71°F
weather icon Clear

Floyd Mayweather selling Las Vegas mansion — PHOTOS

Updated October 17, 2024 - 8:15 pm

Former world champion boxer Floyd Mayweather is selling his Las Vegas mansion for $12.5 million.

The 12,707-square-foot Southern Highlands house has five bedrooms, eight bathrooms and a five-car garage. The house, which was constructed in 2008, also features a putting green, outdoor kitchen, gym, steam room, wine room, pool and fire pits.

Clark County property records show Mayweather’s company Fojoso LLC bought the property in 2009 for $9.5 million.

The house is co-listed by Las Vegas-based real estate agent Michele Sullivan of Douglas Elliman Real Estate and celebrity real estate agent Matt Altman of Los Angeles-based Altman Brothers Real Estate. Altman said Mayweather’s house has something he has never seen before in his career — a two-story movie theater.

“It’s the first one I’ve ever seen in my entire life,” he said. “So, your friends can watch the movie downstairs, and if you like you can watch the movie from your master bedroom. There is literally two screens. It’s probably one of the most interesting and unique features I’ve ever seen in a house.”

Sullivan said they already had a number of interested buyers for the property even before the house went on the market, so they anticipate it will go fast and above asking price.

Altman added that Mayweather isn’t selling the house for any particular reason, and he still loves Las Vegas.

“You buy things, you sell things, you don’t keep everything all the time,” he said.

Altman appears regularly on Bravo TV’s “Million Dollar Listing: Los Angeles” and has worked with multiple Hollywood stars.

Contact Patrick Blennerhassett at pblennerhassett@reviewjournal.com.

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
MORE STORIES
THE LATEST
Major homebuilder buys prime land on Boulder Highway

One of the Las Vegas Valley’s largest homebuilders has snatched up 20 acres of prime land in the southeast valley for $19 million.

Las Vegas homes sitting on the market longer as sales drop

Supply continues to outpace demand as Las Vegas Valley homes are sitting on the market longer without offers, according to Las Vegas Realtors statistics.

Commercial land prices double in Las Vegas Valley

Land developers say the BLM controls the vast majority of land in Clark County, and this has helped fuel a real estate crisis by driving up demand and pricing.

Here’s what $300K will get you across the Las Vegas Valley

With Las Vegas in a housing crisis and millennials being priced out of the housing market, people are having to settle for less. Here are some homes in the $300,000 range.