Imagine buying a 38,000-square-foot Beverly Hills palace with your famous ex, watching the marriage fall apart in real time, listing the thing three separate times, and somehow — somehow — still potentially walking away with a profit.
That’s the Jennifer Lopez story right now.
The singer officially took full ownership of the Bennifer estate this week after Ben Affleck signed over his share of the property. She’s now listed the 12-bedroom, 24-bathroom megamansion for $49,995,000 — and the way the numbers are lining up, J.Lo might actually come out ahead on one of the messiest celebrity real estate sagas in recent memory.
But the real twist? You can thank Netflix for that.

Let’s set the scene.
Jennifer Lopez just relisted the couple’s former Beverly Hills home — for the third time — and this time, it’s all hers.
After Ben Affleck quietly gifted her his share of the estate (a move worth tens of millions of dollars, by the way), Lopez turned around and put the property straight back on the market at $49,995,000, with the listing held by Rayni and Branden Williams of The Beverly Hills Estates.
The couple originally dropped $60,850,000 on the property back in May 2023, then poured millions more into renovating what was already an outrageously luxurious compound. They first listed it in July 2024 for around $68 million — a price tag that clearly didn’t move the needle.
Then came the price cuts. Then the divorce filing. Then the settlement. And now, this.
Here’s where it gets interesting: because Ben gifted his share entirely to Jennifer, she stands to pocket every dollar from the eventual sale. Depending on what they spent on improvements, she could realistically break even — or better.
But that’s not even the wildest part.
The reason Ben could afford to essentially shrug off tens of millions in real estate equity? He sold his AI company, InterPositive, to Netflix for a reported $600 million in March. When your cushion looks like that, a $30-plus million dent in a real estate deal barely registers. Dropping the mansion deed on J.Lo starts to look less like a grand gesture and more like… tidying up a spreadsheet.
For anyone just tuning in — welcome to Bennifer 2.0, one of Hollywood’s most dramatic second-act love stories.

Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck first dated in the early 2000s, becoming one of the defining celebrity couples of that era before calling it off in 2004. Nearly two decades later, they rekindled their romance in 2021, got engaged in 2022, and married in a lavish ceremony in 2022. The reunion felt like something out of a movie. The real estate came next: a sprawling Beverly Hills estate purchased in May 2023 for nearly $61 million.
By mid-2024, the cracks were showing. They listed the home in July 2024, and just about a month later, Lopez filed for divorce in August. Their divorce was officially settled in February 2025, with Ben ultimately signing over his share of the property to Jennifer as part of the resolution.
It was a reunion story that captured the world’s attention — and an ending that arguably generated even more.
The moment news broke that Ben had signed the property entirely over to J.Lo — and that she’d relisted it almost immediately fans and finance-minded followers alike did a collective double-take.
The math started circulating fast. Buy at $60.8M. Renovate. List at $68M. Cut to $50M. Get gifted the whole thing. Sell solo. The internet had thoughts, and they were not holding back.
Posts breaking down the “J.Lo real estate profit pipeline” spread across X and TikTok, with users firing up their calculators to figure out whether she was actually coming out ahead. Fans immediately noticed that if she closes anywhere near the asking price, she could realistically recoup what the couple originally paid especially factoring in Ben’s gifted equity wiping out her exposure on his half.
Within hours of the listing going live, the Beverly Hills property was back on every celebrity real estate watch list online.
The comment sections were in rare form.
Some fans believe the property transfer was always part of the divorce settlement plan — a clean financial break that let both parties walk without prolonged legal battles over valuation. Others pointed to Ben’s Netflix windfall as the reason he could afford to be so generous without blinking.
Sources close to the couple have stayed quiet, but the timing speaks volumes. It’s unclear whether J.Lo plans to stay in Beverly Hills long term or whether this sale signals a broader lifestyle reset she has been notably quiet on the personal-life front since the divorce was finalized.
One recurring fan theory? That Lopez held out on pricing precisely until ownership was fully hers, so she could control the terms of the sale entirely. Smart, if true. Unverified, but not exactly hard to believe.
Behind the staggering dollar figures and celebrity intrigue is a woman navigating the very public aftermath of a very public heartbreak.
Jennifer Lopez spent decades building a legacy as a performer, a brand, a cultural icon — and Bennifer 2.0 was, for a moment, the capstone of all of it. A second-chance love story that felt real. Losing that, in front of the entire world, is no small thing, regardless of how many zeros are on the property deed.
Selling the house isn’t just a financial transaction. For J.Lo, it looks a lot like turning the page.
Here’s the delicious irony of the whole situation: Jennifer Lopez may actually profit from a marriage that ended in divorce, a mansion that sat unsold for months, and a Hollywood love story that didn’t work out all because her ex-husband sold an AI company to Netflix for $600 million and decided a Beverly Hills estate was just easier to give away.
If that’s not a screenplay, nothing is.
One thing’s for sure J.Lo didn’t just survive Bennifer 2.0, she might actually cash in on it. Now the only question is: who’s got $50 million and good taste in zip codes?

