
A Beverly Hills spread asking just under $15 million grabbed the crown for Los Angeles County’s priciest luxury contract last week, even as the broader high-end market hit the brakes. The six-bedroom, six-bath home at 917 Oxford Way led a tally of 28 signed luxury deals countywide, with a combined asking total of about $192.7 million, roughly 26 percent below the same week a year earlier.
According to The Real Deal, those figures come from the Eklund Weekly Luxury Report, which tracks MLS listings priced at $4 million and up. The roundup shows the county logging 28 contracts last week at $192.7 million in asking volume, compared with $243.7 million during the equivalent week in 2025.
Beverly Hills top contract
The Beverly Hills standout at 917 Oxford Way is marketed at just under $15 million and is listed at about 7,504 square feet with six bedrooms and six baths, per Douglas Elliman. The midcentury home was built in 1953 and remodeled in the 1980s, with the listing spotlighting a den with wet bar, a gym or studio space and a pool that extends the living area into the backyard.
Price moves and the listing agent
Public listing records show the house first hit the market March 2 with an initial asking price of $16.5 million and then notched a roughly $1.5 million cut in mid-May, according to Redfin. That adjustment left the ask in the high $14 millions as buyer interest sharpened. The listing is handled locally by Monty Abramov of The Beverly Hills Estates.
Calabasas runner-up
The week’s second-priciest contract was Villa Bellezza at 25305 Prado De La Felicidad in Calabasas, where the seller is seeking just under $14 million for roughly 15,745 square feet, according to Realtor.com. The Italian-style estate, built in 2010 in the gated Estates at The Oaks, comes with a theater, wine cellar, fitness studio and a five-car gallery garage, and it has cycled on and off the market since 2021.
Mid-market deals are carrying the week
Industry watchers say the real action is a notch below those headliners. "The mid-market tier, $5 million to $6.99 million, dominated this week with 11 deals and 33.7 percent of total volume," Marcy Roth wrote in the Eklund report, as reported by The Real Deal. In plain English, buyers appear most comfortable in the lower reaches of the luxury ladder while the biggest tickets wobble.
For sellers, that mix means trophy properties can still grab attention, but overall dollar volume looks fragile and negotiations are tightening. Agents say listings that are staged to feel move-in ready and priced in line with current demand, rather than last year’s highs, are the ones most likely to turn showings into closed deals in the weeks ahead.









