The Moment

Lori Loughlin and Mossimo Giannulli have reportedly sold their Hidden Hills mansion for about $12.65 million amid their separation. The place—nearly 12,000 square feet of modern farmhouse—with a gym, theater, chef’s kitchen, and a backyard built for bocce and barbecue, is said to have closed this week. The reported ask was $14.95 million, and they allegedly bought it for $9.5 million in 2020.

Exterior of Lori Loughlin and Mossimo Giannulli’s former Hidden Hills home
Photo: Wayne Ford Photography

One more wrinkle: the split itself is being framed as ongoing, with Loughlin in Los Angeles and Giannulli spending time in Sun Valley, Idaho—again, all reported but not officially confirmed. There’s also chatter about a prenup that could complicate things, which is exactly the kind of whisper that turns a real-estate transaction into a celebrity divorce subplot.

The Take

In Hollywood breakups, selling the big house is the true status update. You can unfollow, un-ring, and un-Christmas-card, but the moment the primary residence changes hands? That’s when a couple stops being “maybe” and becomes “moving on.”

Interior view of the Hidden Hills home owned by Lori Loughlin and Mossimo Giannulli
Photo: Wayne Ford Photography

To me, this looks less like drama and more like logistics. Homes aren’t just assets—they’re schedules, staff, upkeep, and the emotional echo of another life. Offloading the Hidden Hills spread feels like choosing clean lines over complicated corners. It’s not burning the monogrammed towels; it’s putting the bocce court in storage and getting on with it.

As for the whispered prenup messiness, that’s classic celebrity-divorce foreshadowing. It may end up as consequential as an unused guesthouse or it could define the whole case. Until someone files paperwork or speaks on the record, treat it like a trailer: slick, intriguing, and not the full story.

Receipts

Confirmed

  • Lori Loughlin and Mossimo Giannulli pleaded guilty in 2020 in the college admissions case; both served prison terms and paid fines, according to Department of Justice sentencing records (Aug. 2020).
  • The couple previously owned a Hidden Hills home purchased in 2020, widely reported at $9.5 million at the time by mainstream outlets (2020 coverage).

Unverified/Reported

  • The Hidden Hills home sold for approximately $12.65 million with a prior list price of $14.95 million; the sale closed this week, reported via unnamed real estate sources (Nov. 10, 2025).
  • Loughlin and Giannulli are separated and living in different cities; he’s spending time in Sun Valley, Idaho, reported without on-record confirmation (Nov. 2025).
  • There is a prenuptial agreement that could make a divorce contentious; this is characterized as sourced chatter, not confirmed by either party (Nov. 2025).

Sources: TMZ report (Nov. 10, 2025); U.S. Department of Justice sentencing materials (Aug. 21–22, 2020); contemporaneous mainstream real estate coverage of the 2020 Hidden Hills purchase (2020).

Backstory (For Casual Readers)

Lori Loughlin and Mossimo Giannulli pictured together
Photo: Getty

Loughlin—best known as Aunt Becky from Full House and later Fuller House—and Giannulli, the fashion designer behind the Mossimo brand, were among the parents caught up in the 2019–2020 college admissions case. In 2020, according to court records, they pleaded guilty, served short prison terms, paid fines, and completed community service. After laying low, Loughlin returned to made-for-TV projects. The couple has been linked to multiple high-end properties over the years, including the Hidden Hills residence they were reported to have purchased in 2020.

What’s Next

Watch for any official statements from Loughlin or Giannulli acknowledging the separation, or for formal divorce filings in Los Angeles County. Property records could also confirm the reported sale price and closing date. If a prenup becomes part of public filings, expect fresh rounds of analysis about how their assets are divided—and how that affects any future real estate moves.

In other words: the house is (reportedly) gone, the next chapter will be on paper.

Question for you: When a celebrity couple sells the main residence mid-split, do you read it as a clean break—or just the first move in a longer endgame?

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