The Moment
Hulk Hogan’s longtime Florida mansion, a 5,400-square-foot beachside spread in Clearwater Beach, is about to hit the market for just under $11 million, roughly six months after his death in July 2025.
The home, which Hogan had owned since 2012, sits directly on the sand with sweeping Gulf views and all the trimmings you expect from a wrestling legend who lived large on and off the screen.
We’re talking five bedrooms, five and a half bathrooms, a roughly 1,000-square-foot primary suite with its own gulf-front terrace and spa-style bath, plus teak, marble and natural stone floors, a designer kitchen, gas fireplace and a private elevator.
Outside, there’s about 1,500 square feet of covered space, a heated pool and spa, and the kind of waterfront backdrop that makes you understand exactly why this was his sanctuary.

The place is being listed for $10,989,000 by Hogan’s longtime friend, luxury agent Martha Thorn of the Thorn Collection with Coldwell Banker Realty, turning a wrestling icon’s private retreat into the latest high-end trophy listing.
The Take
I don’t know who needs to hear this, but even if you grew up screaming “Whatcha gonna do, brother?!” at the TV, buying Hulk Hogan’s old house does not make you a member of the NWO. It makes you someone with an $11 million budget and a very strong love of waterfront property.
This is one of those sales where celebrity, nostalgia and real estate collide. On paper, it’s a luxury Florida beach house. In people’s minds, it’s a shrine to an entire era of pop culture: 80s and 90s wrestling, pay-per-view Saturdays, kids in ripped T-shirts doing leg drops on their parents’ couches.
The timing is what sticks. Six months after Hogan’s death, the house shifts from his haven to just another asset in the estate. It feels fast, but honestly, that’s how this usually works. Lawyers move quicker than grief does, especially when waterfront square footage is involved.
Think of it like this: fans want Graceland, but the reality is more like a very expensive open house with catered hors d’oeuvres. Unless a superfan with deep pockets swoops in, this is far more likely to become “luxury coastal residence” in someone’s portfolio than a wrestling museum with a velvet rope around the primary bath.
What makes it bittersweet is that we’ve all seen this movie before. The second a celebrity passes, their home turns into content: listing photos, drone shots, tours narrated like a eulogy. The person becomes the backdrop to the property, instead of the other way around. Here, the listing price is the headline, but the real story is that a piece of Hogan’s everyday life is being quietly folded back into the market.
Hulk Hogan’s Florida Mansion To Hit Market For $11 Million https://t.co/vT73AXrbOt pic.twitter.com/5yvL4ZjdPc
— TMZ (@TMZ) January 30, 2026
Receipts
Confirmed:
- Hulk Hogan’s longtime home is in Clearwater Beach, Florida, directly on the sand.
- The property is approximately 5,400 square feet with five bedrooms and five and a half bathrooms, including an estimated 1,000-square-foot primary suite with a gulf-front terrace, spa-style bath, sitting area and large walk-in closet.
- The home includes high-end finishes such as teak, marble and natural stone floors, a designer kitchen, gas fireplace and private elevator, plus about 1,500 square feet of covered outdoor space with a heated pool and spa.
- The mansion is being prepared for listing at $10,989,000 through agent Martha Thorn of the Thorn Collection with Coldwell Banker Realty.
- Hogan had owned and lived in the home since around 2012.
- He suffered a medical emergency at the residence shortly before his death on July 24, 2025, according to contemporaneous reports and statements.
Unverified / Contextual:
- Any specific plans for preserving or displaying Hogan’s personal memorabilia from the home have not been publicly detailed.
- Who will ultimately purchase the property, and whether they are a fan, an investor or simply a luxury buyer, is unknown.
Backstory (For Casual Readers)
For anyone who drifted away from wrestling after the 80s boom: Hulk Hogan (born Terry Bollea) was the face of professional wrestling for a generation. He helped turn the then-WWF into mainstream entertainment with his larger-than-life persona, starring in marquee events, movies, commercials and eventually reality TV with his family. His catchphrases, mustache and bandana were as recognizable as any rock star’s logo. Along the way, he had public controversies and legal battles, but for a huge slice of Gen X and older Millennials, Hogan is forever that towering figure in yellow and red, dropping the leg and hulking up for one more comeback.
What’s Next
In the immediate future, the house will move through a very normal process for a very not-normal property: staging, professional photos, a glossy listing and private showings for buyers who can handle eight-figure beachfront pricing.

If history is any guide, a few things are likely. The listing itself will become part of Hogan’s legacy tour, shared in fan groups and nostalgia posts. Every aerial shot of that pool against the Gulf will double as a reminder that this was where he spent his final years, not just another random megamansion on the sand.
Depending on who buys it, the home will either quietly disappear into someone’s private life or continue to live online as \”Hulk Hogan’s old place\” every time it changes hands. The name tends to stick to the bricks, even long after the famous owner is gone.
On a more human level, selling the house is one of those practical steps that signals a family moving from shock into after. Estates have to be settled. Properties have to be maintained or let go. Fans get to keep their memories; the people closest to him have to make real-world decisions.
So the next chapter for this house isn’t a pay-per-view main event. It’s paperwork, inspections, closing dates and, eventually, a new set of keys in someone else’s hand.
Sources: Sports reporting on the planned sale of Hulk Hogan’s Clearwater Beach home, published January 30, 2026; publicly available biographical information on Hulk Hogan and real estate details provided via Coldwell Banker Realty and agent Martha Thorn, accessed January 30, 2026.
Your turn: If you had the money, would you ever buy a celebrity’s former home, or does the emotional baggage make it feel more like a museum than a fresh start?
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