 19 while he was still a student at Harvard University.
Since then, the young billionaire has developed a reputation as an internet pioneer, business magnate and philanthropist, and has accumulated a substantial property portfolio to boot.
Mark Zuckerberg’s California home
Zuckerberg’s home base, where he lives with his wife, Priscilla Chan, and their three children, is this 5,617-square-foot, five-bed, five-bath home in Palo Alto, California. Perched on 0.4 acres, the home offers plenty of outdoor entertaining space, including a saltwater pool, a spa, a barbeque area, a sunroom, an entertainment pavilion and both front and back porches.
The couple have also bought the four neighbouring houses, creating a super-compound that, according to the Daily Mail, has riled the local community.
Mark Zuckerberg / Facebook
Mark Zuckerberg’s California home
In 2011, the year before his marriage, Zuckerberg dropped $7 million (£5.5m) on the colonial revival house, which is the oldest home in Palo Alto, with parts of the wood frame structure dating to the 1860s.
Inside, the home has traditional features such as hardwood floors and a fireplace, as well as some less conventional add-ons, including a “Facebook Canon” which launches grey T-shirts, and an AI assistant with the voice of Morgan Freeman, according to Architectural Digest, which Zuckerberg built himself.
Shane Myers Photography / Shutterstock
Mark Zuckerberg’s Hawaiian compound
In addition to his Palo Alto main residence, Zuckerberg owns nine more properties across San Francisco, Lake Tahoe and Hawaii. He seems to have a particular penchant for the latter location, where, at last tally, he currently owns 1,400 acres of land for which he has cumulatively paid over $200 million (£157.6m).
Some of these land purchases have sparked controversy, with locals allegedly complaining that Zuckerberg was blocking public beach access and buying out patches of land that had belonged to generations of tenant farmers.
Oliver Luxury Real Estate
Mark Zuckerberg’s Hawaiian compound
In 2014, he spent $116 million (£91.4m) on 707 acres on the island of Kauai, including most of Pila’a beach and Kahu’aina Plantation, an acquisition which included a 6,100-square-foot house, a 16-car garage, offices and security headquarters.
His next Hawaiian purchase was an additional 89 acres for $45.3 million (£35.7m) in 2017, followed by 600 more in March of 2021 for $53 million (£41.8m).
In December 2023, it was reported that Zuckerberg was using the land he's steadily accumulated to build a sprawling compound. According to planning documents, the property will even have a 5,000-square-foot bunker, with blast-resistant doors and an escape hatch.
Bill Gates: 8 homes
Bill Gates, widely hailed as the father of the internet, spearheaded the so-called ‘microcomputer revolution’ of the 1970s and 80s when he co-founded the software company Microsoft alongside his childhood best friend, Paul Allen.
With a 2024 net worth of $130.5 billion (£103bn), the 67-year-old tech tycoon is a regular figure in the top ten list of the wealthiest people in the world. He's also a prestigious philanthropist through his organisation, the Gates Foundation.
Dllu / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 4.0 DEED]
Bill Gates: Xanadu 2.0
Bill Gates and his ex-wife Melinda, with whom he still co-chairs the charitable Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, gave away a planned $8.3 billion (£6.5bn) in 2023, fighting poverty, disease, and inequity. Though he certainly follows a philosophy of giving, Gates isn’t above living well himself.
Currently, it’s unclear how many properties he actually owns, or how these properties were divvied up in the couple’s divorce, which they announced via Twitter in May of 2021. But the pair certainly put together an impressive portfolio over their years together, starting with their main residence, Xanadu 2.0, in Medina, Washington.
Jeff Wilcox / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY 2.0 DEED]
Bill Gates: Xanadu 2.0
The custom-built mansion overlooks Lake Washington and is said to derive its name from the fictional mansion in the iconic film Citizen Kane.
The Pacific Lodge-inspired property boasts a whopping 66,000 square feet of living space which includes seven bedrooms, two dozen bathrooms (yes, you read that correctly), six kitchens, a 2,200-square-foot ballroom and meeting space, plus a 20-seat Art Deco-style theatre. Throw in a trampoline room, a 60-foot pool with an underwater sound system and a massive library with a hidden bar behind a bookcase, and you have grown-up Disneyland!
Jeff Wilcox / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-A 2.0]
Bill Gates: Xanadu 2.0
Of course, the home also comes equipped with state-of-the-art technology straight out of a sci-fi novel.
According to RobbReport, occupants and guests wear pins with pre-set preferences for lighting, temperature and audio-visual systems. These pins communicate with sensors throughout the house such that as one moves from room to room, the lights and climate systems will alter themselves automatically to correlate with preset preferences – and your music choice will follow you, too!
Bill Gates and his Wyoming ranch
In addition to Xanadu 2.0, which took many years and a reported $63 million (£49.7m) to complete, and today has an estimated worth of closer to $130 million (£102.5m), Gates owns several other homes.
One favourite escape includes the 492-acre ranch in Wyoming that he purchased for a reported $8.9 million (£7m) back in 2009, and which once belonged to legendary hunter Buffalo Bill. In addition to the picturesque ranch, Gates reportedly owns hundreds of thousands of acres of farmland across America.
Bill Gates’s equestrian estate
The Microsoft boss-turned-philanthropist can also make a beeline for his equestrian estate in Wellington, Florida (pictured) that he bought in 2009 for $8.7 million ($6.9m), or head to his 228-acre horse ranch near San Diego, California, which set him back a cool $18 million (£14.2m) in 2014.
Bill Gates’s oceanfront bungalow
In 2020, as Covid lockdowns set in, the Gateses splashed out $43 million (£34.8m) on an oceanfront compound along one of the most exclusive streets in the affluent California community of Del Mar. The property, designed by renowned local architect Ken Ronchetti, is a 5,800-square-foot, single-level home complete with six bedrooms and 3.5 bathrooms, plus a pair of guest houses out back.
Bill Gates’s oceanfront bungalow
The posh property included plenty of luxury features to keep the couple entertained throughout lockdown, including a home theatre, a glass-tiled swimming pool, a 10-person hot tub, a health and fitness suite and a spectacular terrace overlooking the beach. The home sits a mere six miles from the Gates’ Rancho Santa Fe property in San Diego.
Bernard Arnault: 7 homes
While his name may be less familiar than some of the other titans of industry whose property portfolios we’ve toured, Bernard Arnault is a giant in the world of luxury brands.
As the founder, chairman and CEO of LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton, the world’s largest luxury goods company, Arnault is regularly found at the top of the world's richest list. He has a 2024 net worth of $230.2 billion (£181.4bn). Fittingly, his homes are just as luxurious as the brands he manages.
Bernard Arnault’s Parisian mansion
Arnault’s main residence is a spectacular Parisian mansion in the 8th Arrondissement along the left bank of the Sein. While not much is known about the home, it's reportedly worth over $200 million (£157.4m) and dates to the 18th century.
Its limestone exterior features intricate carvings, as well as a solid bronze front door flanked by two lion sculptures. Inside, the home spans over 7,000 square feet and reportedly includes 12 bedrooms, 12 bathrooms, a library, a dining room and a ballroom.
Abaca Press / Alamy Stock Photo
Bernard Arnault’s Bordeaux chateau
Arnault also owns a chateau in the Bordeaux wine region of France known as Chateau Cheval Blanc, or White Horse Castle. The estate dates to 1832 and has been producing award-winning wine since its origin.
The estate remained under the ownership of the Laussac-Fourcaud family until 1998, when Arnault purchased the chateau and its adjoining vineyards.
Benjamin Zingg / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 2.5 DEED]
Bernard Arnault’s Bordeaux chateau
The chateau boasts 34 opulent rooms, no doubt filled with Arnault’s prestigious art collection, as well as a balcony overlooking the surrounding countryside and mountains.
In addition to his French residences, Arnault also reportedly owns five decadent homes in Beverly Hills with a combined value of $125 million (£98.4m), and the 133-acre Indigo Island in the Bahamas, which he purchased for £35 million ($27.5m).
Warren Buffet: 1 home
Known as the 'Oracle of Omaha', Warren Buffett is one of the most successful investors of all time, according to Forbes.
Buffett, who is in his 90s, boasted a net worth of $136.5 billion (£107.4bn) in 2024, which he has built through his management of the firm Berkshire Hathaway, which owns dozens of big-name companies including Geico, Duracell, and Dairy Queen. But in spite of his vast riches, the world’s fifth-wealthiest man still chooses to live a remarkably simple lifestyle…
Warren Buffet’s forever home
Believe it or not, Buffett still lives in the same modest house he bought in 1958 for just $31,500, or about $338,400 (£266k) in today’s money, which means he’s called the same five-bed in Omaha, Nebraska home for 65 years.
The home itself is just 6,570 square feet, and dates to 1921, although some additions appear to have been made to the stucco structure. Today, its estimated value is fixed at $1.4 million (£1.1m), according to Zillow’s estimate.
Warren Buffet’s forever home
To be fair to Buffett, the house does offer an unbeatable location with regards to convenience – just a five-minute drive from Berkshire Hathaway’s corporate headquarters.
Buffett has repeatedly referred to the home as his “third-best investment” and insists that he "couldn’t imagine having a better house". In a 2009 BBC interview, he stated in reference to his home: "I’m happy there. I’d move if I thought I’d be happier someplace else."
Warren Buffet’s former home office
Before he found his forever home, Buffett owned another property even more modest than the one he currently occupies. It was in this quaint three-bed English Tudor-style house that Buffett launched his business empire.
The 3,400-square-foot home, which served as the makeshift office for Buffett’s first solo investment fund, Buffett Associates, hit the market in April of 2022 for $799,000 (£629k). Maybe some of Buffett’s business karma will rub off on the lucky owner!
Warren Buffet’s beach retreat
He also used to own this six-bedroom home in Emerald Bay, Laguna Beach – one of California's most exclusive neighbourhoods. He reportedly bought the beach retreat back in 1971 for just $150,000 – that's about $1.1 million (£864k) in today's money.
However, he offloaded it in 2018 for substantially more than that, scoring an impressive $7.5 million (£5.9m) sale. He also used to own the house next door and connected the two homes with a stairway. He sold that property in 2005.
Like Bill Gates, Buffet also reportedly owns thousands of acres of farmland, including research farms in Arizona and South Africa. His son Howard G. Buffet runs the family farms in Illinois and Nebraska, among others.
Elon Musk: 0 homes
Founder, CEO and chief engineer of SpaceX, CEO and product architect of Tesla owner and CEO of X (formerly Twitter), founder of the Boring Company, co-founder of Neuralink and OpenAI; and president of the philanthropic Musk Foundation, Elon Musk’s CV speaks for itself.
With a 2024 net worth of $193.6 billion (£152.4m), he is the world’s second-wealthiest person. However, when it comes to property, Musk is somewhat unusual…
Elon Musk’s former homes
Back in 2020, Musk made the surprising vow to sell nearly all of his physical possessions, including his entire property portfolio. By March of 2022, he had honoured his pledge to 'own no house' and it was reported that he had finally sold all seven of his homes.
Currently, he is believed to be residing in a rental property in Boca Chica, Texas, near his aerospace company, worth a reported $50,000 (£39.4k). But let’s take a look back at some of the properties that Musk owned before he offloaded them.
Elon Musk’s former Bel Air mansion
One of Musk’s more impressive abodes was this 16,251-square-foot Bel Air Mansion, which he bought back in 2012 for $17 million (£13.4m) after renting the property for two years and living there with two of his sons.
The entire estate occupies a lush 1.7 acres, encircled by rolling hills and picturesque views, and boasts six bedrooms and 11 bathrooms, as well as numerous entertaining spaces, including a two-storey library and a home theatre.
Gene Wilder's former home
Another of Musk’s prestigious properties, now sold, was this charming 2,756-square-foot ranch which once belonged to Gene Wilder.
Musk reportedly used the house as a private school for his children until October of 2020, at which point he parted with the five-bed, four-bath for $7 million (£5.5m) to an LLC managed by the screenwriter and producer Elizabeth Hunter, who is married to Wilder's nephew, ensuring that the home's legacy lives on.
The Photo Works / Alamy Stock Photo
Elon Musk's new glass house?
Elon Musk also appears to be building a mysterious glass structure in Austin. Known as Project 42, the 'secret' plans have been described within the company as a house for Musk. Renderings of the building show different styles of glass structure: one a twisted hexagon perched on the waterfront, and another a large glass cube, similar to the Fifth Avenue Apple Store in New York, pictured here.
Tesla employees were said to have been working on the development before the project's financing came under scrutiny by the US government. An order for millions of dollars worth of specialised glass sparked an internal investigation by Tesla lawyers. While the outcome is unknown, Manhattan federal prosecutors launched a probe into whether the company's funds were misused, The Washington Post reported.
Loopnet / Marcus & Millichap
Elon Musk's Snailbrook
Musk has reportedly been building his own town just outside of Austin, Texas, where the majority of his business interests are concentrated. Snailbrook, as the town is known, is situated along the banks of the Colorado River, conveniently located near both the Boring Co. and SpaceX facilities, and would theoretically provide purpose-built housing for Musk’s employees.
Overseeing his own incorporated town would allow Musk to create his own regulations and dodge bureaucratic red tape. Ironically, it's possible that Elon Musk may end up owning more homes than all the others combined.
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