Celebrities Are Buying Homes in This Surprising City — See How Much It Costs

La Quinta Downtown California Coachella Valley.
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For years, Palm Springs, California, has dominated the conversation about luxury living in California’s desert. But a quieter neighbor is now drawing serious attention from celebrities, executives and high-net-worth buyers looking for privacy, space and long-term value.

La Quinta, a small city in the Coachella Valley roughly two hours from Los Angeles, is emerging as a luxury real estate stronghold — and recent celebrity transactions suggest it’s no longer flying under the radar.

A Celebrity Roster That Rivals Bigger Cities

According to reporting from Realtor.com, one of the clearest signals came late last year when actor Lori Loughlin and fashion designer Mossimo Giannulli sold their La Quinta home for $16.5 million, walking away with roughly $3.5 million in profit after owning the property for just four years. That sale, first reported by Realtor.com, has helped shine a spotlight on a market that insiders say has been building momentum for years.

Loughlin isn’t alone. La Quinta homeowners include Apple CEO Tim Cook, Adele, Justin Bieber, the Kardashians and Phil Knight. That’s an unusually dense concentration of celebrity ownership for a city with fewer than 40,000 residents.

The appeal isn’t about nightlife or visibility. In fact, it’s largely the opposite.

What Buyers Actually Pay in La Quinta

While La Quinta is firmly a luxury market, prices remain comparatively restrained next to coastal California.

According to Zillow, the average home value in La Quinta sits around $728,000. At the higher end, inventory skews heavily upscale, with roughly 200 homes listed above $1 million and about two dozen priced north of $5 million.

For buyers used to Los Angeles or Silicon Valley pricing, that translates to more square footage, land and seclusion for the money.

Privacy, Not Publicity, Is the Selling Point

La Quinta’s design favors gated communities, expansive estates and low-density neighborhoods. These things are all highly desirable if you’re not looking for attention.

Realtor.com mentions that luxury buyers are particularly drawn to upscale communities like The Madison Club and The Quarry, where listings are scarce and turnover is rare. When properties do come to market, competition tends to be immediate and fierce. 

Access also plays a role. The nearby Jacqueline Cochran Regional Airport allows private aviation without the congestion of major hubs, while destinations like The Thermal Club (one of the country’s most exclusive motorsports facilities) cater to ultra-wealthy hobbyists. It’s a millionaires (and billionaires!) playground.

Why Demand Keeps Rising

Several long-term forces are converging in La Quinta.

Remote and hybrid work have made second-home ownership more practical, especially for buyers based in Los Angeles, Orange County, the Bay Area and even out-of-state markets like Texas. Mild winter weather has further strengthened the city’s appeal as a seasonal or dual-residence location. In other words, snowbirds have a new destination. 

High-profile events across the Coachella Valley also introduce new buyers to the area. Realtor.com points to festivals like Coachella and Stagecoach, along with major sporting events such as the American Express PGA tournament, as consistent visibility drivers that bring first-time visitors back as property shoppers. 

A Market Built for the Long Term

Taken together, La Quinta’s limited inventory, celebrity cachet and lifestyle-driven demand mean its luxury boom probably isn’t a short-term trend.

As Realtor.com’s reporting makes clear, the city’s rise isn’t about hype. It’s about fundamentals: land scarcity, buyer demographics, and a version of California luxury that’s increasingly hard to find elsewhere.

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