You Can Now Rent Orlando Bloom’s Former Beverly Hills Home for 31K a Month and His Design Choices Are Still All Over It
There are homes you move into. And then there are homes someone else poured their taste, time, and money into, and you just get to live inside the result.
This one falls firmly in the second category.
Orlando Bloom’s former Beverly Hills mansion is now on the rental market at $31,000 a month, fully furnished, with most of his personal upgrades still in place. Listing agent Jennifer Winston of Compass is handling it.
The Home Bloom Built From the Ground Up
Bloom bought this property in 2017 for $7 million. The 4,011 sq ft single-story home was originally built in 1959 and had already been expanded and refined by Mexican architect Miguel Angel Aragonés before Bloom purchased it.
Then Bloom spent a year and a half making it entirely his own.
He opened up the floor plan, added bespoke Italian Poliform kitchen fixtures, and installed eco-friendly LED lighting throughout.
The primary suite was redesigned to open directly to the pool, with generous closet space, a wet room, a free-standing tub, and a private patio behind floor-to-ceiling windows.
The zero-edge pool and spa alone reportedly cost $500,000 to install. It sits on an ipe wood deck with built-in seating and a fire pit, overlooking the city and the Pacific Ocean.
And then there is the sunken conversation pit in the living room. Plush built-in sofas, a nod to classic midcentury design, the kind of feature that stops people mid-tour.
Jason Oppenheim, who represented Bloom, put it plainly in 2019: “He has honestly exquisite taste, everything from the finishes, to the design and lighting. I really respect his style.”
A Sale That Took Years to Actually Happen
Bloom tried to sell this home almost immediately after finishing the renovation. He listed it in 2019 for $8.49 million, right around the time he got engaged to Katy Perry.
It did not sell.

He held onto it, rented it out, cut the price multiple times, and finally closed at $7 million in August 2025, the same price he originally paid in 2017. Eight years of work, a reported $5 million renovation, and he broke even on the sale.
The full property timeline is covered in detail by Realtor.com.
The new owner made a straightforward call: keep Bloom’s design intact and put it back on the rental market at $31K a month.
Why Trousdale Estates Commands This Price
Trousdale is not a generic Beverly Hills address. It is a 410-acre hillside enclave with 535 custom lots, developed in the 1950s, and home to the densest concentration of midcentury modern architecture in Los Angeles.
It sits inside Beverly Hills proper, meaning it is fully exempt from LA’s ULA transfer tax, a real financial distinction for anyone operating at this price level.
A 4-bedroom, 4-bath home with city and ocean views, architectural pedigree, and a fully curated interior does not struggle to find takers in Trousdale. It just waits for the right one.
If you track luxury real estate moves as they happen, channel on WhatsApp covers stories like this the moment they break. Worth keeping in your pocket.
This pattern keeps showing up across LA. Take the case of the RHOBH star who spent over $1 million on luxury while her dream home slipped into foreclosure, a reminder that even high-profile names do not guarantee smooth real estate outcomes.
Why This Matters
This is not just a story about a celebrity rental listing.
Beverly Hills home prices over the three months ending May 2026 were up 56.2% compared to the same period last year, with a median sale price of $6.1 million.
Trousdale Estates specifically ran 25 to 30% above the overall Beverly Hills single-family median in Q1 2026, according to Redfin’s Beverly Hills housing market data.
At $31,000 a month for a 4,011 sq ft renovated estate with views, the pricing is not aggressive for this submarket. It is actually measured.
Bloom put real money and a clear design sensibility into this home. The new owner is now monetizing that vision without changing a thing. That is a quiet but smart move in a market where architectural quality and interior finish genuinely move the needle on rental value.
It is the same dynamic you see behind listings like this Fortune 500 CEO’s $20 million Bal Harbour condo and the ongoing speculation around Elon Musk’s reported interest in a $300 million Miami Beach megamansion.
Behind every big listing, there is always a story that the price tag alone does not tell.
Key Takeaways
- The home is a 4,011 sq ft, 4-bed, 4-bath single-story property in Trousdale Estates, Beverly Hills
- Listed for rent at $31,000 per month, fully furnished, with listing agent Jennifer Winston of Compass
- Bloom bought it in 2017 for $7 million, spent roughly 18 months and an estimated $5 million on renovation
- Design still inside: Italian Poliform kitchen, sunken conversation pit, zero-edge pool with ipe wood deck, spa-style master suite
- Originally designed by architect Miguel Angel Aragonés before Bloom purchased it
- Listed for sale in 2019 at $8.49M, never sold at that price, rented for years, and finally sold for $7M in August 2025
- New owner is renting it with Bloom’s interiors entirely intact
- Represented on Selling Sunset by Jason Oppenheim, who called Bloom’s taste “honestly exquisite”
What do you think? Would you rent a home where someone else’s design is still everywhere, the kitchen, the pool, the furniture, or would you want to start completely fresh? Drop your take in the comments. Genuinely curious what people think about this one.
Wrapping Up
Bloom spent years on this home and never got to sell it at his number. Someone else did. And now they are renting it, his Poliform kitchen, his conversation pit, his half-million-dollar pool and all, for $31,000 a month.
That is either a great deal for the tenant or a very smart play by the new owner. Possibly both.
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.


