(WXIN) — There are dream homes, and then there are in your dreams homes.
We’re talking about houses with underground tunnels, indoor and outdoor pools, and more bathrooms than the average number of rooms in a typical home.
Point2 has compiled a list of the most expensive homes in each U.S. state and Washington D.C.
“With lustrous listings raging from an Atlantic boardwalk mansion in New York to a North Dakota residence smack in the middle of a wildlife tract, they all have one thing in common: They’re astonishing homes with equally astonishing price tags,” reported the real estate market news outlet.
Ohio’s most expensive home is located in Hunting Valley in Cuyahoga County and is worth just shy of $7 million. It ranks as the 6th cheapest of the most expensive homes in the 50 states and D.C.
It’s no surprise that the most expensive home on the list is in California. A 25,025-square-foot home in Malibu is on the market for $225 million in the Golden State — about 60 times more expensive than the priciest Nebraska home, which is last on the list.
The California home features 16 bedrooms, 22 bathrooms, a gym, a beach cottage, guest houses, an office, an underground tunnel, and a movie theater, among other amenities.
The Nebraska home has an asking price of $3.75 million and features four bedrooms, six bathrooms, water views, a lake room featuring a fireplace, a hot tub and more.
The list features everything from a $4.99 million modern ranch in North Dakota to a nearly 100-year-old estate in Miami Beach, Florida, on the market for $170 million.
There’s even at least one celebrity crib on the list.
The priciest home in Indiana is racing icon Tony Stewart’s $30M lodge that features a 9-acre stocked lake.
Here’s the full list:
- California – $225,000,000
- New York – $175,000,000
- Florida – $170,000,000
- Nevada – $100,000,000
- Washington – $85,000,000
- Oregon – $65,000,000
- Connecticut – $60,000,000
- Texas – $60,000,000
- Hawaii- $59,500,000
- Colorado – $55,00,000
- Tennessee – $50,00,000
- Utah – $48,000,000
- Illinois – $45,000,000
- Montana – $40,000,000
- Massachusetts – $39,000,000
- Virginia – $39,000,000
- Indiana – $30,000,000
- Arizona – $28,000,000
- New Mexico – $27,500,000
- Pennsylvania – $27,000,000
- Kentucky – $25,000,000
- New Jersey – $25,000,000
- Maryland – $24,900,000
- District of Columbia – $20,000,000
- South Carolina – $20,000,000
- Idaho – $19,750,000
- New Hampshire – $19,500,000
- West Virginia – $19,500,000
- Wyoming – $19,500,000
- Rhode Island – $18,500,000
- Georgia – $17,800,000
- Vermont – $16,000,000
- Oklahoma – $15,000,000
- Louisiana – $14,000,000
- North Carolina – $13,900,000
- Alabama – $12,300,031
- Mississippi – $12,250,000
- Minnesota – $12,000,000
- Iowa – $11,900,000
- Wisconsin – $11,900,000
- Michigan – $11,500,000
- Maine – $10,500,000
- Missouri – $9,999,999
- Alaska – $9,000,000
- Arkansas – $7,000,000
- Ohio – $6,950,000
- South Dakota – $6,900,000
- Kansas- $6,700,000
- North Dakota – $4,999,900
- Delaware – $4,850,000
- Nebraska – $3,750,000
The prices are for home listings active as of Thursday. To see photos of the homes, see the actual list.