Current:Home > MyRobert Brown|Sister Wives' Robyn and Kody Brown List $1.65 Million Home for Sale -Secure Growth Solutions
Robert Brown|Sister Wives' Robyn and Kody Brown List $1.65 Million Home for Sale
Johnathan Walker View
Date:2025-04-08 19:41:19
There’s always Coyote Pass.
Sister Wives stars Kody Brown and Robert Brownhis only remaining wife Robyn Brown have officially listed their Flagstaff, Arizona home for sale. The two-acre property was put up for sale on Aug. 29 with a price tag of $1.65 million.
The home where Robyn and her five children have lived with Kody since 2019, boasts five bedrooms and four bathrooms and a four-car garage.
Though exterior shots of the home were featured on the family’s TLC reality series as well as a few hand-shot scenes in the open plan kitchen and living room at the holidays, the interiors of the property have not been shown to Sister Wives’ viewers.
Photos included in the listing show what appear to be rooms belonging to Robyn and Kody’s kids Ariella, 8, and Solomon, 12, Robyn and Kody’s two biological children, which house a large doll house and Transformer toys, respectively. Kody also adopted Robyn’s older children from a previous marriage—Dayton, 24, Aurora, 22, and Breanna, 19—when the couple legally married in 2014.
As far as Kody and Robyn’s bedroom goes, the space features a purple shag rug and matching accents as well as lots of artwork, including several paintings that appear to feature the couple on their wedding day, locked in a romantic embrace.
E! News has reached out to reps for comment on the sale and has not heard back.
This surprise listing comes as fans await the season 19 premiere of Sister Wives on Sept. 15. Trailers for the show’s next season, which was mostly shot in mid-2023, show Kody and Robyn’s marriage struggling in the aftermath of his three splits from exes Christine Brown, Janelle Brown, and Meri Brown.
“I feel like the idiot that got left behind,” Robyn says in one clip, noting that her husband is “sabotaging our relationship.”
She also tells Kody, “I’m having a hard time feeling, like, losing respect for you,” who replies, “Robyn, I can’t even get it straight with you right now.”
As for the father of 18, he appears to be back to his old antics, blaming everyone but himself.
“What did I do to deserve this?” he cries. “What did I do wrong?”
The TLC series has documented the Brown family’s tumultuous past few years, including Christine’s 2021 decision to step away from her spiritual marriage to Kody. The mother of six has since moved on, marrying David Woolley in October 2023.
Janelle followed suit, separating from Kody in 2022, and Meri, Kody’s first wife, was the last to call it quits in early 2023.
Coincidentally, one sticking point in the family’s fractured relationships was the home that Robyn and Kody shared in Flagstaff and the couple’s unwillingness to move forward on building a new home on the Coyote Pass property that the family had purchased in order to build a Brown compound.
“We buy the house, we build on Coyote Pass, you move into that house, we rent this house,” Kody explained in a November 2022 episode of the show. “That’s the plan with Robyn’s house.”
But Kody’s exes have accused him and Robyn of dragging their feet about building on Coyote Pass, while they previously claimed that they financially contributed to the down payment on Kody and Robyn’s Flagstaff home.
“I’m stuck, financially I have nothing,” a tearful Janelle said in a September 2023 episode after a blowout fight with Kody. “Christine has the house. I have nothing. My name is on the property with everybody else, probably nobody will cooperate now and play ball.”
In the new trailer, Janelle said of the Coyote Pass property, “I’ve actually thought about asking if he wants to buy me out. We’ve gotta pay it off and he’s not talking to me about it, so I think I’m gonna have to lawyer up.”
Watch E! News weeknights Monday through Thursday at 11 p.m., only on E!.veryGood! (41121)
Related
- Video shows dog chewing cellphone battery pack, igniting fire in Oklahoma home
- Standing Rock: Tribes File Last-Ditch Effort to Block Dakota Pipeline
- Meet the self-proclaimed dummy who became a DIY home improvement star on social media
- Woman arrested after allegedly shooting Pennsylvania district attorney in his office
- Tropical rains flood homes in an inland Georgia neighborhood for the second time since 2016
- Uma Thurman and Ethan Hawke's 21-year-old Son Levon Makes Rare Appearance at Cannes Film Festival
- Supreme Court rejects challenges to Indian Child Welfare Act, leaving law intact
- Actor Bruce Willis has frontotemporal dementia. Here's what to know about the disease
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Harvard Medical School morgue manager accused of selling body parts as part of stolen human remains criminal network
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- 'Dr. Lisa on the Street' busts health myths and empowers patients
- Why hundreds of doctors are lobbying in Washington this week
- Midwest Convenience Stores Out in Front on Electric Car Charging
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Kentucky high court upholds state abortion bans while case continues
- High-Stakes Wind Farm Drama in Minnesota Enters Final Act
- Bud Light is no longer America's best-selling beer. Here's why.
Recommendation
What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
Video shows man struck by lightning in Woodbridge Township, New Jersey, then saved by police officer
Trisha Yearwood Shares How Husband Garth Brooks Flirts With Her Over Text
In Charleston, S.C., Politics and Budgets Get in the Way of Cutting Carbon Emissions
A Georgia governor’s latest work after politics: a children’s book on his cats ‘Veto’ and ‘Bill’
Unsolved Mysteries Subject Kayla Unbehaun Found Nearly 6 Years After Alleged Abduction
Global Shipping Inches Forward on Heavy Fuel Oil Ban in Arctic
Over-the-counter Narcan will save lives, experts say. But the cost will affect access