Perez Hilton Is Done With Las Vegas After 3 Years and His $4.25 Million Home Proves It
When someone nearly dies twice in the same year, and then lists their home, that is not a real estate decision. That is a life decision.
Perez Hilton, 48, has put his Las Vegas mansion on the market for $4.25 million and is heading back to Miami for good. He announced it on his YouTube channel with words that left little room for interpretation: “God told me to move to Miami.”
After three and a half years in Las Vegas, he has packed up his three kids, his mother, and his podcast studio, and he is not looking back.
The Home He Built His Media World Inside
The property sits in the Prado, a small gated enclave roughly halfway between the Las Vegas Strip and Summerlin. From the outside, it barely announces itself.
Cubic volumes in shades of gray, garage doors set at an angle, a front door tucked around the side through a rock garden. It gives off a quiet, almost private energy from the street.
Inside, it is a different story. Walls of glass pull natural light through open-plan living and dining spaces. A chef’s kitchen anchors the main floor.
A second-floor family lounge gives the home a relaxed, lived-in feel. Six bedrooms, each with a private bathroom. A multigenerational suite with its own separate entrance. A detached casita beside a pool and spa, surrounded by desert plantings and sheltered patios.
But the real detail most coverage skips is this: Perez did not just live here. He built a full media operation inside these walls.
Television segments, news interviews, two documentaries, daily social content, and network specials were all produced from this home.
When he says he had never had a dedicated office before this house, and that he used it quite a bit, that is not a throwaway line. That is the story of a man who finally had the infrastructure to work at the level he wanted.
The listing is held by Kathryn Winterton of Las Vegas Sotheby’s International Realty.
The Year That Made the Decision For Him
Most articles about this listing stop at the God quote and move on. But that quote has a very specific context that changes how you read the whole story.

In March 2026, Perez spent 21 days at Southern Hills Hospital in Clark County after a flu turned into an ulcer, a perforation, and then full sepsis.
He had been taking medication on an empty stomach for a week. He described the final stretch in hospital as hell, counting the days to get back to his kids.
He was barely on his feet when he was back in the ER on April 2. A deep vein thrombosis, running from his groin to just below his calf.
Doctors performed emergency surgery the next morning to remove the clot. He said afterward that if it had traveled to his lungs or his heart, it could have been a very different outcome.
By April 5, he was walking with a walker. By April 7, he said he was finally feeling better. He also started therapy.
According to Robb Report, the listing came shortly after. Three and a half years in Las Vegas, and the decision to leave came down to months that nearly ended everything.
Going Back to Where It All Started
Perez was born in Miami. He has not lived there in 30 years. But his mother, who lives with the family, is from there. His extended family is there. Friends from high school are still there.
He has talked about carrying real childhood trauma tied to Miami. He also said that it has been released now. That he is ready.
“My entire family is in Miami,” he said. “Though I have not lived there in 30 years, it has always been my home.”
That kind of statement, coming from someone who almost did not survive 2026, hits differently than a typical relocation announcement. The move is not about opportunity or lifestyle. It is about proximity to the people who showed up when he was in a hospital bed.
This kind of story, where personal crisis rewrites someone’s relationship with a home they loved, keeps coming up in the celebrity real estate space.
Christina Haack pulling her $4.5 million Tennessee farmhouse off the market again is another example where the personal narrative behind a listing turns out to be far more layered than the transaction itself.
If you follow these stories closely, channel on WhatsApp tracks celebrity real estate and lifestyle moves as they happen, usually well before the broader news cycle picks them up.
Why This Matters
At $4.25 million, this home sits right at the threshold of what Las Vegas considers ultra-luxury. And that price point comes with real market context.
According to the Las Vegas Housing Market Forecast for Summer 2026 by Nevada Real Estate Group, luxury homes priced above $1 million averaged 71 days on market in Q1 2026, compared to just 38 days across the broader valley.
At the ultra-luxury tier above $5 million, there are only 28 to 47 closed transactions per quarter across the entire Las Vegas market. The buyer pool for a home at $4.25 million is not large, and the buyers who exist at this level are selective.
What complicates this listing further is the dual-use nature of the property. This was a family home and a professional media studio simultaneously.
For the right buyer, that history adds character. For others, it may raise questions about how the space was configured and whether it still feels like a pure residence.
The broader lesson here is one the celebrity real estate market keeps teaching. Famous names attract attention, but attention does not equal offers.
Ryan Seacrest’s 40-acre Napa Valley estate sat on the market for nearly two years before finally selling at $18.5 million, and that was a property with significantly more land and a stronger lifestyle narrative behind it.
For anyone who wants a fuller picture of what led Perez here, the story of his return to Miami and what it means personally is worth reading alongside this one.
Key Takeaways
- Perez Hilton listed his Las Vegas mansion for $4.25 million through Las Vegas Sotheby’s International Realty
- The home spans approximately 7,000 sq ft with 6 en-suite bedrooms, a multigenerational suite, a detached casita, and a private pool in the gated Prado community
- He lived there for just 3.5 years and used the home as both a family residence and a full media production studio
- In 2026, he survived a 21-day sepsis hospitalization in March and emergency blood clot surgery in April
- He credits his health scares and divine guidance as the reasons behind the move
- He is returning to Miami, where he was born and where his mother and extended family live
- Las Vegas luxury homes above $1 million averaged 71 days on market in Q1 2026, nearly double the valley-wide average
What do you think? Does the personal story behind this listing make it more appealing to buyers, or does the $4.25 million price tag in today’s Las Vegas luxury market mean it takes a while to find the right person? Drop your thoughts in the comments.
Wrapping Up
Perez Hilton arrived in Las Vegas three and a half years ago with his kids, his mother, and a career he was building inside the walls of a house that barely showed itself from the street.
He is leaving because he almost did not get the chance to leave at all.
Whatever you think of him as a public figure, that part is hard to argue with. Sometimes the reason someone sells their home is not about the market, the timing, or the price. It is about the fact that they survived.
If stories like this are your thing, Build Like New covers celebrity real estate, luxury market moves, and the real decisions behind big transactions, regularly and without the fluff. Worth bookmarking.
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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.


