Jennifer Lopez, Ben Affleck’s Beverly Hills mansion relisted at $52 million, signaling multimillion-dollar loss
Relisting drops asking price by $16 million from July 2024 and sits about $9 million below purchase price, as divorce proceedings finalize and luxury market cools.

Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck have relisted their Beverly Hills estate for $52 million, a price that would leave them about a $9 million short of their purchase price and roughly $16 million below their July 2024 asking price, according to Mansion Global and public records.
The 38,000-square-foot mansion sits on a 5.2-acre promontory in the Beverly Crest neighborhood and features 12 bedrooms and 24 bathrooms, a long slate of luxury amenities and multiple ancillary structures. The listing notes a 5,000-square-foot guest penthouse, a separate caretaker house and a two-bedroom guard unit, along with a 12-car garage and a range of entertainment spaces. Amenities also include an indoor sports complex with basketball and pickleball courts, a gym, a boxing ring, a bar-equipped sports lounge, a home theater, and a zero-edge pool with a sun shelf and hot tub. The property was originally built in 2000 and underwent extensive renovations just before it was first listed.

The couple bought the home in May 2023 for nearly $61 million, about a year into their marriage. They filed for divorce in late 2024 and finalized it in early 2025. Since the divorce, the pricing has moved downward, with two reductions that culminated in the current $52 million asking price.
Lopez has continued to post moments from events held at the property, including recent photos shared on social media from the YES Scholars Gala, suggesting she remains on-site while a buyer is sought. Listing agent Santiago Arana of The Agency did not comment on the relisting, and representatives for Lopez and Affleck did not respond to requests for comment.
The ultra-luxury market has cooled, and high-end properties that once attracted eager buyers are now trading in a more cautious climate. Even with celebrity pedigree, the scale of the asset and the price point can prolong the marketing period for a home of this size, especially as buyers weigh significant price concessions against perceived value and ongoing maintenance costs.

