KELLY Osbourne has revealed the Osbournes have made ten failed attempts to buy back the Beverly Hills mansion that made them TV royalty, only to be repeatedly snubbed by its current owners.
The reality star said her family has chased the six-bedroom home again and again because it holds some of their biggest memories. But the answer has not changed.
Kelly described the house as one of the best places they ever lived and admitted the pull is deeply personal. The mansion helped turn The Osbournes into a global hit and changed her life.
But the home also carries pain for the family. They were living there when Sharon Osbourne was diagnosed with colon cancer in 2002, giving the property an emotional weight far beyond its price tag.
That is why the refusals sting. Kelly said the current owners are rarely even there, yet they still will not sell, leaving the family locked out of one of the most important places in their history.
The mansion was later sold to Christina Aguilera before changing hands again, pushing it even further from the Osbournes’ reach. Now the home has become less a luxury purchase and more a family mission they cannot complete.
Kelly made the admission while promoting Omaze with Sharon in support of Centrepoint, but the bombshell quickly shifted attention back to the family’s private frustration. It also lands at a bruising time for Kelly after her recent split from fiancé Sid Wilson.
For the Osbournes, this is no ordinary property hunt. It is a fight to reclaim a piece of family history they still cannot get back, and the fallout is far from over.
Key Points
- Family emotionally tied to the house; it helped launch their global reality TV stardom
- Property holds painful memories, including Sharon’s 2002 colon cancer diagnosis
- Current owners repeatedly refuse to sell, even though they rarely occupy it
Why They're In The News
Why This Matters
This matters because the Osbournes' repeated rejection reveals how celebrity nostalgia and family trauma collide with property rights, turning a real estate dispute into a public story about memory, privacy and the limits of reclaiming a shared past.