Where does Bob Dylan live? Unpacking the music legend’s real estate portfolio

He is one of Minnesota’s most famous exports and found fame in New York. But where does Bob Dylan live nowadays? Below, AD unpacks the legendary folk and rock musician’s houses over the years, spanning coast to coast.

Childhood homes

Childhood homes, Minneapolis college pads, First New York City apartment, Woodstock residences, The Hotel Chelsea, Hotel June Malibu, Minnesota farm, Malibu mansion, Harlem townhouse, Turtle Bay Gardens home, Scottish Highlands estate

Dylan’s childhood home in Duluth, Minnesota

Dylan was born Robert Zimmerman in Duluth, Minnesota, in 1941. He and his family lived on the upper floor of a duplex at 519 North 3rd Avenue East. “It’s on the banks of Lake Superior, built on granite rock. Lot of fog horns, sailors, loggers, storms, blizzards,” the musician reflected on his hometown in 2017. “My mom says there were food shortages, food rationing, hardly any gas, electricity cutting off–everything metal in your house you gave to the war effort. It was a dark place, even in the light of day–curfews, gloomy, lonely, all that sort of stuff–we lived there till I was about five, till the end of the war.”

Childhood homes, Minneapolis college pads, First New York City apartment, Woodstock residences, The Hotel Chelsea, Hotel June Malibu, Minnesota farm, Malibu mansion, Harlem townhouse, Turtle Bay Gardens home, Scottish Highlands estate

Dylan’s childhood home at 2425 7th Ave (now Bob Dylan Dr.) in Hibbing, Minnesota

In 1948, the Zimmermans moved to a 759-square-foot house at 2425 7th Avenue East (now known as Bob Dylan Drive) in Hibbing, Minnesota. This was home to the singer-songwriter until 1959, when he left for college. Today, one Bob Dylan fan and historian owns both of the musician’s childhood homes. He paid $82,000 for the Duluth dwelling in 2001 and acquired the Hibbing home in 2019 for $320,000.

Minneapolis college pads

In September 1959, Dylan enrolled at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. His first college dwelling was at the Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity house at 915 University Avenue Southeast. Partway through his freshman year, however, the “Subterranean Homesick Blues” singer moved out in favor of an apartment above Gray’s Drugstore in the University-adjacent Dinkytown neighborhood, where he began performing at bars and coffee shops. Dylan dropped out of college that May.

First New York City apartment

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The entrance to 161 West 4th Street in Manhattan

In 1961, Dylan headed to Manhattan’s Greenwich Village, shacking up in a $60-a-month apartment (today this would be equivalent to about $663, a sum that likely would not even be enough to rent a room in the neighborhood) on the third floor of a four-story building at 161 West 4th Street. “It wasn’t much, just two rooms above Bruno’s spaghetti parlor, next door to the local record store and furniture supply store on the other side,” Dylan wrote in his memoir. “The apartment had a tiny bedroom, more like a large closet, and a kitchenette, a living room with a fireplace and two windows that looked out over fire escapes and small courtyards.” By that fall, the nineteen-year-old had scored himself a Columbia recording contract. He continued renting this dwelling until 1964, according to the New York Post.

Woodstock residences

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Dylan in Woodstock, New York, during the summer of 1964.

In 1963, Dylan began frequenting Woodstock, New York. He rented a small apartment above a café on Tinker Street, where he wrote lyrics for his albums Another Side of Bob Dylan and Bringing It All Back Home. In 1965, the same year he married his first wife, Sara Lownds, he put down more permanent roots, investing $12,000 in an 11-room Arts and Crafts house, known as Hi Lo Ha, in the town’s Byrdcliffe enclave. After fans began to descend upon the property in droves, the growing family relocated to a more secluded 100-acre Woodstock property in 1969. Around the mid-1970’s, Dylan left the artsy enclave.

The Hotel Chelsea

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The Hotel Chelsea in Manhattan

The Hotel Chelsea in Manhattan has welcomed stars of all stripes, including Dylan. The singer is said to have holed up at the iconic establishment in the mid-’60s and resided there while working on his 1966 album Blonde on Blonde.

Hotel June Malibu

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The Hotel June in Malibu, California

Dylan resided in another hotel in the mid-1970s, amidst his divorce from Sara. At Hotel June Malibu’s room 13, the 10-time Grammy winner penned much of his 15th studio album, Blood on the Tracks.

Minnesota farm

Dylan still maintains a little slice of home: a roughly 100-acre farm on the Crow River outside of the Twin Cities. According to the Star Tribune, he has maintained the Hanover, Minnesota, property with his brother since 1974. A local watering hole, the Hilltop Bar, was a frequent haunt of the music icon, who seems to spend a lot less time in the North Star State these days.

Malibu mansion

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Dylan’s Malibu home while it was under construction in 1980

It was 1979 when the Nobel prize winner picked up his current primary residence, a Malibu estate, for $105,000. He had been renting actor Martin Milner’s Malibu residence before deciding to custom-build his own pad in Point Dume, hiring designer Martin Newman to get the job done. The home blends Moorish, Spanish, and Santa Fe-style influences. “In architecture, there are seven classic arches, and Bob said, ‘Just use them all.’ That was kind of his attitude,” Newsom told Variety in 2013. “Working for him, the whole crew being artisans, this whole thing that rose from the earth—it was a real castle. There’s a whale-watching tower. Each room has a theme—there’s a cathedral room, a storytelling room. We set up a tile factory on the property because there’s a million dollars worth of handmade tile in this house. It’s an extraordinary place.” Over the years, Dylan has purchased surrounding properties, adding extra privacy around the 6,000-square-foot main home, which reportedly has six bedrooms and seven bathrooms. A Russian-style copper dome is the house’s standout feature.

Harlem townhouse

In 1986, Dylan added a Harlem townhouse dating to 1861 to his property portfolio. The brick house was located in the Manhattan neighborhood’s St. Nicholas Historic District, aka Striver’s Row. The “Blowin’ in the Wind” singer offloaded the 4,500-square-foot Renaissance Revival-style dwelling for $560,000 in 2000.

Turtle Bay Gardens home

The music icon purchased a townhouse in Midtown Manhattan’s ultra-exclusive Turtle Bay Gardens in 1990. Dylan had previously rented the 5,400-square-foot home—one of 20 in the enclave—in the 1980s. “It was a time when Bob was being very private and the kids were young,” Dylan’s handyman in that period, Michael Leshner, reflected to Curbed. “He didn’t want anyone messing with his kids, and he lived a little bit like a hermit for a number of years. He wasn’t performing.” He sold the five-bedroom, six-bathroom pad in 2005.

Scottish Highlands estate

Dylan added a foreign hideaway to his collection of homes in 2006, when he bought Aultmore House, a 16-bedroom manor in the Scottish Highlands, with his brother. Dating to 1914, the Edwardian-style estate had a main house, three four-bedroom cottages, and a Victorian greenhouse on its 25 acres. The siblings sold the property in 2023 for $5.35 million to Scottish whisky company Angus Dundee Distillers.