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Olivia Wilde Sells Los Angeles Home at a Loss as Her Love Story With Caspar Jopling Deepens

  • Jan 9
  • 4 min read

9 January 2026

Olivia Wilde has just turned a significant page in both her personal life and her real estate portfolio by selling her Los Angeles residence for $5.23 million, a nearly $700,000 loss from what she paid for the property in 2023, a move that comes amid heightened public interest in her blossoming romance with British art dealer Caspar Jopling. The once-picturesque Studio City home, which she purchased for roughly $5.9 million, changed hands on December 2, 2025, less than three years after Wilde first invested in the property, and has since become part of a larger narrative about where the actress is headed next in her life and love. Many observers are reading the sale as more than a financial decision; it may signal a willingness to embrace change on multiple fronts.


Wilde, 41, originally bought the four-bedroom, five-and-a-half-bathroom Studio City residence in March 2023, a purchase that coincided with a pivotal period in her personal life as she and former fiancé Jason Sudeikis were navigating a joint custody settlement for their two children, Otis and Daisy. At the time, the home was lauded for its embrace of Southern California living, defined by its stylish indoor-outdoor spaces, architecturally thoughtful design and lush privacy provided by mature landscaping. It was also designed by noted architect Barbara Bestor and refreshed in 2015, giving it a distinctive character many Angelenos admire.


Yet despite its appeal, Wilde chose to bring the chapter of her life associated with that house to a close late last year. The $5.23 million sale price, notably lower than both her original purchase and the earlier $6.2 million asking figure, reflects shifting market conditions — and perhaps more importantly, shifting priorities. The closing of the deal came amid rumors that her relationship with Jopling, 33, has grown more serious since it began publicly in July 2025. The two have been seen together in both London’s Primrose Hill neighbourhood and in New York City, suggesting a fluid bi-continental companionship that has blended their personal worlds, and has led some insiders to speculate that Wilde’s geographic and emotional anchors are evolving.


Jopling, an art dealer who has carved out a respected career in New York and beyond, brings his own cultural cachet to the pairing. It was widely noted earlier in the relationship that he previously dated singer Ellie Goulding and has his roots in both the British and international art scenes, making the union a blend of Hollywood flair and European art world charisma. Though Wilde and Jopling have kept much of their private life out of the spotlight, their public appearances and shared moments tell a story of mutual enjoyment and burgeoning partnership that appears to be influencing how Wilde approaches this stage of her life.


For Wilde, the decision to move on from her Los Angeles home not only represented a hit in terms of return on investment but also perhaps an opportunity to streamline the logistical and emotional complexities of co-parenting in California while also nurturing a connection that has taken her overseas. The Studio City house had been part of the fabric of her life with Sudeikis, with the couple having previously sold their Silver Lake home also tied to their family narrative and divided their shared properties after their split. In that earlier transition, Wilde took sole ownership of the California dwelling as part of the divorce and custody arrangements, while Sudeikis received their Brooklyn townhouse, and the two continued to co-parent their children in a shared schedule.


Despite the sale showing a financial loss on the property, for Wilde it may be less about dollars and cents and more about that fresh chapter. The decision to sell after a relatively short period, in the midst of whispers about future plans, suggests she is unafraid of reinvention or relocation if that serves her evolving personal life. Close friends and insiders have hinted that the actress spends considerable time in the U.K. with Jopling, and though she has not confirmed any intent to permanently relocate, her actions in real estate feel emblematic of a broader appetite for new beginnings.


Moreover, the move comes at a time when Wilde’s broader public profile remains robust. Beyond her personal affairs, she’s been recognized for her work as a director and actress, with previous films such as Booksmart earning critical acclaim and a loyal fan base. Yet in this moment, it’s her off-screen life that has captured headlines, with the real estate sale and her romantic interest in Jopling intertwined in the public imagination. The narrative arc feels unmistakably cinematic: a shift from past relationships and homes tied to earlier professional and personal narratives, into a new phase marked by romance, travel and geographic fluidity.


Real estate experts say that the loss Wilde took on the Studio City property is not unusual in a cooling California housing market where even premium properties can languish or drop below previous purchase prices. But in Hollywood, where celebrity actions are parsed for personal meaning as much as financial sense, this transaction feels like a chapter closing in a story that blends industry glamour with everyday life choices. The sale underscores how actors and creatives often align personal milestones with real estate decisions, creating narratives that, to fans and observers alike, feel deeply human even amid the glitz of fame.


Whether Wilde’s next home will be in the U.K., back in Los Angeles, or somewhere entirely unexpected remains to be seen. What is clear from this sale, and the wider context surrounding it, is that she is navigating her path with both intentionality and openness to the possibilities of change. In an era where celebrity relationships, residences, and life choices are as much a part of public conversation as any performance on screen, Wilde’s latest move stands as a reminder that life off camera can be as compelling and richly nuanced as anything portrayed on it.

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