Entertainment

Full House creator Jeff Franklin relists Beverly Hills mansion for $45M

Jeff Franklin has put his Beverly Hills property back on the market, with Resident Group agents seeking $45 million, TMZ reported.

Georgia Hale

By Georgia Hale · Staff Writer

2 min read

Full House creator Jeff Franklin relists Beverly Hills mansion for $45M
Photo: TMZ

The Beverly Hills estate tied to “Full House” creator Jeff Franklin is back on the market with a $45 million price tag, according to TMZ.

The property has been a repeat player on the luxury real estate circuit. TMZ reported that Franklin has been trying to sell it for years, with the most recent listing last year priced at just under $50 million.

The new listing is being handled by Bennett Bidwell and Adam Rosenfeld of Resident Group, according to TMZ.

A big-ticket home with plenty packed in

TMZ described the property as sitting on a 21,000-square-foot plot in Beverly Hills, with a long list of amenities aimed at buyers who want the full private-resort setup.

The home has nine bedrooms and 18 bathrooms, according to TMZ. The property also includes a 75-yard pool with waterfalls, along with entertainment and lifestyle spaces including a movie theater, billiards room, hair salon and gym.

For car collectors, the listing also brings serious garage space. TMZ reported that the underground garage can hold 16 cars.

The estate also has views over Los Angeles, according to TMZ, adding another big Beverly Hills calling card to the package.

Why it has lingered

The mansion has drawn interest, though not necessarily the kind Franklin needs to close a sale. TMZ reported that real estate sources previously said Franklin gets calls from people looking to rent the property whenever it goes up for sale, rather than buyers ready to purchase it.

That leaves the house back in the high-end hunt, now priced lower than last year’s reported ask but still firmly in trophy-home territory.

The property’s dark history

The land has a grim past. TMZ noted that the site is known as the place where members of the Manson Family killed Sharon Tate and her friends in 1969.

The house where the killings occurred is no longer standing. TMZ reported that it was demolished in 1994, and the current residence was later built on the property.

Franklin, best known for creating the family sitcom “Full House,” is now trying again to find a buyer for the Beverly Hills estate, with Resident Group’s Bidwell and Rosenfeld holding the listing.

This story draws on original reporting from TMZ.