Foreclosure Auction of $40 Million Malibu Beach House Gutted by Kanye West Is ‘Delayed by Bankruptcy Filing’

A foreclosure auction of a Malibu beach house that was famously gutted by Kanye West has reportedly been pushed back by several weeks thanks to a last-minute bankruptcy filing.

The property, which was last listed for $39 million, had been due to go up on the auction block today after its current owner, developer Stephen ‘Bo’ Belmont, was accused of defaulting on an $18.5 million loan taken out to buy the house, which he purchased for $21 million in September 2024.

However, according to the New York Post, the property—and its owner—were granted a brief reprieve from the foreclosure auction when a bankruptcy action was filed on the dwelling, pushing the sale of the property back to April 7.

“Reasons beyond that move, and who made it happen, weren’t immediately clear,” the outlet states.

The auction had been due to take place at the Civic Center Plaza in Pamona, CA, at 10 a.m. local time on March 19, the Wall Street Journal first reported, however it appears to have been delayed at the last minute.

As first revealed by Realtor.com®, Belmont was served with a notice of default in November 2025 in which his lender, Quality Loan Service Corp, accused his company, Belwood Investments, of falling behind on mortgage payments, claiming that the developer currently owes $814,623.54 as of Nov. 4, 2025.

In the default notice, Belmont was warned that he risked losing the home—which was originally designed by Pritzker-winning architect Tadao Ando—if he failed to catch up on payments within 90 days.

The master bedroom and deck under construction at Kanye West's Malibu house
A foreclosure auction of a Malibu beach house that was famously gutted by Kanye West has reportedly been pushed back by several weeks thanks to a last-minute bankruptcy filing. (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Concrete stairs in the gallery at Kanye West's Malibu house
The property, which was last listed for $39 million, had been due to go up on the auction block today after its current owner, developer Stephen ‘Bo’ Belmont, was accused of defaulting on an $18.5 million loan taken out to buy the house. (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

In an interview with the Wall Street Journal earlier this month, Belmont revealed that he was rushing to try and refinance the home before it could be sold out from under him, insisting that he refused to lose the dwelling he had spent so much time and money on.

“I’m never going to let that happen,” he said. “There is too much on the line.”

However, he admitted that his attempts to refinance the property had hit a hurdle because of its unique ownership structure; when Belmont set out to buy the home from West, 48, he offered it up as a one-of-a-kind investment opportunity, which saw dozens of people handing over various amounts of money to help him with the purchase and restoration of the famed dwelling.

Those who had invested in the property received a letter in February informing them of the impending foreclosure auction, in which it was stated that the remaining balance on Belmont’s loan was close to $21.1 million.

Belmont sought out a workaround by creating an LLC that incorporated all of his investors as members—although he admitted that the process had not been easy.

“Getting 382 people to sign independently of everyone is very, very difficult,” he told the Wall Street Journal.

The foreclosure auction delay is just the latest in a very long line of scandals to hit the beleaguered property—and comes just days after West was ordered to pay $140,000 in damages to a former worker who performed renovations on the property.

West purchased the beach dwelling for the staggering price of $57.3 million in September 2021, before hiring a rare-record dealer named Tony Saxon—who is not a licensed contractor—to carry out a gut renovation of the home.

Within months, almost all of the fixtures inside the property had been torn out, including the windows and all interior finishes, as well as the electric and plumbing, a move that sparked outrage among architecture buffs, who slammed West for destroying such a significant property.

Kanye West and Bo Belmont, who purchased the rapper's gutted Malibu home
West sold the property to Belmont for $21 million in September 2024. (Getty Images; Belwood Investments)
Kanye West's former Malibu beach house, which was designed by Tadao Ando then gutted by the rapper
Belmont had previously vowed to restore the dwelling to its former glory. (Getty Images)

West further fueled that outrage in January 2024, when he put the gutted dwelling on the market for $53 million, having seemingly abandoned his plans to turn the home into a kind of modernist bunker—but not before Saxon filed a 2023 lawsuit against him, alleging that he sustained several injuries while working on the home, including a broken neck.

That suit was recently heard in court, where a lawyer for Saxon aired a very bizarre allegation about West’s unusual demands for the property—namely that all of its toilets be ripped out.

“He wanted no toilets,” attorney Ron Zambrano stated, according to Rolling Stone, adding: “If people had to go No. 2, it was a hole in the ground.”

Zambrano added that West had told his client—who claimed he is owed around $1 million in unpaid wages and expenses for the project—he wanted to turn the property into an “off-the-grid shelter.”

Saxon, who sought $1.7 million, further alleged that the rapper required him to live at the house while it was being gutted and that he was asked to complete the work without the necessary permits.

However, West’s lawyer, Andrew Cherkasky, fired back at Saxon’s claims—while accusing him of lying to the rapper about having a license when he did not. Furthermore, Cherkasky insisted that Saxon was never in West’s employ, but was treated as a contractor.

“It was what every remodeler or construction worker does—bring your own tools, your own guys,” he said, adding that West’s only goal with the transformation of the home was to turn it into a unique residence for his family.

As for Saxon’s claims about being told to sleep in the bare concrete dwelling, Cherkasky insisted that the worker had done so of his own accord.

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