Justin Timberlake And Jessica Biel Are Selling Their Hollywood Hills Estate For $35 Million

 thumbnail

 thumbnail

Justin Timberlake and Jessica Biel are putting their palatial Hollywood Hills estate on the market!

The Wall Street Journal reports that the Hollywood power couple’s nine-bedroom 11-bathroom home, which stands on 10.2 acres of heavily wooded land, is up for sale with an asking price of $35 Million.

Located at the end of a cul-de-sac in Hollywood Hills, the 13,500-square-foot Spanish-style mansion has been part of Justin’s real-estate portfolio since the early aughts. After he and Jessica tied the knot in 2012, they went on to give the home a complete make-over, giving it a chic update with a rustic-modern vibe.

The seven-bedroom main house boasts luxe comforts including a gym, a screening room, a gourmet kitchen, has a total of four fireplaces, and an outdoor living area for prefect for al fresco entertaining backdropped by the San Fernando Valley skyline.  The decadent master’s suite comes with its own dual-vanity dressing room and a decadent bathroom with free-standing tub. There’s also a separate two-bedroom guest house on the premises.

There’s also a lot of recreational amenities outside, like the 85-foot zero-edge swimming pool and separate plunge pool, a tennis-court, and a vegetable garden. But the home enjoys a secure privacy offered by the gate and guard house at the entrance and the forested lands that surround it.

The 10-acre compound is actually a combination of plots with rich Hollywood history dating all the way back to the 1940s. Portions of it were previously owned by big names in Tinseltown including actor Erroll Flynn, singer Stuart Hamblen, singer/songwriter Ricky Nelson, and actress Helen Hunt.

According to a PEOPLE source, Justin and Jessica want to spend more time in their Big Sky digs in Montana, where their family – including sons Silas and Phineas – have spent most of their time amid the pandemic.

“They’re rarely in L.A. and are happy to live in Montana,” the source says. “They also still have a place on the East Coast.”