Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell’s 4 Homes Reveal a Very Private Life

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Kurt Russell and Goldie Hawn’s real estate story reads less like a trophy collection and more like a map of how they actually live. Across four long-held homes, the pattern is clear: one property for city energy, one for desert calm, one for family retreat, and one for heavily guarded privacy. That mix is what makes the portfolio interesting. These are not interchangeable celebrity houses. Each one carries a different mood, a different use, and in some cases, a different response to the pressures that come with fame.

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1. The Manhattan penthouse shaped around meditation

Goldie Hawn’s New York home stands apart for its interior identity. She reportedly bought the 57th Street penthouse in 1998, and the apartment was redesigned to reflect her interest in India, spirituality, and a quieter kind of luxury. The details are unusually specific: four life-size gold Buddhas, textiles sourced from India and Tibet, and a meditation room centered around a 1920s Chinese opium bed. A wall partition was also removed to create a more harmonious flow between spaces. Rather than leaning on sleek Manhattan minimalism, the penthouse appears to function as a personal sanctuary set high above the city.

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2. The Pacific Palisades estate that kept evolving long after they left

One of the couple’s best-known California properties was a Georgian-style Pacific Palisades house they bought in 2004 and sold in 2017. The home kept drawing attention even after their ownership ended, eventually returning to market for $13.49 million before changing hands again in early 2026. The appeal was easy to trace. The 1951 residence featured elegant columns, an ivy-covered exterior, multiple fireplaces, skylights, a sauna, outdoor entertaining spaces, and a poolside meditation hut during their time there. It was polished, traditional, and expansive without losing the kind of private, lived-in atmosphere that often defines homes celebrities keep for years rather than seasons.

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3. The guarded Los Angeles-area residence shaped by security concerns

Another Southern California property says even more about their lifestyle. In the Pacific Palisades area, the pair bought a residence in 2011 and custom built it into a new mansion with an in-home elevator and constant security presence. What makes that home notable is not just scale, but purpose. According to the source material, the security measures intensified after multiple break-ins, turning the property into something more defensive than decorative. For celebrity real estate, that is often the untold design brief: comfort has to coexist with control, and architecture starts absorbing the realities of visibility, access, and personal safety.

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4. The Palm Desert escape that became Goldie Hawn’s “safe haven”

The Palm Desert house appears to serve a different role entirely. Located near Coachella Valley and close to Kate Hudson’s home, the estate reportedly spans about 5,000 square feet and includes three bedrooms, 4.5 bathrooms, and a lagoon-style pool. Its importance seems emotional as much as geographic. The home has been described as Goldie Hawn’s “safe haven” after the break-ins, suggesting that the desert property became less of a secondary address and more of a reset button. In celebrity-home terms, that distinction matters. A house can be lavish and still be defined by the feeling it restores.

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5. The Old Snowmass log home Kurt Russell calls his favorite

If one property anchors the portfolio, it is Colorado. Russell told The Wall Street Journal, “Our Old Snowmass home is my favorite. It’s a large, beautiful log-cabin lodge on a ranch that we moved into a little over 40 years ago.” The home is not just scenic; it is deeply tied to routine. Russell has described waking up to mountain views, heading to the barn to saddle a horse, and settling in by the fireplace. That daily rhythm helps explain why Colorado reads as their emotional home base, even while work continues to pull them to New York and California. The property also reflects a longstanding affection for log construction, which Russell has spoken about directly: “Goldie and I share a passion for log homes. I never got that out of my system, starting with the one in Maine.”

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6. The guest house that stayed almost exactly the same

The Colorado estate is especially revealing because it includes two residences. Russell owns the main lodge, while Hawn owns the adjoining guest house, where Oliver Hudson once lived. When Oliver gave a remote interview from the property, he called it “a bit of a time capsule” and added, “Those curtains that you see are like 30 years old.” He also explained, “Mom built this house first and then my step-dad Kurt built the other house.”

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That reluctance to constantly update gives the Colorado compound a different character from the more polished urban and coastal homes. It reads as inherited family space rather than image-managed real estate.

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7. The Colorado ranch that became the family gathering point

Beyond architecture, the Old Snowmass property functions as the center of the family calendar. The ranch has long been the setting for holidays, winter visits, and time with children and grandchildren. Russell has also said that Wyatt Russell, Meredith Hagner, and their children live in Colorado, which makes the state even more central to the family’s routine. There is also a rare historical footnote attached to the ranch. Russell once recalled inviting Princess Diana to visit Colorado as a quieter escape from paparazzi attention, and he later said she came with her sons and stayed for 10 days at the property, according to his 2016 account. That story reinforces what the house appears to provide best: privacy with warmth, not isolation.

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Taken together, the four-home portfolio shows a couple arranging real estate around temperament rather than display. New York holds introspection, Los Angeles carries both glamour and security, Palm Desert offers relief, and Colorado remains the place where the outside world seems to fall away. For all the scale and value attached to the addresses, the stronger through line is simpler: each home serves a purpose, and the most memorable ones are the properties that gave them room to feel protected, grounded, and off duty.

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