Sylvester Stallone has officially turned the page on California, selling both his Beverly Park and Hidden Hills properties—and this month, he finally gave fans a look inside his new Florida mansion.
The Rocky legend and his wife, Jennifer Flavin, married for 28 years and still going strong, opened the doors to their stunning $35 million estate for a feature in Veranda magazine. But for the couple, the move is not about marble finishes or sweeping views alone. It is about comfort, character, and having room for what matters most—their family and their dogs.
“Monumental structures, but none of them embraced you,” Stallone said of other homes they toured. That changed the moment they walked into their new Palm Beach property, built in 2014. “It finally felt like home.”
A home built on warmth, not just wealth
While the lakefront mansion impresses with soaring ceilings and carefully curated art, Stallone and Flavin made design decisions with real life in mind—especially life with pets, children, and big, lively family dinners.
“We have three dogs and a cat and lots of children, nothing we own is precious,” Flavin explained. “Our family is precious, but the material things are not precious.”
To bring that vision to life, the couple turned to celebrity designer Martyn Lawrence Bullard, who previously worked with them in Los Angeles. Known for layering personality into high-end spaces, Bullard leaned into soft textures, durable performance fabrics, and a touch of glamour that still feels livable.
It is luxury designed to be used—meant for laughter, movement, and everyday living.
A living gallery, not a museum
Naturally, no Stallone home would feel complete without his substantial art collection—but this is not a house where paintings are treated like untouchable relics. For Stallone, art is meant to evolve.
“I consider it like a wardrobe,” he said, explaining that he regularly moves, swaps, and restages pieces to “restimulate the mind.”
In a Veranda Instagram video, Bullard walks viewers through an art-lined hallway where tall windows pour in natural light. On one side, deep crimson and black abstract panels radiate intensity, while across from them, a trio of grid-like works holds quiet focus. At the far end, a striking portrait by George Condo anchors the view, alongside works by Rashid Johnson and even Picasso.
In the dining room, a Damien Hirst butterfly work helped inspire a vivid cobalt 14-foot dining table. Overhead, bright blue chain-link fixtures hold globe pendant lights, adding another punch of color and energy to the space.
From Rocky robes to Palm Beach pools
For all its polish, the estate never drifts far from Stallone’s roots. The screening room is filled with memorabilia from Rocky and Rambo. A private bar gleams beneath boxing-inspired artwork. And in one corner sits a remarkable collection of keepsakes: the original Rocky script, championship belts, the oversized knife from Rambo, the iconic red robe, and a cluster of statuettes and awards.
Photographed by Douglas Friedman, the home reads less like a shrine and more like a living legacy—honored, displayed, and still part of the present.
Closing the California chapter
The Florida reveal follows Stallone’s decision to sell his Hidden Hills estate in 2023 to music legend John Fogerty. Initially listed at $22.5 million, the property ultimately sold for $17.2 million—a notable drop, but one Stallone appears to accept without regret.
That California estate was a 10,500-square-foot compound featuring a main residence, guesthouse, equestrian barn and riding arena, fruit orchard, cabana, and a private theater. Still, for Stallone, the shift was never just about property.
It was about reinvention.
Now, in his Palm Beach retreat, Stallone seems to have found the balance between timeless glamour and daily life—a place where art can move, dogs can roam, family can gather, and a Hollywood icon can finally feel at home.





















