Most Expensive Homes in Los Angeles
Where price becomes positioning
At the highest level of Los Angeles real estate, price is not simply a number. It is a declaration of what the property represents.
Some homes are priced for land. Others are priced for design. A few are priced as complete lifestyle environments. And increasingly, the market is forcing sellers to prove which category their property truly belongs to.
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This ranking focuses exclusively on active listings. These are homes currently competing for buyers, not past transactions. That distinction matters because it reveals how the market is behaving right now, not how it behaved at its peak.
What makes this list particularly revealing is that not every property here is succeeding. Some are testing the limits of pricing, while others are redefining what luxury actually means in Los Angeles.
For a broader context, the California Luxury Real Estate Market Guide explains how Los Angeles fits within the wider state. What becomes clear very quickly is that Los Angeles does not follow a single model. It operates across multiple definitions of luxury at the same time.
10 Most Expensive Homes in Los Angeles
#10. 77 Beverly Park Lane, Beverly Hills — $68 million
At $68 million, this estate spans about 27,000 square feet with 9 bedrooms and 15 bathrooms, positioned on one of the largest flat parcels in Beverly Park at roughly two acres.
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The key advantage is not visible in typical marketing images. Behind the property sits an additional four acre mountainside that cannot be developed. That constraint creates something rare in Los Angeles. Permanent privacy.
At roughly $2,500 per square foot, the pricing sits well below architect driven hillside homes. That gap highlights a core difference in the market. This property is not selling design. It is selling control.

Buyers drawn to Beverly Park are not chasing visibility. They are buying separation. This home represents that entry point.
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#9. 9966 Beverly Grove Drive, Beverly Hills — $77.5 million
Listed at $77.5 million, this 2023 built estate offers about 15,700 square feet with 6 bedrooms and 13 bathrooms on 2.63 acres.
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Compared directly with 77 Beverly Park Lane, the difference is immediate. This is not a land first property. It is a precision built residence focused on systems, materials, and execution.
At approximately $4,900 per square foot, the premium reflects new construction, integrated technology, and design clarity. Features such as a 23 zone climate system, extensive outdoor terraces, and a fully engineered interior environment position the home for a buyer who values performance as much as location.

This is a different type of luxury. Less about legacy, more about control through technology.
#8. 9904 Kip Drive, Beverly Hills — $79 million
At $79 million, this estate expands the scale of ownership in a way few Los Angeles properties can match. The residence includes 24,757 square feet, 10 bedrooms, and 22 bathrooms on a 19.75 acre parcel.
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That number matters. Nearly twenty acres shifts the property out of the typical luxury category and into something closer to a private domain.
At around $3,200 per square foot, the pricing reflects a distribution of value across land, not just structure. Compared with Beverly Grove, which trades near $4,900 per square foot, Kip Drive shows how land heavy properties are valued differently.

The price reduction from $88 million to $79 million reinforces a broader shift. Even at this scale, buyers are no longer accepting pricing based on size alone, a shift closely tied to what drives luxury home prices in California. They are comparing land against design, and asking which holds value longer.
#7. 73 Beverly Park Lane, Beverly Hills — $80 million
Priced at $80 million, this estate spans approximately 28,500 square feet with 9 bedrooms and 22 bathrooms on a 2.68 acre parcel within North Beverly Park.
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Placed directly against 77 Beverly Park Lane, the distinction becomes clearer. Both offer land and security, but this property adds a layer that Beverly Park rarely delivers at scale. Extended views that reach toward both the city and the ocean.
At roughly $2,800 per square foot, the pricing still sits below newer hillside builds. That gap reflects the market’s current logic. Buyers are willing to pay a premium for design and views, even if that means sacrificing land.
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However, this property challenges that tradeoff. It offers both. Land and view. That combination is what supports its positioning near the top of the Beverly Park segment.
The earlier pricing near $90 million, followed by the adjustment to $80 million, confirms the same pattern seen across this ranking. Even strong assets must now align more precisely with buyer expectations.
#6. 9016 Thrasher Avenue, Los Angeles — $82 million
At $82 million, 9016 Thrasher Avenue represents a completely different model of value. The home spans approximately 15,200 square feet with 5 bedrooms and 9 bathrooms on a 0.42 acre hillside site, completed in 2023.

Compared directly with Beverly Park estates, this property trades land for impact. Designed by Paul McClean, it belongs to a category where architecture and view drive pricing more than acreage.
At approximately $5,400 per square foot, it sits among the highest in this ranking. That premium reflects a combination of new construction, architectural authorship, and uninterrupted jetliner views across Los Angeles.
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The comparison with Kip Drive is particularly telling. One offers nearly twenty acres at around $3,200 per square foot. The other offers less than half an acre at over $5,000 per square foot. Both sit in the same price range.
This is where Los Angeles becomes unique. Two completely different definitions of luxury can exist at the same level, and buyers choose based on lifestyle rather than scale.
#5. 9126 Cordell Drive, Los Angeles — $85 million
At $85 million, 9126 Cordell Drive shifts the conversation away from traditional residential value. The home spans approximately 23,894 square feet with 4 bedrooms and 7 bathrooms, completed in 2025 on a 0.29 acre hillside site.

On paper, the bedroom count appears modest for the price. In reality, that is intentional. This property is not optimized for sleeping capacity. It is optimized for experience.
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Across five levels, the residence integrates eight pools, a bowling alley, a theater designed for forty guests, a nightclub, a half basketball court, and a full wellness floor. The design treats the home as a complete environment rather than a conventional living space.
At roughly $3,500 per square foot, the pricing sits below architect driven homes like 9016 Thrasher Avenue. That difference highlights an important distinction. Thrasher sells architecture and view. Cordell sells immersion.
The transformation in value reinforces that shift. The underlying property traded near $4 million in 2012. At $85 million today, the increase is not driven by market inflation alone. It is driven by redevelopment and a redefinition of what luxury living can be in Los Angeles.
#4. 1200 Bel Air Road, Los Angeles — $100 million
Now positioned at approximately $100 million, 1200 Bel Air Road, known as La Fin, includes 12 bedrooms and 17 bathrooms on a 2.08 acre parcel, completed in 2021.
This property represents one of the most visible tests of the ultra luxury market in Los Angeles. Initially introduced at $139 million, the home has undergone multiple pricing adjustments before reaching its current level.
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The scale is undeniable. A dramatic chandelier installation, expansive entertainment areas, a large scale lower level with specialized lounges, and extensive outdoor living spaces all contribute to a property built for impact.
Yet the pricing history tells the real story. Unlike Cordell, where value is driven by concept, La Fin operates as a speculative luxury project. It was designed to set a benchmark.

The market response suggests that benchmark was too aggressive.
The reduction from $139 million to around $100 million is not a collapse. It is a correction, reflecting broader California luxury real estate market trends. Buyers at this level are not rejecting luxury. They are recalibrating how they define value within it.
#3. 7661 Curson Terrace, Los Angeles — $125 million
At $125 million, 7661 Curson Terrace stands in a category that few properties can approach. The residence spans approximately 22,000 square feet with 7 bedrooms and 12 bathrooms on a 0.97 acre promontory site in the Hollywood Hills.
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Unlike La Fin, which relies on scale and amenities, this property derives its value from engineering and permanence. Built over a ten year period, the structure incorporates an estimated $30 million in poured in place concrete, with deep foundational systems that would be difficult to replicate under current building conditions.
The location amplifies that advantage. Positioned on a promontory with no immediate neighbors on either side and bordered by protected land, the estate secures uninterrupted views across Los Angeles from east to west and out to the Pacific Ocean.
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At roughly $5,600 per square foot, the pricing aligns more closely with architect driven homes such as 9016 Thrasher Avenue. The difference is where that value sits. Thrasher concentrates value in design and view. Curson concentrates value in structure and long term scarcity.
This is not a property easily replaced. It is one of the few in Los Angeles where the construction itself becomes a barrier to future competition.
#2. 607 Siena Way, Los Angeles — $135 million
Listed at $135 million, 607 Siena Way represents one of the most ambitious contemporary homes currently on the market in Bel Air. The residence includes 8 bedrooms and 20 bathrooms on a 1.22 acre parcel.

Originally introduced at $177 million, the property has since been repositioned, reflecting the same pricing recalibration seen across multiple properties in this ranking.
Where Curson emphasizes engineering, Siena focuses on design as an immersive experience. Developed by ARYA Group, the home integrates natural materials, expansive glass systems, and a spatial layout designed to create a continuous connection between interior and exterior environments.
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Features such as a four story floating staircase framed by fire and water elements, a retractable roof within the primary suite, a private cinema, and a dedicated wellness center reinforce its positioning as a design driven asset rather than a land driven one.
At this level, Siena is not competing with Beverly Park estates or large compounds. It is competing with global luxury properties that prioritize architectural identity and experiential living.
#1. 1261 Angelo Drive, Beverly Hills — $135 million
Also priced at $135 million but fundamentally different in structure, 1261 Angelo Drive represents one of the largest residential offerings in Los Angeles. The estate spans approximately 50,000 square feet with 16 bedrooms and 27 bathrooms on a 6.03 acre promontory in Beverly Hills.
Originally listed at $195 million, the current pricing reflects one of the most significant adjustments among top tier properties.
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Compared directly with Siena Way, the difference is immediate. Siena compresses luxury into design and experience. Angelo expands it across land and scale.
At roughly $2,700 per square foot, the valuation sits far below properties like Thrasher or Curson. That does not indicate lower quality. It reflects a different allocation of value. Land, size, and long term scarcity define this asset.

The property’s positioning on a six acre promontory effectively creates a private domain within Beverly Hills, offering unobstructed views across the Los Angeles basin.
At this level, the estate is not competing on features alone. It is competing on the ability to combine land, scale, and location into a single asset that very few properties can replicate.
What This Ranking Reveals About Los Angeles Luxury
Los Angeles does not operate under a single definition of luxury.
Across these ten listings, multiple models of value are competing at the same time, particularly when compared with the most expensive homes in California.
Beverly Park and large estates reinforce the enduring importance of land. Properties such as Angelo Drive and Kip Drive show that acreage remains one of the most reliable anchors of long term value.
Hillside homes follow a different logic. In areas like the Bird Streets and Hollywood Hills, properties such as Thrasher and Curson demonstrate how architecture, engineering, and view orientation can command significantly higher price per square foot, even on smaller parcels.
A third category moves beyond both. Homes like Cordell and Siena shift the focus away from traditional metrics, where value is constructed through experience, technology, and spatial design rather than scale alone.
At the same time, pricing behavior across the ranking reveals a clear pattern. Several of these homes entered the market at more aggressive levels before adjusting downward in response to buyer resistance.
This is not a weak market. It is a selective one.
At this level, buyers are not reacting to size alone. They are evaluating alignment between land, design, experience, and long term scarcity. Properties that fail to justify all four are corrected in real time.
What ultimately defines the most expensive homes in Los Angeles is not a single factor, but how precisely each property expresses its role within the market and how convincingly it holds that position under scrutiny.