Justin Bieber Buys Beverly Hills Home for $8.5 Million

The pop star and his wife, Hailey Baldwin, previously rented in Toluca Lake for $100,000 per month·Architectural Digest

Justin Bieber and Hailey Baldwin are putting down some roots on the West Coast. The couple, who quietly tied the knot in a civil ceremony in September 2018, recently purchased a 1930s Monterey Colonial home in Beverly Hills for $8.5 million, reports the Los Angeles Times. The abode was renovated by its previous owner, production designer Charles Infante.

Inside the 6,132-square-foot brick home are five bedrooms, seven bathrooms, a sunken family room, and a bright kitchen with a large center island and white oak cabinetry. There’s also a home theater, a wood-paneled library, and an Art Deco–inspired wet bar and wine cellar decorated with Martinique print wallpaper reportedly inspired by the Beverly Hills Hotel. More lush greenery abounds in the backyard, which features a new zero-edge swimming pool and a cabana with a fireplace. In the front courtyard, there’s a fire pit surrounded by olive trees.

Before committing to a permanent pad in Los Angeles, Bieber and Baldwin were renting a Spanish contemporary–style Toluca Lake mansion for $100,000 per month. Just after their whirlwind engagement, in August, TMZ reported that Bieber purchased a 101-acre lakefront property in his native Ontario for $5 million.

Even after snagging the sprawling property in the Great White North, the couple opted to spend most of their short engagement in New York City (Baldwin reportedly owns an apartment in Williamsburg, Brooklyn). Earlier this month, the New York Post reported that they were looking at a number of new rental options in lower Manhattan, including a unit on Leroy Street in a building designed by Ian Schrager.

Over the years, the singer’s real-estate choices—and antics—have consistently made headlines. His first home after finding fame on YouTube was a Calabasas mansion that he later sold to Khloé Kardashian. While living there, he was charged with vandalism for egging his neighbor’s house, an incident that spurred a years-long lawsuit. After that, he paid $29,500 per month for a short stay in a Hollywood Hills party home complete with a nightclub, movie theater, gym, and plenty of neon signs. He later rented L.A.’s famous “salad spinner” house for $59,000 per month, another Beverly Hills pad for $35,000 per month, and a $133,000-per-month place in London.

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