Photo Credit: Tyler Hogan for Berlyn Media

Sharon Osbourne puts her Los Angeles mansion, shared with the late Ozzy, up for sale for $17 million, located in Hancock Park, just south of Hollywood.

The Los Angeles home of Sharon and Ozzy Osbourne is now on the market. The couple purchased the seven-bedroom, 11-bathroom Hancock Park mansion in 2015 and originally listed it for $18 million in 2022. However, it was removed from the market after the family’s move back to the UK was delayed.

The house was designed in 1929 and sits on about a half-acre, featuring a main house that spans 10,200 square feet and a guesthouse. Renovations have kept the home’s early 20th-century aesthetic intact. It includes a home theater fireplace featuring celebrity signatures dating back to prior owner, radio host Frank Bresee.

The property listing says the house includes a kitchen, family room, breakfast room, living room, formal dining room, wood-panelled library, home office, and screening room. The outdoor space includes a dining area with a pizza oven and barbecue, gardens, and a swimming pool covered in hand-laid mosaic tiles.

“It’s one of the more prestigious areas around Downtown LA,” said Realtor and Hancock Park resident Pete Buonocore. “Many of the houses are in a Historic Preservation Overlay Zone where homeowners are required to preserve the unique character of their homes, so when you’re driving down the street, it’s as if you’re in the 1920s.”

Other celebrities who have lived in the neighborhood include Muhammad Ali, Antonio Banderas, Natalie and Nat King Cole, Melanie Griffith, Jake and Maggie Gyllenhaal, Howard Hughes, Meghan Markle, and Lou Rawls.

Ozzy Osbourne passed away in July 2025, just weeks after his farewell performance with Black Sabbath in his native Birmingham, Back to the Beginning. Osbourne, who was no longer able to walk due to his advanced Parkinson’s disease, among other health issues, sang while seated on a throne. He died only 17 days after the show, at the age of 76.

Proceeds from the event exceeded £140 million, which were donated to Acorns Children’s Hospice, Birmingham Children’s Hospital, and Cure Parkinson’s.