Among Brad Pitt’s many accomplishments—seven Academy Award nominations, a successful wine label, the title of People’s Sexiest Man Alive—is his ability to invest in some truly trophy real estate. The Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood actor has spoken before about his affinity for all things architecture and interior design, telling Oprah Winfrey in 2004, “I love that architecture is this huge art piece you can be inside. I believe it lifts your soul and affects your mindset.” In late 2012 he collaborated on a collection with furniture-maker Frank Pollaro, and in 2020 he narrated a documentary about Frank Lloyd Wright. So it is no surprise that he has selected some impressive homes and made them even more so with his time, investment, and attention to detail.
Over the years, the actor and producer has owned residences in Hollywood, the south of France, Mallorca, New York City, and New Orleans, with a rumored property in the Lake of the Ozarks region of his native Missouri—though unfortunately for fans in the Show-Me State, there are no public records of this. Below, we’ve rounded up some of Pitt’s most prominent houses, some of which he still owns—and continues to expand upon—today.
Three years after he stole the screen as a charismatic hitchhiker in Thelma & Louise, Pitt paid $1.7 million for a mansion in Los Feliz, purchased directly from Cassandra Peterson, better known by her alter-ego, Elvira Mistress of the Dark. Over the next few years, the actor picked up two contiguous properties to expand the compound and then purchased two more after coupling up with ex Angelina Jolie in 2005. According to Variety, the multistructure 1.9-acre property cost a total of nearly $5 million. Under his ownership, the home came to include a 6,692-square-foot Craftsman main house, large outdoor swimming pool, private tennis pavilion, and skate park, and it was what Pitt called his kids’ “childhood home” in a 2017 interview with GQ. (It is also where Jimi Hendrix reportedly wrote “May This Be Love.”) The actor listed his longtime property for $40 million in early 2023; a source told People magazine that the Oscar winner was “looking for something smaller” in the Los Angeles area. He sold it just two months later, for $33 million, to oil heiress Aileen Getty.
1998
Pitt then enlisted the German architecture firm Graft to construct a zen Hollywood Hills getaway. The actor served as his own interior designer for the modernist stone and glass oasis, telling the L.A.-based style magazine Flaunt, “I learned that you have to let go of a lot of great ideas for the sake of harmony.”. The pad features hidden shelves and cupboards to maximize storage while minimizing clutter. Mica stone walls, pine flooring, and copious skylights help to add texture and character to the pristine space. It appears that Pitt still owns this home.
2000
Shortly after marrying Jennifer Aniston, Pitt splashed out $4 million for an ocean-front, 11-acre vacation property near Santa Barbara. The home, located near Gaviota State Park, is still in his possession today. When he and Jolie were together, they used it as a vacation retreat for themselves and the kids, horseback riding and enjoying time out on the beach.
2001
When Aniston and Pitt purchased their main marital home together, they opted for an impressive 11,173-square-foot Wallace Neff designed mansion. The couple spent three years renovating the French Normandy Revival-style residence, which was originally built in 1934 for actor Fredric March and his wife Florence Eldridge. Improvements included heated marble floors, a bar with wood floors from a 200-year-old French chateau, and a brand-new screening room. When the couple split in 2005, they put the property on the market and ultimately sold it for $28 million the following year.
2005
Pitt then spent $8.4 million on a midcentury-modern bachelor pad in Malibu situated between Point Mugu State Park and the sea. The four-bedroom, four-bathroom dwelling featured three fireplaces, a tennis court, and access to a private cove, and measured 4,088 square feet. The architecture buff reportedly spent millions renovating the 1962 property before finally listing it in early 2009. Fellow real estate enthusiast Ellen DeGeneres snapped it up for $12 million in 2011, and flipped it for a $1 million profit a year later.
2006
The former New Orleans home of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie. Photo: GTCRFOTO / Alamy Stock Photo
The following year, Pitt and Jolie bought a property in New Orleans’s French Quarter as they focused on charity work in the city after Hurricane Katrina. (Pitt’s started a nonprofit called the Make It Right Foundation in 2007 to help rebuild housing in the area, though it was plagued with issues and controversy.) They paid $3.5 million for the brick, traditional-style 7,650-square-foot house, which was originally built in the 1830s and featured Venetian-plastered walls, custom marble mantles, and original crown moldings. The now-separated couple put it on the market and sold it a decade later for $4.9 million.
2007
Pitt and Jolie set down roots in New York City with the purchase of a residence at the famed Waldorf Astoria hotel. While it’s unknown how much they paid for the luxury unit, it’s rumored that the hotel held particular significance for them as one of the first places that they stayed together as a couple. It’s unclear whether or not Pitt or Jolie still own this home.
2011
Chateau Miraval, Pitt’s property in the South of France. Photo: MICHEL GANGNE/AFP via Getty Images
The couple set their sights toward international real estate over the next few years, first renting, and then buying, a villa in the French countryside. Named Chateau Miraval, the $60 million estate includes both a chateau and a winery, the latter of which the pair used to create an eponymous wine brand, best known for its rosé. Pitt and Jolie even tied the knot on the grounds in 2014. After their split and consequent divorce, however, it was Pitt who primarily maintained involvement with the brand—they are currently embroiled in a lawsuit over the fact that Jolie sold her stake. In late 2021, the actor began working with French producer Damien Quintard to restore a recording studio on the property.
2016
While Pitt shot his World War II drama Allied amid rumors of his impending divorce, he and Jolie reportedly paid $3.9 million for a private villa in Mallorca, Spain. Not much is known about the property, except that it measures 9,687 square feet and boasts eight bedrooms and a swimming pool overlooking the Balearic Sea. Local media reported that Pitt and Jolie were spotted together around town often. It is unclear whether Pitt still owns this home.
That same year, the Jolie-Pitt family was reportedly renting an eight-bedroom home in Surrey, England, along the River Thames, for $21,000 a month while Pitt filmed World War Z and Jolie worked on humanitarian projects in the U.K. The residence included an indoor pool and gym— ideal given the more blustery weather there. The plan was for the clan to live there for six months, and the couple split not long after that.
2022
The Ad Astra star next broke records with his purchase of a historic seaside bungalow in Carmel, California, for $40 million. According to The Wall Street Journal, the sale was one of the most expensive real estate deals ever made in the Carmel area—and likely for good reason. The Craftsman-style home was designed by Charles Sumner Greene, one half of the influential 20th-century architecture firm Greene and Greene (he shared the firm with his brother Henry). Named the D.L. James House, after the American writer who commissioned its design in 1918, the unique mansion is built from locally sourced granite and sandstone and even appears to be built directly into the rock. The structure measures 3,000 square feet and includes a basement-level library and a separate wing for live-in staff. Marble detailing in the interior include images of local flora and fauna carved into the marble, further establishing a relationship between the home and its immediate environment.
2023
Shortly after oil heiress Aileen Getty purchased Pitt’s longtime Los Feliz residence, Pitt made headlines when he snapped up her nearby midcentury-modern pad for $5.5 million—a substantial bump above the $4.1 million she bought it for in 2019. Known as the Steel House, the 2,000-square-foot home was designed by lesser-known midcentury architect Neil M. Johnson in 1960. Johnson was reportedly inspired by the Case Study program, and so created this particular residence with certain telltale elements from that era: including a rectangular roofline, terrazzo floors, beamed ceilings, and cantilevered eaves. Fun fact: The owner before Getty was none other than Maroon 5’s guitarist James Valentine, who acquired the property in 2007. The rocker worked with designer Mark Haddawy to restore the home’s retro details, including a redwood hot tub, a freestanding sauna, and a fireplace that heats both the living and dining rooms.
Source: Joyce Chen