Lindsey Vonn Drops Beverly Hills Mansion Price Again Only 3 Weeks After Putting It Back on the Market

I’ll be honest. When a celebrity cuts a home price twice in six months, most headlines treat it like gossip. But there’s a real story here, and it’s not just about Lindsey Vonn.

It’s about a woman who’s already moved on, physically, emotionally, and financially, and a Beverly Hills market that isn’t letting anyone off easy right now.

The Price Drop Nobody Expected This Fast

Back in November 2025, Vonn quietly listed her 1940s Craftsman bungalow in Beverly Hills’ Coldwater Canyon area for $4.45 million. No takers.

The listing was pulled. Then on May 12, it came back at $4.25 million, and just three weeks later, on June 1, it was cut again to $3.99 million.

That’s a total reduction of $460,000 from the original ask, with $255,000 coming in the last cut alone.

The 3-bedroom, 5-bathroom home sits on a quarter-acre lot with a pool, pool house, marble countertops, a chandelier-lit living room, and enough hedges and gated walls to make the paparazzi irrelevant.

Listed by Bob Hurwitz of Hurwitz James Company, the property is described as “impeccably renovated” and “effortlessly private.”

According to Realtor.com’s full coverage of the listing, Vonn originally bought it in 2021 for $3.4 million, solo, after her split from NHL player P.K. Subban. It was her California fresh start. Now she wants out.

She Didn’t Leave California. California Left Her Plans.

lindsey vonn beverly hills home price cut utah
Image Credit: Realtor.com

Here’s what most articles miss: Vonn wasn’t waiting around for the right time to sell. She was already gone.

On February 8, 2026, she crashed during the women’s downhill at the Milan Cortina Winter Games. Airlifted off the mountain. Eight surgeries. One procedure reportedly saved her from amputation. She spent over two weeks immobile in an Italian hospital, alone.

She didn’t come back to Beverly Hills to recover. She went straight to Utah, to her 24-acre Park City estate she’s called home since 2020.

“It was quite a challenge, just being in the hospital alone for two and a half weeks,” she said later.

Here’s the part that makes this more human than a real estate headline. On May 18, Vonn posted an Instagram photo sitting in that same Beverly Hills kitchen with her rescue dog Chance, both of them looking at an iPad. Personal items across the counter. Completely normal life.

Two weeks later, that same kitchen was photographed empty and staged for buyers.

She’s still there occasionally. But her heart and her permanent address are already in Utah.

Athletes making big real estate moves while their careers shift is more common than you’d think. Wayne Gretzky recently sold a Palm Beach mansion he got directly from Dustin Johnson for $6.4 million. The pattern is always the same: life changes first, the properties follow.

Why This Matters

The Beverly Hills market in 2026 is not forgiving of wishful pricing.

According to the May 2026 Beverly Hills real estate market update by Todd Jones of Rodeo Realty, the average price reduction on homes that eventually close is $285,000 below the original list price. Correctly priced homes sell in 38 days. Overpriced ones just sit and collect cuts.

lindsey vonn beverly hills home price cut utah
Image Credit: ELLE Decor

Vonn’s 1940s Craftsman, despite being renovated and beautifully finished, is competing against newer, turnkey builds that 2026 luxury buyers increasingly prefer. A second relist followed by another cut within three weeks tells buyers one thing: there’s still room to negotiate.

This isn’t a Vonn problem. It’s a market reality, and it’s happening up and down the 90210 zip code right now.

If you follow real estate closely, stories like this surface constantly. This WhatsApp channel covers these updates as they break, often before the major outlets pick them up.

Trades and life pivots shake up real estate decisions in ways most fans don’t track. AJ Brown’s trade to the Patriots has already put his New Jersey home in an interesting spot, another example of how an athlete’s next move off the field matters just as much as what happens on it.

Where She Stands Now

Vonn is consolidating, and she’s doing it deliberately.

Her Miami Beach mansion sold for $11 million in late 2025. A second Miami property is still listed at $3.69 million. Earlier this year, she purchased Bobby Flay’s Hollywood Hills home for $8.4 million.

And her Utah chalet, 15,000 square feet on 24 acres, overlooks the same Olympic Park where she competed at age 17 in 2002 and is her permanent base.

She became a part-owner of the Utah Royals NWSL team in 2024. She helped bring the 2034 Winter Olympics back to Salt Lake City. She said the Utah property was the very first one she looked at and she never needed to look at another.

The Beverly Hills bungalow isn’t a home anymore. It’s the last physical tie to a chapter that closed on a mountain in Cortina.

Not every high-profile property story ends in a clean sale. Some sit, get relisted, and find a completely different life.

The $2.5 million farmhouse where the FBI arrested Ghislaine Maxwell is now available for rent, proof that even the most talked-about properties eventually find their next chapter.

The Bottom Line

Vonn isn’t desperate. At $3.99 million, this is now below the $4 million psychological threshold, and that matters to buyers. The home is charming, private, renovated, and priced closer to reality than it was seven months ago.

It will sell. The question is just how much further the market will push before it does.

So here’s what I want to know. Do you think $3.99 million is fair for a renovated 1940s Craftsman in Beverly Hills right now, or does the market still have more room to move? Drop your take in the comments.

For more stories like this, celebrity real estate, home security, and housing market news, head over to Build Like New. Follow us on X and join the conversation on our Facebook page. We cover these stories as they develop.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. All pricing data is sourced from public listings and third-party market reports. Nothing here constitutes financial or real estate investment advice.

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