Take a glimpse at the $29 million mansion Prince Harry and Meghan are currently living in
- Publish Date
- Friday, 8 May 2020, 11:11AM
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are living in a luxury Beverly Hills mansion belonging to Hollywood tycoon Tyler Perry.
The couple, along with their one-year-old son Archie, have been living in Perry's US$18m ($29m) secluded mansion since moving to Los Angeles at the end of March, Daily Mail TV claims.
The Tuscan-style villa comes with eight bedrooms, 12 bathrooms and sits on 9ha on a hill in the ultra-exclusive Beverly Ridge Estates guard-gated community.
It's not known if the royals are renting Perry's mansion or staying as guests.
There is no record of the mansion being sold.
A source told Daily Mail: "Meghan and Harry have been extremely cautious to keep their base in LA under wraps.
"Their team helped them choose the location for their transition to Los Angeles wisely.
"Beverly Ridge has its own guarded gate and Tyler's property has a gate of its own which is watched by their security team."
Beverly Ridge Estates has just 14 homes, and is considered prestigious and chic.
Harry and Meghan have never been seen in public with Perry, but are believed to have been introduced through mutual friend Oprah Winfrey.
Both the Sussexes and Perry, who is worth US$600 million, consider Winfrey their Hollywood mentor.
Perry expressed sympathy for Meghan earlier this year after the actress faced fierce media criticism during her time in the UK.
Perry said: "Remember when Meghan Markle did that interview? She said 'Thanks for asking if I'm okay. Because no one ever asks me that.'
"I felt for her when she said that. People toss it out. 'How are you doing?' But not many people really mean it. Or pay attention to the answer."
Perry built the huge Beverly Hills mansion from scratch after buying the 9ha for US$4.3m in 2004.
Harry and Meghan had been staying at a waterfront home in Vancouver Island since announcing they were stepping down from their royal duties in January.
But they moved to California when Canada announced it would be restricting its borders due to the coronavirus crisis.
This article was originally published at NZ Herald and reproduced here with permission.