Justin Baldoni, Blake Lively Legal Battle: Actor Quietly Lists $9M California Estate Amid £125M Lawsuit
Justin Baldoni lists his $8.88 million Ojai estate as Blake Lively lawsuit heads to trial in May 2026.

Justin Baldoni — actor, director and self-styled wellness evangelist — has quietly put his 10-acre California retreat on the market for $8.88 million, a precise figure that seems less aspirational than an attempt to control a narrative slipping sideways. The timing is notable: Baldoni's listing comes as his legal dispute with Blake Lively moves towards a civil trial scheduled for May 2026, with Lively seeking $161 million in damages over allegations of sexual harassment and retaliation linked to It Ends With Us.
Justin Baldoni has quietly listed his sprawling California compound for $8.88 million, months before he is due to go head to head in a legal battle against his former costar Blake Lively, who has accused him of sexually harassing her on the set of their movie, "It Ends With Us."… pic.twitter.com/jONeGGYWsR
— Realtor.com (@realtordotcom) February 6, 2026
To be clear, selling a house is not an admission of anything. But it is a signal, and in Hollywood, signals are half the story.
The Ojai 'Sanctuary' Hits the Market
The property reads like a love letter to the modern Californian dream of self-improvement — part family home, part boutique retreat, part flex. The listing describes a 5,200-square-foot, five-bedroom Mediterranean-style main residence set on 10 acres at the foothills of the Topa Topa Mountains. There is also a tiny house, along with a 'yoga dome' and 'guest dome' that the listing says were imported from Poland, as if serenity could be shipped internationally.
Health and harmony are not just vibes here; they are features. The marketing highlights a 'state-of-the-art medical-grade air filtration system' and electromagnetic frequency shielding around the primary bedroom, alongside a saltwater pool and a 'regenerative orchard.' Elsewhere on the property are pickleball and basketball courts, an elevated hot tub, a custom gym, an LED-lit in-ground trampoline, a koi pond with its own waterfall, walking paths, EV charging stations, a private well and fire mitigation systems — an inventory of privilege dressed up as 'wellness.'
Baldoni and his wife Emily bought the place in 2020 for $2.2 million, and the listing notes they spent two years renovating and adding structures. Back when the couple showed off the property in glossy interiors coverage, it was framed as a year-round family base: somewhere to play by the pool, host friends, watch the sunset — an oasis by design, not accident.
Now it's being positioned, pointedly, as an 'opportunity:' a residence, a second home, or a retreat investment. Translation: the sanctuary is for sale, and whoever has the cash can buy the storyline too.
Money, Reputation and the Courtroom Clock

What cannot be ignored is the overlap between the personal and the procedural. Lively's lawsuit seeks $161 million in damages and is tied to allegations she was sexually harassed during the production of It Ends With Us, then targeted with retaliation, according to reporting on the case. Baldoni has denied the allegations, and his own legal counter-offensive has been a saga in itself — one that has kept this dispute in the headlines long after the film's credits rolled.
Blake Lively Claims $161 Million in Damages Due to ‘It Ends With Us’ Smear Campaign - $56.2 million in past and future earnings from acting, producing, speaking engagements and endorsements, $49M for beauty brand Blake Brown, and $22M for Betty Buzz due to the harm to her image.
by u/mlg1981 in popculturechat
A judge has postponed the trial to May 2026, citing court scheduling pressures — a polite way of saying the machinery of justice moves at its own pace, indifferent to celebrity panic. The delay matters because it extends the period in which both sides must live within the dispute: every legal filing, every leak, every carefully placed phrase in a statement doubling as a reputational tourniquet.
Against that backdrop, a high-end property listing can seem less like a lifestyle choice and more like a form of quiet triage. Realtor reported that the estate had previously been listed for rent at $40,000 per month before being put up for sale. It is not hard to see why a sprawling compound — no matter how carefully curated — might start to feel like an expensive symbol when your professional identity is being contested in public.
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