The Moment
Josh Flagg is doing what he does best: turning a zip code into a storyline. The Million Dollar Listing star has put a roughly $10 million Miami mansion on the market, and it just happens to sit directly across from David and Victoria Beckham’s reported $72.3 million compound on North Bay Road, a stretch locals call Billionaires’ Row.
The Mediterranean-style home, about 4,000 square feet on a 10,000 square foot lot, has 4 bedrooms, 5 bathrooms, vaulted ceilings, custom steel doors, high-end security, and a detached pool house equipped with a sauna and cold plunge. Flagg says it’s basically a brand-new build after a full gut renovation with designer Gary Eisner of BuiltIN Studio.

Flagg told a celebrity news outlet the timing was no accident. He claims that the minute New York elected a politician he calls “Mandahmi,” he rang his broker, Jordan Karp, and told him to list the place. According to him, the calls started flooding in immediately.
In peak rich-guy confession mode, Flagg also admits he’s never even spent a night in the Miami house. He’s already snagged a place in East Hampton and a commercial building in downtown Manhattan, insisting, “I love New York — it’s home half the month. I’m just doing business.”
The Take
I’ll be honest: this isn’t just a real estate listing, it’s a whole modern-rich-people mood board.
On paper, it’s simple. A celebrity broker flips a high-end property in a prime Miami neighborhood and uses the Beckham compound as the world’s greatest landmark. In reality, it’s the 2020s tax-flight fantasy distilled into one listing: “I’m not fleeing New York, I’m just strategically orbiting Florida… from my Gulfstream.”
Flagg even jokes that once a politician starts talking about making the rich pay more, the private jets at Teterboro are “fueling up faster than the Bergdorf sale,” and a week later everyone from Manhattan is bragging they “escaped New York like they tunneled out of Shawshank with a Birkin.” That’s not just a punchline; it’s the official tagline of this era of luxury real estate.
And then there’s the Beckham factor. Saying your house is across from David and Victoria is the modern version of, “Our place backs up to the golf course.” It’s social proof baked right into the driveway. You’re not just buying a home; you’re buying proximity to a very photogenic power couple who make even walking the dog look like a campaign for overpriced athleisure.

What really makes me laugh, though, is that Flagg hasn’t even slept there. It’s like he speed-dated Miami, never actually had dinner, and is now selling the ring. This is the new celebrity status symbol: not living somewhere fabulous, but owning inventory in places you barely visit.
For regular people who move and, you know, actually live in their homes, this all sounds wild. But in the upper tiers, real estate is less “home” and more “asset plus storyline.” Flagg’s storyline here is crystal clear: hedge your New York life with a Florida address, park it across from global icons, then cash out before the paint dries.
Receipts
Confirmed:
- A celebrity news report dated Nov. 16, 2025, states that Josh Flagg listed a roughly $10 million Miami home on North Bay Road, described as across from the Beckhams’ $72.3 million compound.
- The same report details the property as a 4-bed, 5-bath Mediterranean-style home of about 4,000 square feet on a 10,000 square foot lot, with vaulted ceilings, custom steel doors, significant security, and a detached pool house with sauna and cold plunge.
- Flagg is quoted saying the house has been rebuilt “from the ground up” and that buyers could likely move in within about 60 days of completion.
- The property is held by Flagg Family Capital, his family’s private real estate investment arm, in partnership with Carolwood LP, led by Adam Rubin and Andrew Shanfeld.
- Listing photos in the report are credited to Zillow, supporting that the home is actively on the market.
Josh Flagg Lists $10 Million Miami Mansion Across from The Beckhams https://t.co/q9rrmUGMvx pic.twitter.com/WLOOnv3UDc
— TMZ (@TMZ) November 17, 2025
Unverified / Reported:
- Flagg’s explanation that he decided to list the home immediately after New York elected “Mandahmi,” and that his broker Jordan Karp’s phone has been “blowing up,” is based solely on his own quoted comments.
- His quips about New Yorkers “escaping” the city, private jets fueling up at Teterboro, and Shawshank-with-a-Birkin-style exits from Manhattan are clearly framed as jokes and commentary, not factual claims.
- His statement that he has never spent a night in the Miami house is presented as his own account; there’s no independent documentation of his overnight stays (or lack thereof).
Sources: Celebrity news report published Nov. 16, 2025; listing photos credited to Zillow within that report.
Backstory (For Casual Readers)
If you’re not glued to real estate TV, Josh Flagg is one of the longtime stars of Million Dollar Listing, a show that follows high-end agents wheeling and dealing mansions for the ultra-wealthy. David and Victoria Beckham — yes, that David and that Posh — bought a massive waterfront estate on Miami’s North Bay Road as part of their Miami chapter, tied to David’s Major League Soccer franchise. The street is packed with power players, from Hollywood directors to fashion royalty, and sales commonly hit the $70–$100 million range. In other words: this isn’t the cul-de-sac where someone complains about your trash cans being visible.
What’s Next
The obvious next question is who snaps this place up. Another celebrity? A hedge funder looking for a Beckham-adjacent landing pad? Or some quiet billionaire who just wants a sauna, a cold plunge, and the ability to say, “The neighbors? Oh, just the Beckhams.”
What’s worth watching is whether the house sells close to that $10 million mark and how quickly it moves. If it gets scooped up fast, it’s another data point in the ongoing story of money flowing from New York and other high-tax states into South Florida’s luxury market. If it lingers, it could hint that even Billionaires’ Row buyers are starting to blink at sky-high pricing.
For Flagg, this likely won’t be his last Florida flip, even if he still hasn’t committed to more than a figurative sleepover in Miami. With an East Hampton home and Manhattan commercial building already in the mix, he’s playing coastal chess, not checkers — and the board just happens to include the Beckhams’ front yard.
So here’s the question: if you could afford it, would you ever buy a home you never planned to actually live in, just for the address and the neighbors?
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