With a new owner, a new name, and all the exotic animals and amusement park rides now gone, the property once known as Neverland Ranch looks very different today.
The train station at Neverland Ranch, Michael Jackson’s house in California. Photo credit: Jim Bartsch
Many, many years after its famous owner, the King of Pop, stopped calling it home, the sprawling property once known as Neverland Ranch finally found a new resident.
Billionaire Ron Burkle, a one-time associate of the late pop star and co-founder of the investment firm Yucaipa Companies, paid $22 million for the 2,700-acre property in December 2020, the Wall Street Journal reported.
That’s fairly close to the amount Michael Jackson spent on the ranch back in 1988, when he bought it for $19.5 million.
While the $22 million Burkle paid to buy the property is no pocket change, it’s still a far cry from the initial ask.
Michael Jackson’s Neverland Ranch was listed for sale in 2015 for an impressive $100 million (which made it one of the most expensive homes for sale in the U.S. at the time) and later saw some significant price cuts.
See below for the full history of Neverland Ranch, both before and after Michael Jackson called it home.
Neverland Ranch: One of the most iconic celebrity homes of all time
Well before I had any interest in real estate, Neverland Ranch was the very first celebrity home I have any memory of — and I’m pretty sure I’m not the only one.
Even today, more than 30 years later, I distinctly remember news reports introducing Michael Jackson’s house, a sprawling ranch that stretched on for miles and that he planned on turning into a magical realm filled with laughter, joy, and plenty of animals.
This place unlike any other, with carousels, Ferris wheels, and elephants and tigers and giraffes, which even had its own railroad and firehouse.
Small bridge over a lake on the grounds of Sycamore Valley Ranch, formerly Neverland Ranch. Photo credit: Jim Bartsch
But it wasn’t long until rising scandals dispersed the magic. Not just for us, but, as we will soon learn, for Michael as well.
As I started reading up about the ranch — and learned more about its past before it became Michael Jackson’s house — I realized that there’s so much more to this timeless estate than the glory (and infamy) brought by its former celebrity owner.
So let’s take a closer look at the incredible property once known as Neverland Ranch, which now goes by the name Sycamore Valley Ranch.
The history of Neverland Ranch – Before it became Michael Jackson’s house
Originally known as the Zaca Laderas Ranch, the massive spread of land spanning across 2,700 acres was purchased by William Boone in 1977.
A successful property developer, Boone was so enchanted with the property that he wanted to make it the perfect home for him and his family.
He started by renaming the estate the Sycamore Valley Ranch, a name the property has reverted back to in recent years, in an attempt to shake off the Michael Jackson connection.
Drawing on his years of experience building excellent homes, Boone enlisted the help of architect Robert Altevers to design the main structures on the property, and the two of them spent more than two years coming up with the perfect plans and designs for the estate.
The primary residence at Sycamore Valley Ranch, formerly Michael Jackson’s house. Photo credit: Jim Bartsch
What had been an undeveloped stretch of cowboy country would soon be replaced by Boone’s dream world, complete with a 13,000-square-foot main house and multiple outbuildings, spectacular gardens, and a four-acre lake with a five-foot waterfall and a stone bridge.
“I had a desire to express everything I had learned in 15 years of home building,” the developer said at the time.
Little did he know that the result of his years of experience would soon become one of the most famous properties in the world.
Sycamore Valley Ranch, formerly Neverland Ranch. Photo credit: Jim BartschSycamore Valley Ranch, formerly Neverland Ranch. Photo credit: Jim Bartsch
Michael Jackson turned it into a fairytale land, a mix between a zoo and an amusement park
The King of Pop purchased the property from Boone in 1988 for $19.5 million and named it after Neverland, the imaginary land from the children’s story Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie.
He had an ambitious vision for the property and wanted to use it as a retreat from the outside world, a magical world of wonder.
During his time at Neverland, Michael Jackson added an odd mix of fanciful details.
Mock Victorian architecture and amusement park rides turned the desert property into a utopian playland, complete with two railroads and a dream-like railroad station, a roller-coaster, a Ferris wheel, a carousel, and bumper cars.
It also had an unforgettable zoo full of exotic animals ranging from flamingos to orangutans, giraffes, and tigers to an actual elephant.
In fact, the singer’s famous 5,000-pound Asian elephant (called Gypsy) was a gift to Jackson from actress Elizabeth Taylor.
The elephant was Taylor’s way of showing appreciation to Jackson for allowing her wedding to take place at his Neverland ranch.
And Elizabeth Taylor’s wedding was not the sole major event to take place at the Neverland Ranch.
The home was also where Oprah shot her famous live interview with Michael in 1993, and where Jackson and Lisa Marie Presley hosted children from all around the world in a massive event that took place in 1995.
Jackson often hosted groups of children at Neverland. The fanciful ranch became a haven for hundreds of seriously ill and underprivileged children.
Lisa Marie Presley and Michael Jackson at Neverland Ranch, during a VIP visit by a group of children in April, 1995. Photo credit: © Imagecollect | Dreamstime.com
However, amidst the praise for Jackson and gratitude for his generosity, reports of 𝑠e𝑥ual misconduct surfaced.
Later on, during a far more grim period in its history, Neverland Ranch was searched extensively by police officers in connection with the People v. Jackson trial after he was charged with multiple counts of molesting a minor in 2003, but the police failed to find any incriminatory evidence against the pop star.
Despite being acquitted of all charges, Jackson stated he would never return to Neverland again as he no longer considered the ranch home.
In 2005, he dismissed most of the staff, dismantled the carousel and Ferris wheel, and never returned to Neverland.
Following Michael’s death in 2009, press reports came out stating that the family intends to bury him at the Neverland Ranch, eventually turning it into a place of pilgrimage for his fans — similar to how Graceland is now a mecca for Elvis Presley fans.
But that never happened and Michael’s father, Joseph Jackson, later denied these reports.
From Neverland Ranch back to Sycamore Valley
After calling the property home for more than 15 years, Michael Jackson defaulted on a $24.5 million loan backed by the ranch in 2008.
Despite his financial struggles, he didn’t want to part ways with his longtime home.
The train station at Michael Jackson’s house, the infamous Neverland Ranch. Photo credit: Jim Bartsch