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Buying Beverly Hills welcomes you into the high-stakes world of The Agency, Mauricio Umansky’s posh Los Angeles real estate firm. While the reality show’s interoffice hijinks and swanky parties may hook you, the series’ centerpieces are its many showstopping properties. From Malibu to Los Feliz, The Agency has the kinds of listings Barbie Dreamhouse fantasies are made of. In fact, Buying Beverly Hills is so chock-full of fabulous homes, you’re probably going to want to revisit them (or make sure you didn’t miss one). Here’s your chance, with your complete guide to every enviable mansion that threatens to steal your heart (or wallet) this season.
List price: $6.75 million
Square footage: 6,229
Agent commission: $337,500
Milldale is the very first house presented in Buying Beverly Hills — and for good reason. It’s the house where Mauricio and Real Housewives of Beverly Hills wife Kyle Richards raised their daughter, Alexia, along with the rest of the Umansky family. This mansion boasts seven bedrooms, nine bathrooms and three past Real Housewives tenants. As Farrah points out, Larsa Pippen and Sutton Stracke also previously lived in Milldale at one time or another.
Milldale eventually sells for $6 million by the end of Buying Beverly Hills Season 1. Not too shabby.
List price: $65 million
Square footage: 18,000
Agent commission: $3.25 million
To quote Farrah once again, Wallace Ridge is destined to be purchased by “some billionaire.” With seven bedrooms, a whopping 14 bathrooms and views that would make anyone green with envy, it deserves nothing less.
List price: $2.9 million
Square footage: 2,440
Agent commission: $145,000
Agent Allie brings Lyceum into The Agency fold through her client Shayna, an influencer, trained chef and ex-girlfriend of Ryan Seacrest. The four-bedroom, three-bath home has lots of personal touches from Shayna, who made the space “completely her own,” down to an outdoor pizza oven.
List price: $8.2 million
Square footage: 6,510
Agent commission: $410,000
Bel Air Road is agent Ben’s “insane” new listing at the start of Season 1. The mansion has five bedrooms and six baths. It’s here Ben tries to teach junior agent Joey how to follow in his social media real estate influencer footsteps. Bel Air Road has an elevator and a view of the canyons.
List price: $20 million
Square footage: 12,000
Agent commission: $1 million
Rexford serves as agent Jon’s first big teaching moment for his junior agents, Sonika and Brandon. As Jon tells his protégés, a $20 million listing like this calls for “different” (read: better) etiquette. Rexford was originally owned by silent film star Edward G. Robinson — who’s also named-checked in Blonde — and was home to decades of subsequent Hollywood history.
List price: $6.75 million
Square footage: 3,645
Agent commission: $337,500
Camden is a very personal property for The Agency. It was the home of Joey’s great-aunt and has been taken over by her two “tough cookie” daughters. While the property has five bedrooms and four bathrooms, everyone agrees the listing is a true “teardown.” The real prize here is the land in the prestigious Beverly Hills Flats, which is very rarely up for grabs.
List price: $79 million
Square footage: 22,000
Agent commission: $3.95 million
San Vicente helps introduce us to Santiago, Mauricio’s charming business partner. The “amazing” property over the Riviera County Country Club has seven bedrooms and 13 bathrooms. Agent Melissa tours the listing with Dubai heiress Mandana, who couldn’t be more delighted by San Vicente’s basketball court and sprawling garage.
List price: $4.5 million
Square footage: 5,000
Agent commission: $225,000
Farrah thinks Curson is a listing that would be perfect for newlyweds. It’s got five bedrooms and eight baths, with a fireplace, a secretive wine storage closet and an inviting rooftop.
List price: $8 million
Square footage: 2,896
Agent commission: $400,000
Jon calls this property a “panty-dropper.” He shares it with his business partner, Adam, and Adam’s brother, Mike, who designed it and therefore see it as their “baby.” Rising Glen has three bedrooms and three-and-a-half bathrooms.
List price: $3.2 million
Square footage: 3,900
Agent commission: $160,000
Arden is more of a gossip spot than anything — at least for agent Ben. He visits the four-bedroom, four-bath “modern farm” with his BFF Zach to spill the professional tea. It’s here Ben reveals to Zach he’s being courted by The Agency’s rival, Compass.
List price: $40 million
Square footage: 11,358
Agent commission: $2 million
Serra is another Santiago property. Joey and Ben tour the six-bedroom, nine-bathroom space before the rest of the real estate community, since it’s off-market at the time of their visit. This Malibu mansion is 7 acres behind the gate of its private community and conveniently located near a goat yoga location.
List price: $5.5 million
Proposed square footage: 9,043
Agent commission: $275,000
Jon waits to reveal the “infamous” history of Glendower, but we won’t. The five-bedroom, seven-bath property is the Los Feliz Murder House and, as the name suggests, the scene of a grisly Los Angeles crime. Unsurprisingly, Jon is approaching the listing as a total remodeling job and has enlisted architect Richard Landry to help.
List price: $10.9 million
Square footage: 11,826
Winsdor is one of the most “fun and whimsical” houses in the bunch, as Jon describes it. With nine bedrooms and nine baths, Mauricio even once considered buying the property for himself and his wife. Windsor was built in 1914, just before Prohibition. So it naturally comes equipped with a surprise private speakeasy, along with more modern amenities like a full arcade and cigar room.
List price: $5.95 million
Square footage: 2,619
Agent commission: $297,500
Mauricio brings Farrah and Alexia to tour Marco Place, which is located in the coveted Venice walking streets area before it becomes an official Umansky Team property. Alexia is put in charge of the listing and throws an influencer brunch at the four-bedroom, four-and-a-half-bath abode to build buzz — complete with a selfie station.
List price: $12.9 million
Square footage: 9,700
This property is Buying Beverly Hills’ second trip to Arden Drive in Beverly Hills. Arden No. 2 is another off-market opportunity and much larger than the previous listing on the street. It has nine bedrooms and six bathrooms, plus the original beams from the 1920s, as Mauricio points out.
Square footage: 6,830
This Woodland Hills home is a bit of a Season 1 outlier. It’s not actually an Agency listing. It is, instead, an Agency learning opportunity. The five-bedroom, seven-bath mansion belongs to comedian Whitney Cummings, and Jon brings Sonika here for a confidence boost. During their conversation, Whitney explains she wanted her glamorous nest to feel like “a rehab in a barn in Tuscany.” Mission accomplished!
List price: $42 million
Square footage: 18,850
To quote Mauricio, Orum is a “marquee” listing. With nine bedrooms and 15 bathrooms, the mega mansion built by longtime Agency client Dang is one of Mauricio’s “favorite homes” in all of Los Angeles. Mauricio wants to list the palatial place at $42 million — and Dang wants it sold “tonight,” preferably.
List price: $139 million
Square footage: 36,000
Agent commission: $4.17 million
While this second Bel Air Road mansion isn’t the final property of Season 1 — it’s the third-to-final one — it’s so spectacular it deserves to be saved for last. Jon calls the listing, which he shares with Adam, the “Eighth Wonder of the World.” The space possesses a 23-foot poolside TV, 44-foot chandelier, private night club, vodka room, wine room with space for more than 1,000 bottles and a complete dinosaur skeleton on a patio. The nearest 5-star hotel is shaking.