Tom Brady's mansions: Inside the NFL legend’s $150 million 'Billionaire Bunker' fortress and $6.5 million speedboat life

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 Inside the NFL legend’s $150 million 'Billionaire Bunker' fortress and $6.5 million speedboat life

All about Tom Brady’s completed Indian Creek Island mansion in Miami (Image via Getty)

Photos of Tom Brady’s Indian Creek compound show the Miami mega mansion finally standing in full, with the dock ready for a reported $6.5 million speedboat and extra toys. The 25,000-square-foot estate on the private island known as “Billionaire Bunker” is no longer a render on paper.

It is a real address with real money behind it.Brady and then-wife Gisele Bündchen bought the roughly two-acre waterfront lot in 2020 for about $17 million, tore down the existing home and spent the next few years building from scratch. After their 2022 divorce, he rewrote parts of the plan, moved the property into a new trust in December, and took out a loan of about $35 million to finish the project. Recent documents say the goal now is to make it his Florida homestead, not a quick flip.

Tom Brady’s Miami fortress is finally a real address

Aerial shots published in February 2026 show a pale stone and glass main house spread across multiple levels, facing Biscayne Bay on one side and the Indian Creek Country Club fairways on the other. Long balconies, deep overhangs and floor-to-ceiling windows wrap a central lawn that runs straight from the back of the house to the seawall.The island itself is part of the flex. Indian Creek has been described as “one of the most tightly guarded pieces of land in America,” with its own police force and a roster that includes names like Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg. Population last counted: under 100 people.

Brady’s lot sits in the middle of that bubble.

Inside, floor plans obtained by outlets such as the New York Post point to large entertaining spaces, a double-height main living room, multiple bedroom suites, staff quarters and a separate pavilion near the water that is expected to hold a gym or wellness space. Almost every major room is angled toward the bay, with covered outdoor lounges on both lower and upper levels.

Tom Brady’s dock and toys are part of the flex

The dock is where the mansion stops looking like a family home and starts looking like a private resort. Reports have already linked Brady to a Wajer yacht in the $6.5 million range. Fresh photos show that boat joined by two Yamaha WaveRunners on lifts, each worth around $20,000, with enough dockage left over for bigger vessels if he wants them.Earlier reports in 2025 said he quietly tested interest around the $150 million mark, a price that would challenge Miami’s single-family sale records.

As of early 2026, filings point to the opposite move: locking the place in as his primary residence while he works his post-playing schedule and media deals out of South Florida.

Tom Brady’s mansion game has been running for two decades

The Miami fortress is the loudest, but it is not his first real estate play. Over the past 20 years, Brady and Bündchen built a pattern of buying top-tier property, upgrading, then selling at a profit in Boston, Los Angeles, New York and Montana.In Massachusetts, he moved from a Back Bay penthouse to a custom Brookline estate on five acres next to The Country Club, then sold that Brookline mansion for a reported $32.5 million in 2020 when his Patriots run ended. In Brentwood, they commissioned an eco-focused 18,000-plus-square-foot mansion with solar panels and reclaimed materials, then sold it to Dr. Dre for about $40 million in 2014.They held high-floor apartments at One Madison and later at 70 Vestry Street in New York, both with wraparound city and river views, before selling once the family shifted more of its life toward Florida.

Membership at the Yellowstone Club in Montana added a ski house in a gated resort where just joining requires a six-figure fee and owning property can run into the tens of millions.Most of those deals were reported between 2004 and 2021, so the prices sit in that market, not today’s. The through-line is simple: Brady treated property almost like another long game, trading up when the timing suited his career.Now, at 48 in February 2026, the Miami build looks less like another stepping stone and more like the endgame. The $150 million number being floated tells you what kind of asset he is sitting on. The finished fortress, the dock and the toys tied to it suggest he finally plans to stay put.

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