MIAMI, FLORIDA: David Beckham has managed to get a mortgage for a Miami penthouse for more than $12M. The 48-year-old former soccer player used his company, Beckham Brand Ltd, to buy the $21.17M apartment on the 59th floor of One Thousand Museum, when he was forming the Inter Miami football club.
The Beckhams' penthouse has monthly payments that reach $49,384, and the total cost, with taxes, is $59,008. The home, which cost $27.9M when it was bought three years ago, is just one piece of the couple's $86.4M international real estate portfolio. The Miami mortgage is among the 10 biggest celebrity home loans, according to The Sun. Some of the biggest include Jay Z and Beyonce ($52.7M), Drake ($52.3M), The Weeknd ($48.2M), Mark Wahlberg ($39.7M), Angelina Jolie ($17M), Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck ($13.9M), the Beckhams ($12.56M), Johnny Depp ($9M), Prince Harry and Meghan Markle ($9.49M) and the Osbournes ($9.39M).
READ MORE
Top 5 highest paid celebrities and their brand endorsement deals in 2023
Victoria Beckham leaves fans spellbound with blonde pixie magic, dismisses nose job rumors
What are the features of the Miami penthouse?
The penthouse features five bedrooms, Miami's first private helipad, floor to ceiling windows and balconies with views of the ocean. Bekham and his wife, Victoria, also have access to the tower's infinity pool, double-level gym and jacuzzi, and hair and beauty salon. The couple also owns a $7.4M Cotswolds mansion and a $38.27M London townhouse.
What was David Beckham doing in Macau?
Bekham recently made his first trip to the Macau hotel rooms he created, and posted about the same on Instagram. It was revealed in January 2022 that he was making money by choosing the furniture, bedding and artwork for suites in a $716 per night hotel in China's Las Vegas, according to the Daily Mail.
Bekham, whose net worth is $518M, helped to design 14 rooms at The Londoner in Macau. Interestingly, his photos were placed on the wall next to the beds in the rooms as well. He posted a ton of photos from inside the rooms on his initial tour, including shots of the artwork on the walls, the robes bearing his initials and his time spent baking Chinese Almond Cookies with the in-house chef. His initials were embroidered on pillows and slippers, and there were branded coasters and robes throughout the rooms as well.