Where Does Margot Robbie Live? Examining the Wuthering Heights Star's Homes

February 14, 2026
5 min read
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Celebrity Real Estate

Where Does Margot Robbie Live? Examining the Wuthering Heights Star's Homes

The actor owns homes in sunny Los Angeles and in her native Australia
Born and raised in Australia Margot Robbie now lives in Los Angeles.
Born and raised in Australia, Margot Robbie now lives in Los Angeles. (Photo: Samir Hussein/WireImage/Getty Images

You can currently find her on the big screen inhabiting Thrushcross Grange in Wuthering Heights, but where does Margot Robbie live in reality? Now one of Hollywood’s most sought-after talents, the actor grew up in a quiet suburb of Queensland, Australia, and later moved with her mother and three siblings to the Gold Coast. She relocated to Brooklyn in the early 2010s and met her husband, director Tom Ackerley, several years later, but it wasn’t until after the pair got married in 2016 that she even contemplated owning a home.

Early on she and Ackerley shared a flat with four roommates in London. “I like living with lots of people,” she told news.com.au. “It reminds me of the house I grew up in.” Fast-forward to more than a decade later, and Robbie has since bought and sold a handful of residences both in Los Angeles, where she works, and on Australia’s Gold Coast, where her family still resides. Turns out, Barbie dream houses come in many shapes and sizes. Below, we’re sharing a glimpse into each of the places that Robbie has called home over the years.

Hancock Park starter home

Robbie and Ackerley’s starter home was an impressive $2.73 million mansion in LA’s ritzy Hancock Park neighborhood, which they quietly picked up in 2017, just one month after tying the knot. The gated home measured 3,900 square feet and featured four bedrooms, including a primary suite with its own balcony; six bathrooms, an enviable kitchen decked out in Carrera marble, brass, and chrome fixtures; and a wine cellar. The new construction also boasted European oak hardwood floors, high ceilings, and stainless steel appliances. A few more unexpected features: a wood rope swing in the living room and a private dog/cat room that was built with its own separate entrance—it’s possible that the newlyweds reserved this room for their puppy Boo Radley, whom they also adopted at the start of that year. The couple decided to let go of this first residence in May 2021, listing it for $3.47 million; they sold it one month later, for $3.45 million.

Hollywood bungalow

The actor’s second Stateside home was an investment property. In February 2018, she bought a charming bungalow in Hollywood Heights from Milk writer Dustin Lance Black for $950,000. The two-bedroom, one-bathroom pad measured a modest 945 square feet, but what it lacked in size it more than made up for in style. Robbie went to work renovating the property almost immediately, refinishing the hardwood floors, renovating and updating the kitchen, and repainting the entire home. The result was a hillside midcentury with cobalt blue shutters and trim (a color scheme that wound its way through the interiors, too), a primary bedroom with French doors opening directly out onto a small courtyard and tiered garden, and a white-tiled galley kitchen. The I, Tonya actor flipped the property onto the rental market shortly afterward, initially for $5,000 a month and then dropping it down to $4,200 a month. She held onto the home for three years before selling it for $1.2 million in 2021.

Gold Coast properties

Also in 2018, Robbie snapped up two modern side-by-side homes in Australia’s Gold Coast for a reported $2.5 million. Her mother had just sold Robbie’s childhood home, and the Suicide Squad actor generously purchased these two residences for both her mother and her sister. In a Vogue Australia interview, the actor reminisced about growing up on the Gold Coast, and how there were “camphor laurel trees down the back past the back paddock and [she] could sit in the tree and do [her] homework and Mum would yell out the window when dinner was ready.” She added, “You tell stories like that and you realize how lucky you are to have grown up on the Gold Coast.”

Venice Beach compound

Robbie’s next home was a stunning Venice Beach compound, which she picked up in an off-market deal for $5 million in 2019. At the time of purchase, it comprised three separate concrete structures sitting on a double-wide lot: a cottage-like residence, a loft-like live/work space, and a bungalow-like structure featuring two bedrooms and two bathrooms. Because the deal took place off-market, details of the property are not readily available, but in a Vogue 73 Questions interview that took place that same year, Robbie shows off a sun-drenched, airy living space with white walls, high wood-beamed ceilings, and an open plan layout. A lap pool out back is where, according to Robbie, she enjoys starting off the day with a swim. In 2021, it was reported that the couple had begun major construction on the property, but the results of that project have yet to be revealed. As far as we know, this is still the actor’s main residence.

LuckyChap offices

Robbie extended her breezy, beachy aesthetic to the headquarters of LuckyChap Entertainment, the production company she cofounded in 2014. In 2021, they expanded from an office space on the Warner Bros lot into a standalone space of their own in Downtown LA, which AD toured. Robbie’s laidback office featured wood-paneled walls and rattan chairs, while the kitchen had a vintage-meets-contemporary look.

In 2025, it was time for something fresh, and LuckyChap gave AD another tour of their new headquarters, which sit at the 5,000-square-foot site of a former fish shop. The midcentury-inspired space has a few Easter eggs from the production company’s movies, including reupholstered chairs from the set of Barbie. Resembling more of a home than a workplace at first glance, it is far from your typical office space. What would be a boardroom resembles more of a chic formal dining room, with a mossy green color scheme and glowy lighting. “We’ve always been averse to conference rooms,” cofounder Josey McNamara told AD. “How we have it set up feels so much nicer for those long company meetings we have to do.”

Even the most comfortable of offices can feel stuffy from time to time, but the LuckyChap headquarters have that figured out, too. “I’m not very good at staying inside. So if I’m reading scripts or having lunch or even doing meetings, I go up to the terrace,” Robbie explained. The sunny spot is lined with butterfly-friendly landscaping, features space to lounge or dine, and is shaded by scalloped umbrellas that would look at home on a stylish beachside resort.

Add in the screening room—a blue-hued room resembling a family den, complete with a gallery wall and a red sofa—and the fully equipped, oak-paneled kitchen, and the space really is a home away from home. In a way, Robbie is still maintaining her ideal living situation—living with lots of roommates.

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