Alec and Hilaria Baldwin Delist Their Hamptons Mansion Again Weeks After Cutting the Price by $1 Million

The Baldwins have been trying to let go of their Amagansett estate since September 2022. Four years, four separate listings, five price cuts, a YouTube tour, an Instagram campaign, and still no buyer.

And now the listing is gone again.

This is not a real estate story anymore. It is a pattern. And the pattern tells you something no listing description ever will.

The Home Behind the Headlines

Alec bought the Amagansett property in March 1996 for $1.75 million. Known as the Nathaniel Baker House, it is a historic 18th-century cedar-shingled modern farmhouse sitting on 10 acres in the Hamptons.

The estate spans roughly 8,500 square feet, with 5 bedrooms, 8 bathrooms, a private wood-paneled library, a home theater, a wine room, a gunite pool, a pavilion with a fieldstone fireplace, and over 1,200 square feet of covered porches.

On paper, it reads like a dream listing. The complications sit in the details.

Four Listings, Five Prices, Zero Buyers

Here is the full timeline, because most articles bury it or skip it entirely.

September 2022, first listed at $29 million. January 2023, dropped to $24.9 million. February 2023, delisted. March 2023, relisted at $22.5 million. September 2023, delisted again.

January 2024, back on at $18.99 million, with Alec filming a personal YouTube tour that has since pulled 180,000 views but moved zero buyers. July 2024, pulled again.

Then, in August 2025, Alec told The New York Times the family had changed their minds entirely. “It’s a kid’s home that I never want to leave,” he said. The kids, he explained, “go crazy” at the idea of selling.

Four months later, they relisted at $21 million. January 2026, dropped to $19.99 million. March 2026, Hilaria posted an Instagram video calling it “a piece of paradise” and urging followers to help find a buyer.

alec hilaria baldwin hamptons mansion sale delisted
Image Credit: Realtor.com

June 2026, price cut again to $18.99 million. And now, per Realtor.com’s exclusive reporting, the fourth listing has been pulled.

From $29 million to $18.99 million is a 35% reduction over four years. The home is still theirs.

Spain, Seven Kids, and a Decision That Keeps Reversing

The delisting came one week after Hilaria revealed the family is spending the summer in Mallorca, Spain.

“I’m bringing my kids to go be with my family for the month of July,” she told the Daily Mail. “This is like we’re testing the waters.”

She also said she plans to go back and forth between Spain and the Hamptons, which makes the decision to delist feel less like a resolution and more like another pause.

That is the thread every competitor missed. This is not a couple that wants to sell and cannot find a buyer. This is a couple that cannot decide if they want to sell at all.

The kids are attached. Alec has said publicly he never wants to leave. Hilaria keeps calling it a piece of paradise in the same posts where she asks people to buy it.

The emotional conflict is baked into every listing decision they have made.

If you follow luxury real estate moves as they happen, there is a WhatsApp channel worth adding. That is where stories like this get tracked before the news cycle catches up.

It is also worth noting that real estate experts have flagged structural challenges with the property itself.

Jenny Lenz of Dolly Lenz Real Estate pointed out that the location, north of the highway in Amagansett, is not considered prime by most buyers and is priced as though it sits on a top street in East Hampton or Southampton.

Of the 10 acres, 3.2 are reserved exclusively for agricultural use, which limits developer appeal significantly.

A listing that carries both personal baggage and structural drawbacks needs the right buyer, at the right moment, with the right price alignment. The Baldwins have not landed all three at once yet.

And it is also worth noting they are reportedly trying to sell their Greenwich Village penthouse privately, with California as the long-term goal. That context makes the Hamptons situation feel even more unresolved.

Why This Matters

The Baldwin saga is not just a celebrity footnote. It reflects something real about the Hamptons ultra-luxury market right now.

Per Hamptons.com’s weekly market data for the week of June 30, 2026, just 18 contracts were signed across the entire market, a 45% drop compared to the same week in 2025. Total dollar volume came in at $88 million, down 52% year over year.

The bulk of active transactions are happening in the $3 million to $5 million range. At $18.99 million, the Baldwin estate sits in a tier where buyers are scarce, patient, and highly selective.

Redfin data shows Hamptons homes are now averaging 125 days on market, up from 86 days the year prior. Even strong properties with famous names attached are sitting longer.

Fame does not manufacture urgency. Market conditions do. And right now, the Hamptons ultra-luxury segment is asking sellers to be patient in a way most are not prepared for.

This same tension shows up in other high-profile listings, like the RHOBH star who spent over $1 million on luxury while her dream home slipped into foreclosure, proof that a recognizable name and a premium property are not enough when the market is not cooperating.

Key Takeaways

  • The estate first listed in September 2022 at $29 million
  • Current price at time of delisting was $18.99 million, nearly 35% below the original ask
  • Four separate listings have come and gone since 2022, all without a closed deal
  • Alec bought the property in March 1996 for $1.75 million
  • The home is a historic 18th-century estate in Amagansett known as the Nathaniel Baker House
  • 3.2 of the 10 acres are reserved for agricultural use, limiting developer appeal
  • Hilaria announced the family is spending summer 2026 in Mallorca, Spain
  • Hamptons luxury contract volume dropped 52% year over year the week of June 30, 2026
  • The Baldwins are also reportedly trying to sell their Greenwich Village penthouse privately

Do you think the Baldwins genuinely want to sell this home, or has it become a listing they keep going back to without real commitment? Drop your take in the comments.

Wrapping Up

Four years is a long time to be in the market without a result. And looking at the full timeline, the delisting pattern, the emotional quotes, the Spain pivot, it is hard to read this as a couple with a clear exit strategy.

If this kind of story is your thing, Build Like New covers celebrity real estate, luxury market shifts, and the human side of big transactions on the regular. Worth bookmarking if you want more than just the headline.

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Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. All details are based on publicly available reports at the time of publication.

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