
Anthony Davis has quietly offloaded his Bel Air Crest estate for $32 million, slipping out of the ultra-private gated enclave he has called home since 2021. The roughly 3.5-acre spread packs in eight bedrooms, a dramatic glass-domed entry, a home theater, a barber and hair salon, an elevator, an Olympic-length pool and a private tennis court. Davis first floated the property last summer with an asking price in the high $30 millions, so the final number lands notably under that opening salvo, even if it is still very much trophy-compound territory.
According to TMZ, the home closed for $32 million on Thursday. The buyer was represented by Jacob Dadon of Carolwood Estates, while Jordan Cohen of RE/MAX One held the listing. The outlet reports the deal capped a year on the market for the estate and published a detailed, room-by-room tour that shows off just how tricked out the place really is.
Listing And Features
Listing materials on Compass show the estate spans 17,254 square feet and sits on about 3.5 acres. Inside and out, it is built for athletes and entertainers: there is a theater, game room, wine cellar, home gym, barber and hair salon, and an outdoor chef’s kitchen. The MLS notes extras like a batting cage, cabanas, and a large motor court, perks that help explain why the property initially hit the market carrying such a lofty price.
Price History
MLS price history posted on Trulia shows the home listed for $39.9 million on July 31, 2025, before moving to pending status in May 2026 and ultimately closing at $32 million. The compound last traded in April 2021 at roughly $31 to $32 million when Davis acquired it, according to The Real Deal and MLS records, meaning the star big man is essentially walking away close to where he came in.
Timing With Big Trades
The timing of the sale tracks with the upheaval in Davis’ professional life. He was shipped to the Dallas Mavericks in a blockbuster February 2025 trade that brought Luka Dončić to the Lakers, as detailed by NBA.com. Then, in February 2026, he was dealt again, this time to the Washington Wizards, a move reported by the Los Angeles Times. Those back-to-back trades help explain why keeping a massive Los Angeles estate started to make less sense.
For Bel Air, the deal is another reminder that even blue-chip properties often settle below their debut price after a long stint on the market, particularly when an owner’s team and travel schedule are in flux. For the buyer, it is a rare chance to grab one of Bel Air Crest’s most private, fully loaded compounds inside the guard-gated community.









