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Real EstateHousing

In a frozen luxury housing market, buyers are asking to ‘try before they buy’ and having sleepovers in multimillion-dollar mansions

Sydney Lake
By
Sydney Lake
Sydney Lake
Associate Editor
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Sydney Lake
By
Sydney Lake
Sydney Lake
Associate Editor
Down Arrow Button Icon
December 17, 2025, 10:09 AM ET
Sellers are getting more creative with luxury home listings.
Sellers are getting more creative with luxury home listings.Getty Images
  • Luxury homeowners are increasingly struggling to sell at desired prices, prompting a rise in creative tactics like sleepover trials and steep price cuts. New taxes in areas like Los Angeles and Cape Cod make luxury transactions even more costly, forcing sellers to be more mindful and flexible with pricing strategies.

In today’s luxury housing market, it’s become increasingly difficult to sell for what the homeowner might think the home is worth—and even high-profile sellers have been forced to drop prices on their megamansions. 

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Because home prices and mortgage rates remain elevated, buyers are scrutinizing their purchases now more than ever. Plus, in several luxury housing markets, extra “mansion taxes” are tacked on, making purchases even more expensive. 

So to woo prospective buyers, sellers are trying a new tactic: offering up sleepovers in their mansions to help seal the deal. 

Julian Johnston, a real estate agent with the Corcoran Group in Miami, said this is a trend he’s seeing more frequently in today’s luxury market, as sellers and agents are forced to become more open to creative strategies like pricing adjustments and unique marketing campaigns to stand out. 

“In the luxury sector, where buyers often have the means and the time to wait for the right property, anything that sparks fresh attention and differentiates a home from its competition can help move the market forward,” Johnston told Fortune. 

The Wall Street Journal first reported about this trend earlier this year, offering the example of a $60 million mansion where the owner allowed an overseas couple to stay at the home for two months at $250,000 per month before putting in an offer. Eric Albert, the homeowner, told WSJ the potential buyers wanted to be sure the home was comfortable, with a good size and layout to meet their needs.

“For $60 million, you should try it before you buy it,” Albert told WSJ. “It’s a smart thing to do.”

While Johnston told Fortune he’s not seeing it with the majority of listings yet, “it’s certainly gaining traction in high-end markets where buyers are more selective.”

Other real estate experts, however, see this as potentially a move of desperation for sellers—and a signal some luxury homes are overpriced at the start. 

“Sleeping in the house to get a feel for it is one of the oddest concepts I’ve ever heard of,” Simon Isaacs, founder of Palm Beach, Fla.–based luxury firm Simon Isaacs Real Estate, told Fortune. “That doesn’t mean it won’t happen. Stranger things have happened.”

The frozen luxury housing market

During the past couple of years, there have been several notable cases of high-profile people being forced to drop the price on their lavish luxury homes. In April 2024, billionaire media mogul Rupert Murdoch majorly slashed the price of his Manhattan penthouse by 40% to $38.5 million. Not only did that mean he ended up listing it for far less than he wanted, but he also ended up losing money because he bought the property for $57.9 million in 2014. 

Then this May, Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck slashed the price of their $60 million Beverly Hills megamansion by more than $8 million. Most recently, the billionaire founder of Oakley sunglasses became the latest victim of the sluggish luxury housing market by relisting his Beverly Hills mansion for $65 million, down from the original $68 million price listing from June 2024.

These few examples go to show that while not fully out of a seller’s market, the tides are turning in favor of buyers as listings stay on the market longer and price cuts become more common, according to Realtor.com.

“Square footage and celebrity status don’t justify inflated pricing anymore,” Anthony Luna, CEO of L.A.-based real estate advisory Coastline Equity, told Fortune. “Buyers want smart design, upgraded systems, and long-term value.”

Meanwhile, luxury buyers and sellers also have to contend with mansion taxes in some markets. The mansion tax in L.A., for example, applies an additional 4% tax to property sales of at least $5 million and a 5.5% tax for properties north of $10 million, further complicating real estate sales and pricing. 

The tax, which is typically paid by the seller, is separate from a home’s sale price and can be a “massive amount of money,” Selling Sunset star and Oppenheim Group agent Emma Hernan previously told Fortune. She described it as a “nightmare” for sellers and agents alike. 

One of the more recent examples of municipalities considering mansion taxes is Cape Cod. Already one of the most expensive housing markets in the U.S., where homes often exceed $1 million, according to Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, it’s about to get more expensive for luxury homeowners. Cape Cod lawmakers are considering a tax on wealthy homeowners that would tack on an extra 2% surcharge on luxury-home sales above $2 million.

Considering those factors, luxury homeowners will have to be more mindful than ever when pricing their properties. 

The reason there are so many price drops in the luxury sector is “they were mispriced in the first place,” Isaacs said. 

“Everybody has an expectation of what their home is worth, and real estate brokers who are on the ground showing people every day have a better understanding of what people want, what people’s appetite is, and what things are spent on,” he said. “Some things they’re willing to spend [on], and some things they’re not.”

A version of this story was published at Fortune.com on Aug. 28, 2025.

More on the luxury housing market:

  • ‘Quiet luxury’ is coming for the housing market, the Corcoran Group CEO says. It’s not just the Hamptons, Aspen, and Miami anymore
  • The housing market has gotten so bleak that even millionaires are renting right now
  • The ultrarich are scooping up mansions while almost no one else can afford a typical home 
The Fortune 500 Innovation Forum will convene Fortune 500 executives, U.S. policy officials, top founders, and thought leaders to help define what’s next for the American economy, Nov. 16-17 in Detroit. Apply here.
About the Author
Sydney Lake
By Sydney LakeAssociate Editor
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Sydney Lake is an associate editor at Fortune, where she writes and edits news for the publication's global news desk.

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