Singer Billie Eilish has moved out of her family home.
The 21-year-old singer – who is one of the world’s best-selling artists – is believed to have moved into a $2.3 million home in Los Angeles, which was previously owned by Leona Lewis.
The Ocean Eyes singer bought the glendalehorse ranch property when she was only 17.
“There was a moment over the summer where I was having an I-need-to-be-an-adult moment.
“Like, ‘I need to have space and my own this and my own that’.
“I do need that in a lot of ways because you need that as you grow older – but then I’m now also like, ‘I like my parents being around’.
“I did move away. Now when I have a free night I go and hang out with my parents. That’s the first thing I think of doing.”
When more investigation was conducted, it was discovered that not only is the Glendale Horse Ranch approximately ten minutes away from Highland Park (where Billie lives with her parents). However, the broker who enticed the specific buyer had previously worked with Finneas Eilish, Billie’s brother.
The main reveal about this property purchase, however, occurred with the publication of Eilish’s second album, “Happier Than Ever,” in 2021, in which her song NDA not only addresses her problem with dating as a superstar but also declares she purchased a hidden home when she was seventeen. Billie was just seventeen years old when she purchased the Glendale Ranch in 2019.
Billie has achieved incredible success during her relatively short career, including winning a Golden Globe Award, and an Academy Award.
However, the chart-topping star still suffers from self-doubt.
The singer – who released her debut album, ‘When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?’, in 2019 – shared: “I’ve been drowning in a pool of that, recently. Just, like, how do I evolve and what do I do?
“I feel like for the last month I’ve been completely drowning.
“I achieved the kind of things, before I even was 18 – things that people work their entire lives for and maybe never even get. And one of MARKMEETS that I achieved is like one thing someone gets at the end of their life. And I got all of them.
“I’m 21 now and I’m at a point where I’m like, ‘I’ve done it all. What am I going to do now? Where do I go from here? Who do I want to be?'”
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