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The rise and fall of Allbirds: The sneaker company, once valued at $4 billion, just sold for $39 million

Editor’s note: This list was first published in August 2023 and has been updated to reflect recent developments.

After years of losses, Allbirds has agreed to a sale.

The company announced on Monday that it would be acquired by American Exchange Group, a New York-based fashion and consumer goods company, for $39 million.

The announcement follows several years of plummeting sales for the shoemaker, once famous for its wool sneakers worn by tech bros and venture capitalists. At the height of its popularity, during its IPO trading debut in 2021, its stock soared about 116% and gave the company a $4 billion valuation. It has reported declining net revenue every quarter since 2022.

In November, the company posted quarterly net revenue of $33 million, a 23.3% decrease from the same period a year earlier.

The company had 23 stores globally, including 21 in the US, at the end of September 2025 — down from over 50 stores worldwide at the end of 2022 — and said earlier this year it planned to close nearly all remaining stores.

Here’s a history of Allbirds and how it went from a buzzy sustainable footwear brand to a company on the brink.

Tim Brown and Joey Zwillinger cofounded Allbirds in 2015 as a sustainable-footwear company

Tim Brown and Joey Zwillinger, the cofounders and co-CEOs of Allbirds. 

Allbirds

According to its initial filing with the SEC, Allbirds’ mission was to “make better things in a better way, through nature.” 

Zwillinger previously worked as a vice president of industrial products at a biotechnology company


Joey Zwillinger, who is sitting in a boat, and Tim Brown posing for a picture on a dock with boats moored around them.

Allbirds’ Joey Zwillinger and Tim Brown. 

Allbirds

Brown’s background included serving as the vice-captain of New Zealand’s soccer team.

Allbirds roared to life in 2016 with a Kickstarter campaign that hit its $30,000 goal in five days.


Allbirds' Kickstarter page where a banner has been added to note that their wool runner shoes are now sold out.


Kickstarter

The company raised nearly $120,000 to make a wool running shoe designed to make a lighter environmental impact than traditional athletic shoes.

In 2016, Allbirds received B Corp certification, a designation given to companies that work to advance environmental and social causes, and shareholder concerns.


A model's legs from the thigh down. They are wearing green trousers and AllBirds Wool Runners.


Allbirds

For Allbirds, the designation codified, “how we take into account the impact our actions have on all of our stakeholders, including the environment, our flock of employees, communities, consumers, and investors.”

In only its second year in business, Allbirds gained the title of world’s most comfortable shoe.


A man sitting on a flower-lined sidewalk with his legs out to show off his Allbirds wool runners.


Allbirds

Time magazine said Allbirds’ hero product, the Wool Runner, was the “World’s Most Comfortable Shoes.”

By 2017, Allbirds, Warby Parker, and Casper were considered among the “DTC pioneers” shaking up their respective industries — sneakers, eyeglasses, and mattresses.


A street window looking into a Warby Parker store with artistic patterns on the walls.

Warby Parker and Allbirds were among the DTC pioneers. 

Interim Archives/Getty Images

By 2018, direct-to-consumer business plans proliferated. In 2018, Inc. reported that more than 400 startups were trying to “become the next Warby Parker.”

Allbirds sneakers became synonymous with Silicon Valley dressing


A screenshot of an article by The New York Times article with an image of a model wearing a pair of Allbirds sneakers.


The New York Times

In August 2017, Allbirds got another shot of national publicity when The New York Times described Wool Runners as part of the Silicon Valley uniform.

A month later, Allbirds opened its first store,


Multiple pairs of sneakers lined up on a wall in Allbirds' first store in Soho, New York City.

The first Allbirds store was in NYC’s Soho neighborhood. 

Business Insider/Jessica Tyler

The 1,450-square-foot store is located in New York City’s Soho neighborhood. In 2022, the company operated 58 stores.

By 2020, Allbirds’ popularity had spread well beyond Silicon Valley. President Barack Obama was repeatedly spotted wearing Wool Runners.


President Barack Obama standing at a podium and speaking with his finger raised in a questioning manner.

Former President Barack Obama has worn Allbirds sneakers. 

Brynn Anderson/AP

But the shoe started to fall out of favor with the trendsetters and the press, with GQ even lamenting the sight of Obama wearing them. “Can’t someone send him a pair of Jordans?” the magazine wrote.

Allbirds launched the Dasher in 2020.


A promotional-style image of Allbirds Tree Dasher in front of a white background.

Allbirds’ Wool Runners. 

Allbirds

With the success of Wool Runners waning, Allbirds launched its first performance-running shoe, called the Dasher, in May 2020. Gear Patrol called it “shockingly good.”

Also in 2020, Allbirds partnered with Adidas to make a low-carbon shoe, another sign of the company’s willingness to disrupt industry norms.


Adizero x Allbirds sneakers

The Adizero x Allbirds 2.94 kg CO2e. 

Allbirds

Large footwear brands are typically reluctant to partner with one another. The shoe, called the Adizero x Allbirds 2.94 kg CO2e, had the lowest carbon footprint of any Adidas or Allbirds sneaker.

In August 2021, ahead of a public offering, Allbirds disclosed growing annual sales and mounting losses.


A woman walking inside an Allbirds store, with sneakers on the wall behind her.

People shopping inside an Allbirds store in NYC in 2021. 

Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Sales increased from $193.7 million in 2019 to $219.3 million in 2020, but losses also increased, growing from $14.5 million in 2019 to $25.9 million in 2020. 

Allbirds went public in 2021.


allbirds


Allbirds

A little more than 2,100 days after it launched its Kickstarter campaign, Allbirds went public on November 3, 2021. Shares soared 90% on the opening day of trading, a sign of Wall Street’s bullish outlook for the company.

Allbirds dropped claims about being the first “sustainable” IPO.


A wall with sneakers on display in the Allbirds store in Soho.

The Allbirds store in Soho. 

Business Insider/Jessica Tyler

After the Securities and Exchange Commission objected, Allbirds dropped claims about being the first “sustainable” IPO, the Financial Times reported in November 2021.

Allbirds launched wholesale in 2022.


A set of doors outside a Nordstrom department store.


Jeff Greenberg/Contributor/Universal Images Group Editorial via Getty

Although it was launched as a direct-to-consumer company, in May 2022, Allbirds announced its first wholesale partners, Zalando and Public Lands, then Nordstrom — a signal that DTC sales would not be enough to get the company to profitability.

As Allbirds added wholesale partners, the backlash began to build against DTC companies.


The Allbirds store in Green Hills, Nashville.

Allbirds has announced plans to slow store openings and increase wholesale partnerships. 

Allbirds

“It’s the de-DTC era,” said Simeon Siegel, the managing director for equity research at BMO Capital Markets. Analysts including Siegel said the benefits of direct sales were often overstated.

As DTC companies started to fall out of favor and investors started to pay more attention to profitability, Allbirds’ stock started to drop.


A blue and red collage depicting Allbirds's drop in stock price over the last six months.


Allbirds; Insider

Allbirds shares, which hit $28.64 on the company’s first day of trading, had fallen to under $5 fewer than eight months later. Stock pickers said the company needed to expand beyond Wool Runners.

In 2022, Allbirds officially lost its novelty in Silicon Valley wardrobes.


A screengrab of an Allbirds story from The Wall Street Journal which includes an image of a flock of birds are attacking a scarecrow that is dressed up like a


Wall Street Journal

Roughly five years after The New York Times christened Wool Runners part of the Silicon Valley uniform, The Wall Street Journal in December 2022 said that “tech bros” had moved on.

In March 2023, Allbirds’ shares plummeted 47% after a disastrous earnings report that included a $101 million annual loss.


A promotional-style image of Allbirds' Tree Flyers in front of a white background.

Allbirds’ Tree Flyers. 

Allbirds

On a call with stock analysts, executives announced a sweeping four-part reorganization, including slowing the pace of store openings, adding more wholesale partners, and working to “reignite product and brand.” Co-CEO Joey Zwillinger also said some of the company’s marketing veered too far from what Allbirds consumers wanted, including marketing for the Tree Flyers, above, which focused on its technical-performance attributes.

Allbirds began to rethink its big bet on DTC.


A logo for Dick's Sporting Goods on the side of a building.


Reuters

As part of the reorganization plan, Zwillinger said the company was considering adding more wholesale partners. By then, the company’s wholesale partners included Nordstrom, REI, Scheels, and Dick’s.

In 2022, while still based in San Francisco, Allbirds quietly opened an office in Portland, Oregon, to take advantage of the city’s talented-footwear workforce.


Allbirds' office, a red building on a city street in Portland, Oregon.

In 2022, Allbirds opened an office in Portland, Oregon. 

Matthew Kish/Business Insider

Nike is based in a Portland suburb, and Adidas has its North American headquarters in the city.

Allbirds hired several Nike and Adidas veterans to run the office, including Ashley Comeaux, who spent more than 10 years at Nike before becoming Allbirds’ vice president of product design.

In early 2023, Allbirds released a string of products designed and developed by Comeaux and her team.


A model in a white gown jumping out of frame to reveal a grey pair of SuperLight sneakers.

SuperLights, the latest shoe from Allbirds, doesn’t have a Strobel board, which makes the shoe lighter and more comfortable. 

Courtesy Allbirds

Risers and Pacers got strong reviews from Business Insider.  Although the new products were well received, shares of the company traded below the $15 IPO price, trading for $1.23.

In March 2023, Allbirds announced disappointing earnings, and Zwillinger told analysts that the company had lost focus on its core.


Allbirds M0.0nshot carbon neutral shoes

Allbirds claims its M0.0NSHOT is the world’s first carbon-negative shoe. 

Allbirds

Since then, the company has focused on its best-sellers, the Wool Runner and Tree Dasher, while it discontinued underperforming products, like much of its apparel, the Wall Street Journal reported. 

In June 2023, the company released what it said was the world’s first carbon-negative shoe, which it calls the M0.0NSHOT.

In May 2023, Allbirds announced a leadership shake-up.


Allbirds cofounder Tim Brown

Allbirds co-founder Tim Brown 

Tommaso Boddi/Getty Images

Brown said he would step into the role of chief innovation officer, leaving fellow cofounder Joey Zwillinger as the sole CEO.

The company also laid off 21 employees globally in May 2023, it said in a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.


allbirds 2847

An Allbirds store. 

Business Insider/Jessica Tyler

The shoe company generally had a disappointing start to 2023. The company reported a 13% decline in year-over-year revenue in the first quarter.

‘As we’ve tried to expand and grow the brand, we created products that haven’t quite met the mark,’ Brown told The Wall Street Journal.


A pair of the Allbirds Tree Flyer in the Blizzard color.

The Allbirds Tree Flyer sneakers. 

Mara Leighton/Insider

In a July 2023 article, Brown and Zwillinger told The Wall Street Journal that their attempts to appeal to customers younger than its 30- to 40-year-old base didn’t go over well. The Tree Flyer was one of those attempts that missed the mark. 

The company reported second-quarter earnings were above expectations. Sales fell 10% compared to a projected 18%.  

“We laid out a road map for our strategic transformation back in March, and now two quarters into our work, we have gained traction and are solidly on track to drive toward profitability expectations,” Zwillinger said in an August 2023 earnings call. 

In November, Allbirds released an updated version of its first Wool Runner.


screenshot of new wool runner advertised on allbirds website

The new Wool Runner is available on the Allbirds website. 

Allbirds/Screenshot

The Wool Runner 2 has been updated with a new version of its SweetFoam midsole and improved durability.

Full-year earnings for 2023 were dismal indeed, with sales down 14.7% and a net loss of $152.5 million for the year.


The Allbirds Pacer doesn't look anything like the company's iconic Wool Runner.


Courtesy Allbirds

The company also promoted Joe Vernachio from COO to CEO, with Zwillinger stepping down to serve as a special advisor and remaining on the board of directors.

The company continued to struggle with declining sales.


Allbirds store

Earlier this year, the company said it would close most of its remaining stores. 

Business Wire/AP

Allbirds lost more than $20 million in the quarter ending September 30, according to its most recent earnings report. The company noted “substantial doubt” about its future in that filing and said it could “engage in strategic transactions.”

From March 2025 to March 2026, shares slid more than 50%.

In January, the company said it would close its remaining full-price stores in the US by the end of February, leaving it with two discount stores in the US and two full-price stores in London. The US made up the bulk of its revenue.

Allbirds said in March 2026 that American Exchange Group would buy it for $39 million.


An Allbirds store on Fifth Avenue in New York, US, on Wednesday, May 4, 2023. Allbirds Inc. is scheduled to release earnings figures on May 9.


Bloomberg/Getty Images

Allbirds said in a statement on Monday, March 30, that American Exchange Group, a New York-based fashion and consumer company, would acquire it for $39 million.

The company added in the statement that the sale would close in the second quarter. The distribution of the net proceeds of the sale to stockholders would be made in the third quarter, it said.

Allbirds’ stock has fallen about 50% in the past year. However, it rose about 24% in after-hours trading on Monday after the sale was announced, to $3.70 per share.

Matthew Kish, Ben Tobin, and Jennifer Ortakales-Dawkins contributed to earlier versions of this article.




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The Army’s $87 million deal with Anduril is about linking sensors and shooters to give operators a better shot at defeating drones

The US Army’s sweeping new deal with Anduril includes an $87 million effort to link counter-drone systems so troops can better spot, track, and destroy enemy drones — a threat growing on and off the battlefield.

The Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 selected Anduril’s Lattice software for its new command and control system. JIATF-401, established last summer, has been working to write the rules for countering drones in partnership with the FBI and Department of Homeland Security. Sharing approved systems, particularly a common software that everyone can use, has been a priority for the task force.

The task force announced the decision last Friday, saying that a common backbone for its drone defenses was necessary as uncrewed aerial systems become an increasing threat.

Anduril’s Lattice is expected to allow personnel from across the military and federal agents to share and see each other’s data, have a clearer picture of what threats exist, and better coordinate responses to drone attacks, the service said in its press statement.

On Monday, Anduril said the task force’s command and control system with Lattice will involve numerous sensors for detecting drones and interceptors for stopping them.

Legacy weapon systems and new assets will be able to connect to the platform, “enabling distributed detection, tracking, classification, and ultimately engagement of UAS threats,” Park Hughes, Anduril’s managing director for air defense, said.


A small drone sits on a rock. A soldier wearing camouflage crouches next to the rock.

JIATF-401 was stood up last August to rapidly deploy counter-drone systems and common operating procedures across the military and government agencies. 

US Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Donovan E. Melendez



Lattice is also part of the Army’s new Next Generation Command and Control system, which the service has been testing since last year. NGC2 is being built with a Silicon Valley-style “move fast, fail fast, fix fast” approach, which the Army and other services have said is necessary to field new systems quickly.

The task force’s $87 million agreement falls under a much larger contract the Army also announced Friday. That agreement, worth up to $20 billion over the next decade, allows any federal agency to purchase Anduril’s off-the-shelf systems, the company’s chief business officer, Matthew Steckman, told reporters.

“The modern battlefield is increasingly defined by software,” Gabe Chiulli, chief technology officer for the Department of Defense’s Office of the Chief Information Officer, said in a release. “To maintain our advantage, we must be able to acquire and deploy software capabilities with speed and efficiency.”

Steckman said that while the contract isn’t the first of its kind, it was more complex because Anduril makes a wide variety of products, from software to drones and wearable artificial intelligence goggles, that the government can buy. The Army alone has 120 existing contracts with Anduril already, and the new deal is intended to help streamline how the company and the government do business.

“By establishing both the common C2 [command and control] software platform and the common process for the government to procure, deploy, and sustain ever-improving counter-UAS software at scale, the JIATF is very much accelerating the nation’s response to the UAS threat,” Hughes said.

The Army and other military services are shifting their approach, aiming to reduce what leaders see as bureaucratic hurdles in how weapons are tested, funded, and procured. That shift includes buying commercially available systems, such as software, drones, and counter-drone technology, from vendors like Anduril.

Officials have said the changing approach is designed to cut costs, speed up the acquisition process, and rapidly procure the weapons that troops need sooner rather than later.




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Palantir’s Alex Karp has ties to a $46 million Miami mansion that was bought before his company’s HQ move

Several months before Palantir moved its headquarters to Miami, an entity with ties to the company’s billionaire CEO, Alex Karp, put down roots in the city.

In June, Hibiscus East LLC purchased a home on Miami’s San Marino Drive for $46 million, according to property records.

Like several of Karp’s other properties, the LLC is registered in Delaware. It is connected to an attorney’s office in Manchester, New Hampshire, and an accounting office in Bedford, New Hampshire, both of which appear on documents from previous real estate transactions that are linked to Karp.

The nearly 10,000-square-foot newly built home sits on San Marino Island, one of the exclusive Venetian Islands in Biscayne Bay. A YouTube video of the home posted by listing agent Dina Goldentayer showcases the property’s waterfront and pool.

Goldentayer declined to comment to Business Insider. Representatives for Palantir and an attorney for Karp did not respond to requests for comment.

Last month, Palantir announced it was moving its headquarters to Miami from Denver. The company has not revealed publicly why it’s making the move. Before setting up in Denver in 2020, Palantir was headquartered in Silicon Valley.

“Our company was founded in Silicon Valley,” Karp wrote in an investor letter that year. “But we seem to share fewer and fewer of the technology sector’s values and commitments.”

One of Karp’s Palantir cofounders, Peter Thiel, bought a home on one of Florida’s Venetian Islands in 2020, and his VC firm, Thiel Capital, later opened an office in Miami.

It’s not clear if Karp, who is worth $15.8 billion, according to Bloomberg, is moving to Miami full-time. He owns hundreds of acres of land in New Hampshire and, last year, made headlines for spending $120 million on a monastery outside Aspen, Colorado.

A handful of California billionaires have recently purchased properties in Miami, including Sergey Brin and Mark Zuckerberg. The real estate shopping spree comes amid an initiative in the state to get a wealth tax on November’s ballot. If passed, California residents with a net worth of more than $1 billion would be subject to a one-time 5% tax on their wealth.

Florida famously has a no-income tax policy written into its constitution.

“California’s a beautiful state, but now, because of all the political situations and all the tax laws, it’s just coming in our favor,” luxury real estate agent Saddy Abaunza Delgado previously told Business Insider.

Similarly, Howard Schultz, the former CEO of Starbucks, announced a move to Miami earlier this week — on the same day a millionaire’s tax passed Washington state’s House of Representatives.

The rush has caused prices to balloon in the 305. Zuckerberg’s $170 million purchase earlier this month on the island of Indian Creek set a Miami record.

“The influx of billionaires from California” will cause “escalation of the market,” Ana Bozovic, a founder of Analytics Miami, previously told Business Insider. “The market ceiling keeps rising,”




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What’s next for 7 million student-loan borrowers now that SAVE is over

Repayment for millions of student-loan borrowers could soon look very different.

In recent days, a series of court decisions sealed the fate of the SAVE student-loan repayment plan, which has been up in the air for years.

The 8th Circuit ordered a district court to approve President Donald Trump’s proposed settlement with the state of Missouri to eliminate the plan ahead of its 2028 phaseout.

This means that once the settlement is formally approved in court, the Department of Education can proceed with eliminating the SAVE plan and transitioning borrowers to new plans that are likely to result in higher monthly payments.

“In the coming weeks, the Department will issue clear guidance on next steps for borrowers enrolled in the illegal SAVE Plan, including details regarding how borrowers can move into a legal repayment plan,” Undersecretary of Education Nicholas Kent told Business Insider in a statement. “The Trump Administration will continue to realign the federal student loan portfolio to better serve students and taxpayers.”

The SAVE plan was created by former President Joe Biden in 2023, intended to give borrowers cheaper monthly payments with a shorter timeline to debt relief. The plan has been blocked since the summer of 2024 due to litigation filed by GOP-led states, including Missouri. Prior to the settlement, Trump’s “big beautiful” spending legislation called for eliminating the plan by the summer of 2028.

What’s next for SAVE student-loan borrowers

Before the proposed settlement was announced in December, the Department of Education resumed charging interest on SAVE borrowers’ accounts on August 1, 2025, and encouraged borrowers to switch to new plans — such as the income-based repayment plan — due to ongoing litigation.

While it’s unclear how soon the department will require SAVE borrowers to switch to a new plan in light of the latest ruling, the terms of the proposed settlement offer some detail on what could come next. According to the department, once the settlement is approved, it will not enroll any new borrowers in SAVE, it will deny pending SAVE applications, and it will move all SAVE borrowers to existing repayment plans.

The department advised borrowers to use Federal Student Aid’s Loan Simulator to estimate what their monthly payments would look like on a new plan. Borrowers have previously told Business Insider that their projected payments are hundreds of dollars higher than what they owed on the SAVE plan, and they’re concerned about their ability to afford the new payments in addition to their other monthly expenses.

David Chatman, a 51-year-old borrower on SAVE, said that his $86 payment is projected to jump to $689.

“When I saw that my payment was going to be this much more, I just sat there and looked at it,” Chatman said. “There’s no way. There’s no way.”

For now, enrolled borrowers await further guidance from the Department of Education once the settlement is implemented. Advocates criticized the decision and its impact on millions of borrowers.

“The millions of borrowers who had a right to lower monthly student loan payments and relief through SAVE will now face thousands of dollars in higher bills every year, thanks to the right-wing campaign against borrowers,” Winston Berkman-Breen, legal director at advocacy group Protect Borrowers, said. “Nearly 8 million people will see their costs climb, even as voters across party lines beg Trump to do something about America’s affordability crisis.”

Have a story to share? Contact this reporter at asheffey@businessinsider.com.




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Kristi Noem’s $220 million DHS ad campaigns cost more than some of Hollywood’s biggest hits

Kristi Noem might not be a Hollywood star, but her department spent like the big studios.

The former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security was ousted from her post on Thursday, following months of controversy over her handling of immigration enforcement in Trump’s mass deportation campaign.

During Noem’s appearance before Congress on Tuesday, Senator John Kennedy, among other lawmakers from both sides of the political aisle, pressed Noem about the department’s spending of taxpayer dollars, including a $220 million ad contract.

The ads, which Noem said were intended to encourage undocumented immigrants to leave the US, included footage of the now-former secretary riding a horse in front of Mount Rushmore while delivering stern messages about border enforcement.

Lawmakers scrutinized the bidding process for the contracts behind the ad campaign, as well as the firms selected, raising questions about how taxpayer dollars were awarded and spent.

In her testimony, Noem defended the ads as “effective” and said President Donald Trump had approved the $220 million in spending. “We went through the legal processes, went through it correctly,” she said.

Trump later disputed that account, telling Reuters on Thursday, “I never knew anything about it.”

On social media, “The View” host Meghan McCain compared the DHS ad costs to the production budget for “Sinners.” The Ryan Coogler-directed movie, which recently set an Oscars record with 16 Academy Award nominations, had an estimated budget of $90 million, as reported by The Hollywood Reporter.

“Kristi Noem’s DHS vanity videos cost $130 million more than Sinners,” McCain wrote in an X post.

“Sinners” isn’t the only movie with a smaller budget than the department’s ad spending.

The $220 million price tag — which also accounted for media buying and placement, consulting fees, and related administrative expenses — surpasses the budgets for a list of blockbuster movies.

Here are 15 of them, as well as their reported budgets, which have been adjusted for inflation to reflect what those costs would be today.

And spoiler: some of your favorite movies might be included.




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Billy Joel just sold his Long Island estate for a total of $35 million — $14 million under the original asking price

Billy Joel is moving out.

The main piece of the “Piano Man” singer’s Long Island estate just sold for $28.75 million, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Laffey International Realty, the home’s realty company, announced in a post on Instagram earlier this week.

The 26-acre waterfront estate, known as “MiddleSea,” in Centre Island, New York, first went on the market in 2023 after completing a five-year renovation project.

The original asking price for the whole property, which is comprised of four distinct houses, was $49 million. After going on the market in 2023, it was relisted in 2024 with additional renovations.

The estate’s sale was eventually broken into pieces, with the gatehouse selling separately for $7 million last year. This sale, combined with the recent sale of the main house and two adjacent lots, totals $35.7 million, The New York Times reported.

It comes nearly a year after Joel had to step away from performing after being diagnosed with a rare brain disorder. The lifelong New Yorker is making progress, even offering a short surprise performance with a tribute band in January.

His now-former estate, MiddleSea, has quite the backstory. Joel first spotted the waterfront estate as a teenager while harvesting oysters to earn extra money to support his working-class family.

“I’ll never live in a house like that,” he thought to himself at the time, The New York Times reported in 2024.

He was wrong. Joel ended up purchasing the estate in 2002, fulfilling one of his lyrics written more than half a century ago: “I wish that I was back in Oyster Bay / Takin’ it easy, oh yeah.” Forbes reported in 2019 that his net worth was an estimated $52 million.

Take a look inside the waterfront property in Centre Island, New York.

The estate is located in Oyster Bay in the town of Centre Island, New York.

The property spans 26 acres on a waterfront area of Long Island, New York.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

The collection of homes is nestled on 26 acres of pristine Long Island real estate.

Joel nicknamed the property MiddleSea due to its positioning in the middle of the sea, with Oyster Bay on one side and Cold Spring Harbor on the other, The New York Times reported.

He also named the property MiddleSea in honor of his favorite instrument.


an aerial view of billy joel's waterfront estate in new york showing a fountain

The property was named for its spot on Long Island Sound and for a piano key.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

The Times reported that Joel also named the property after “middle C,” the centermost C note on a piano.

“If it’s not for me being able to take piano lessons, I probably would never have been able to afford a high-flying property like this. So, I named it after the first note which I learned on the piano, which was C,” Joel said.

Joel’s property was made up of four distinct homes, which were ultimately sold separately.


an aerial view of billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The property has four separate homes, plus a maintenance building.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

One problem with selling the home was its high taxes. The annual property tax bill had reached over half a million dollars, The Times reported, diminishing the property’s allure to potential buyers.

The sale was made easier by selling the estate in pieces, and ultimately, the entire property sold for $14 million below the 2023 asking price.

In its entirety, the property is made up of four distinct homes — the main house, the beach house, the guest house, as well as the gate house, which sold last year. A maintenance house also sits on the property.

The property’s main house is a 20,000-square-foot red-brick mansion.


an aerial view of billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The Main House spans 20,000 square feet.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

The home has five ensuite bedrooms and a primary suite with two full bathrooms and a private balcony that overlooks the water.

The foyer features black-and-white marble tiling, a chandelier, and 30-foot ceilings.


a entry room with black and white checkered floor inside billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The entryway has tall ceilings and marble floors.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

The grand staircase leading up to the rest of the property is also made from white marble and features an ornate wrought-iron railing.

The main kitchen has two large islands and art deco-style light fixtures.


a kitchen with multiple white marble islands inside billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The main kitchen has two huge islands.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

The islands are made with Calacatta Caldia Marble.

The kitchen’s appliances are similarly high-end, from the Waterstone faucets and bronze-and-gold farm-style sink to the Officine Gullo Firenze Oven, which can cost upward of $20,000, and Sub-Zero refrigerator.

There’s also a chef’s kitchen with stainless-steel appliances and surround backsplash.


a stainless steel kitchen with high-end appliances inside billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The chef’s kitchen has stainless steel appliances.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

The chef’s kitchen provides ample space for cooking and accommodating large groups of guests.

The “Scenes From an Italian Restaurant” singer once said he “makes a great pasta” and “it’s probably my favorite food,” Page Six reported.

There’s also a formal dining room with a large white marble fireplace.


a view of the dining room showing the table and chairs inside billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The dining room features a marble fireplace.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

The formal dining room has large paned windows that overlook the property and crown molding on the ceiling.

The main house’s backyard has a waterfall feature and access to a floating dock and a boat ramp.


an aerial view of billy joel's waterfront estate in new york showing a fountain

The waterfall is placed up a flight of brick stairs.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

The main house’s manicured lawns overlook the water.

The guesthouse has three bedrooms and five bathrooms.


the driveway and car garage inside billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The guest house has an attached four-car garage.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

The guesthouse is 3,839 square feet, has an attached four-car garage, and was newly renovated before the property was relisted in 2024.

The living room has a fireplace and French doors that overlook the bay.


a living room with fireplace and beige walls inside billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The guesthouse has a living room with a fireplace.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

The guesthouse is smaller than the main house but features some of the same classic details, like the fireplace and molding around the ceiling.

There’s also a private two-lane bowling alley in the basement.


an indoor bowling alley inside billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The guesthouse has a bowling alley in the basement.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

There’s a lot of extra space for entertainment, including a large family room over the attached garage.

The gatehouse was sold separately last year for $7 million.


an aerial view of billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The Gate House has a high-security gate.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

The five-bed, four-bath house is a self-sufficient property. The home has its own driveway, security gate, and swimming pool.

The home has two kitchens, a media room, a screened-in patio, and a first-floor primary ensuite.


a sunny dining room with beige rugs and a table set with beige chairs inside billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The Gate House has two separate kitchens.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

In addition to its main gourmet kitchen with a Viking oven and Sub-Zero refrigerator, there’s also a chef’s kitchen in the back with its own fireplace.

A stone patio surrounds the free-form heated gunite swimming pool.


a second round outdoor pool at billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The Gate House has its own free-form swimming pool.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

The Long Island Sound can also be seen from the pool.

The beach house sits on a strip of pristine beachfront.


an aerial view of billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The beach house leads out to the private dock and the water.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

It has three bedrooms, three bathrooms, an eat-in kitchen, and a large stone patio with pergolas.

Its kitchen features custom Ciuffo cabinetry and Calacatta quartz countertops.


a white kitchen with island and dining room table with chairs inside billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The kitchen has a large island with a Calacatta quartz countertop.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

Other luxury appliances in the kitchen include a side-by-side Sub-Zero refrigerator, a Wolf oven, and a Miele dishwasher.

The living room has French doors that open onto the beachfront.


a living room with paned windows and a beige couch and blue tufted chairs inside billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The living room has porcelain tile flooring.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

The home is noticeably more water-friendly than the other properties, thanks to the porcelain tile flooring that makes it easy to transition from indoor to outdoor living.

The house also has its own gunite pool.


an outdoor pool with terra cotta tiles surrounding it at billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The gunite pool is heated and overlooks the beach.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

A stone’s throw away is a helipad for helicopter arrivals and departures, a floating dock, and over 2,000 feet of waterfront beach.

The maintenance house doubles as a garage that can hold up to six cars.


a separate barn structure painted red with light green doors at billy joel's waterfront estate in new york

The maintenance house can fit six cars.

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices/Laffey International Realty

The second floor of the maintenance house also has a working office or break room.

Editor’s note: This story was first published in November 2024. It was updated in March 2026 to reflect the sale of the property.




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