Golfer Greg Norman's Jupiter Island home has been named one of the nine "most expensive homes on the market," according to The Huffington Post.
Norman's property at 382 South Beach Road is priced at $65 million by its listing agent and real estate website Zillow.com, the source of The Huffington Post's nine properties.
According to Zillow.com, monthly payments on the property would be $271,787.
The home's listing price has changed three times since Norman placed it on the market in 2007.
High-end real estate firm The Corcoran Group Inc. first listed Norman's estate for $65 million. Nearly a year later, the firm dropped Norman's asking price to $47.5 million. The price on the six-building estate went back up to $60 million in November, and recently, Norman's agent raised the asking price back to the original $65 million.
The Corcoran Group's Suzanne Frisbie is the agent for the 8-acre property named "Tranquility," which stretches from the ocean to the Intracoastal Waterway. Corcoran has offices in New York, the Hamptons and the Palm Beaches.
Jupiter Island is one of America's wealthiest communities and has lured a number of high-profile celebrities and executives, including Celine Dion; Tiger Woods; Yankee Candle Co. founder Michael Kittredge; Alfred West, CEO of the financial services firm SEI Investments; and former Lehman Brothers CEO Richard Fuld Jr.
Norman bought the estate with his former wife Laura Andrassy in 1991 for $4.5 million, according to public records. The property includes a four-bedroom home, two-bedroom guesthouse, garage for 17 cars, tennis court, pool and dock.
The main house overlooks the Intracoastal, with formal living and dining rooms, a gourmet kitchen, wine room, library, den and combined media room/game room.
The grill house adjoins a 50-foot pool overlooking the Intracoastal, with the tennis court nearby. The carriage house includes a gym. The dock can accommodate a large yacht and includes two boat lifts for smaller craft.
The west lawn allows for a 5,500-square-foot putting green with bunker and tee set up for 80-yard pitch shots.
The famous barrier-island estate gained worldwide fame when then-President Bill Clinton injured his knee there in 1997.