Jake Paul Team 10 House: What Really Happened to the Infamous Mansions

Jake Paul Team 10 House: What Really Happened to the Infamous Mansions

If you were anywhere near YouTube between 2016 and 2018, you couldn't escape it. The screams. The dirt bikes in the backyard. The smell of burning mattresses. The Jake Paul Team 10 house wasn't just a place where some kids lived; it was a loud, chaotic, and incredibly profitable fever dream that basically changed how we look at influencer culture today.

Honestly, looking back at it now, it feels like a weird collective hallucination. But for the people living in those neighborhoods—first in Beverly Grove and later in Calabasas—it was a very real, very noisy nightmare.

The Beverly Grove "War Zone"

Before the massive mansions, there was the 1200 block of North Kilkea Drive. This was the original headquarters, a sleek, modern rental that cost about $16,000 a month. It was supposed to be a workspace for Team 10, Jake’s "talent incubator" where he basically tried to be the Dr. Dre of social media.

But it didn't take long for things to go sideways.

You’ve probably seen the news clips. In July 2017, KTLA showed up because the neighbors were literally losing their minds. They called the street a "war zone" and a "living hell." Why? Because Jake had leaked his own address. Suddenly, hundreds of teenagers were camped out on a quiet residential sidewalk every single day.

Then there was the fire.

In a stunt that almost feels too stupid to be real, Jake and his crew decided to set a pile of furniture on fire in the backyard pool area. The flames were huge—higher than the roof. It was the kind of thing that makes you wonder how nobody ended up in handcuffs right then and there. When the news reporter asked him about the chaos, Jake famously climbed on top of their news van and joked about his shoes.

That specific moment was basically the beginning of the end for his relationship with Disney. They "mutually parted ways" (which is corporate-speak for "you're fired") shortly after.

Moving to the Calabasas Mega-Mansion

By late 2017, the heat in Beverly Grove was too much. The neighbors were threatening a class-action lawsuit, and the landlord was done. So, Jake did what any 20-year-old with millions of dollars would do: he leveled up.

He bought a $6.9 million estate in Calabasas. This place was massive. We're talking:

  • 15,000 square feet of living space.
  • 3.5 acres of land (mostly for riding dirt bikes).
  • A gym, a movie theater, and enough bedrooms for a rotating cast of "Team 10" members.

This was the "Team 10 House" most people remember. It was where "It's Everyday Bro" was filmed. It was where the Martinez twins allegedly felt bullied and eventually fled back to Spain. It was also where the FBI eventually showed up in 2020.

Yeah, the FBI raid. That was a big one.

In August 2020, federal agents swarmed the property, hauling out several firearms. It was linked to an investigation regarding a riot at a mall in Scottsdale, Arizona, earlier that year. While Jake wasn't charged with anything major from that specific raid, it signaled that the "wild kid" era was getting a lot more serious—and a lot more dangerous.

Life Inside the House: It Wasn't All Parties

People think the Jake Paul Team 10 house was just a 24/7 party, but for the members, it was more like a boot camp.

Former members like Alissa Violet and the Martinez twins eventually spoke out about the reality. There were strict rules. You had to be up by a certain time. You had to film a certain amount of content. Jake reportedly took a massive cut of everyone’s earnings—sometimes up to 20% or more—in exchange for "mentorship" and a room in the house.

It was a business. A high-stress, high-stakes business where your relevance depended on how much you were willing to embarrass yourself for the vlog.

Where Are the Houses Now?

In early 2021, Jake finally sold the Calabasas mansion for about $6.15 million. He took a bit of a loss on it, but he was done with Los Angeles. He moved to Puerto Rico to focus on his boxing career, trading the "Team 10" drama for training camps and $20 million waterfront compounds in Dorado.

The Calabasas house is still there, of course. It’s a beautiful property when there aren't people jumping off the roof into the pool. But the era of the "Collab House" as Jake defined it is pretty much dead.

The original West Hollywood rental? It's been renovated and scrubbed of its YouTuber history. It's just another high-priced modern home now, though I'm sure the neighbors still have PTSD whenever they hear a dirt bike engine.

The Legacy of Team 10

Love him or hate him, Jake Paul proved a point with those houses. He proved that if you’re loud enough and consistent enough, you can build an empire out of thin air. But he also showed the dark side of that "clout at any cost" mentality.

The Jake Paul Team 10 house was the blueprint for the Hype House and every other influencer collective that followed. It was the peak of 2010s YouTube culture: messy, profitable, and ultimately unsustainable.

If you're looking to visit these spots, don't. The Calabasas house is in a gated community (and it's a private residence now), and the West Hollywood neighbors have zero patience for fans. The "New Era" of Jake Paul is in the boxing ring, and the houses are just relics of a time when "vlog life" was the only thing that mattered.

Key Takeaways for Content Creators:

  1. Location matters: If you're going to be loud, don't do it in a residential neighborhood with families.
  2. Contracts are everything: If you're joining a "house," read the fine print. Don't trade your long-term earnings for short-term "clout."
  3. Evolution is necessary: Jake moved from pranks to boxing because the house model had reached its limit. Know when to pivot before the FBI shows up at your door.

You can still find the old house tours on YouTube if you want a hit of nostalgia, but the "Team 10" brand as a physical living space is officially a closed chapter in internet history.