Carrie Underwood Selling Mansion Where She Suffered ‘Freak Accident’

Tiffany Meier
By Tiffany Meier
February 26, 2019Entertainment
share
Carrie Underwood Selling Mansion Where She Suffered ‘Freak Accident’
Carrie Underwood arrives for the 59th Grammy Awards on February 12, 2017, in Los Angeles, California. (Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images)

Country superstar Carrie Underwood is selling her Brentwood, Tenn., mansion, where she suffered her infamous fall in November 2017, for $1.45 million.

She recently listed the 7,083-square-foot house that People magazine identified as the location where she suffered her “freak accident” that left her with a broken wrist and around 40 stitches.

The Italian-style villa—located in a gated golf course community—features four bedrooms, four full bathrooms, an airy open floor plan, high ceilings, a covered porch, wet bars, a gym, a finished walk out basement and more, according to Realtor.com.

The highlight of the property is in the master suite which has a “luxe dressing room with a special spiral staircase leading to a ‘glam room’ the size of many NYC apartments,” the site noted.

The property is roughly 10 miles south of Nashville.

Underwood isn’t asking to seek much profit for the property she bought for $1.35 million in 2007, noted Variety.

View this post on Instagram

Ready for Fall with my @CALIAbyCarrie Moto Hybrid Jacket! #StayThePath

A post shared by Carrie Underwood (@carrieunderwood) on

The ‘Freak Accident’

In November 2017, Underwood fell while descending the steps of her home. For months, she stayed out of the spotlight while she recovered.

“I just fell. I just tripped taking my dogs out to do their business,” Underwood told “Today’s” host Hoda Kotb in an interview. “It could happen to anybody. I say if I would have fallen anywhere else, it wouldn’t have been a problem, but there was just one little step that I went to catch myself on, and I missed.”

A source told People magazine that the decision to sell the house came after her fall.

“They’ve been having a lot of issues with neighbors letting people into the community to look around and it all escalated after the fall,” the source said.

“They are completely done with the neighborhood,” the source said. “[The family is] fully moved into their new place and are finally putting this one on the market,” the source added.

In October, Underwood’s husband, Mike Fisher, posted a photo of a moving truck on Instagram, prompting speculations that the family was moving to their new home at that time.

View this post on Instagram

Best in the biz right there! Thanks @blacktiemoving you guys are awesome!!

A post shared by Mike Fisher (@mfisher1212) on

Rise to Stardom and Touring with Children

Underwood rose to stardom after winning the fourth season of “American Idol” in 2005, and she’s since sold over 65 million records worldwide, reported Realtor.com.

After the recent birth of her second son, Jacob Bryan, she seems to be spending as much time at home as possible ahead of her upcoming “Cry Pretty Tour 360” in May.

“Carrie lives a very quiet life,” a source told People magazine. Underwood and Fisher “take Isaiah fishing, to the zoo and to farms so he can learn about animals. They very much live a farm life and seem to love it.”

View this post on Instagram

???? #GoatSelfie

A post shared by Carrie Underwood (@carrieunderwood) on

She’s also already planning to tour with her children.

“It’s just all gonna happen at once,” she told PopCulture. “I went on tour with Isaiah when he was 11 months old. He was right there when we had our first show. And it was really hard. Obviously, I have help when I’m out there. Somebody’s gotta watch my kid when I’m on stage.

“But I’m really bad at utilizing that, which I think is good too,” she added. “Nobody ever got up with my kid in the middle of the night. That was me, and I’m proud of that.”

ntd newsletter icon
Sign up for NTD Daily
What you need to know, summarized in one email.
Stay informed with accurate news you can trust.
By registering for the newsletter, you agree to the Privacy Policy.
Comments