Ali Mills’ Karate Kid House in Encino Hits the Market After Major Modern Remodel
Well, that home has now hit the market.
Located at 4072 Alonzo Avenue in Encino, the house used as the residence of Ali Mills, played by Elisabeth Shue in the 1984 classic The Karate Kid, is currently listed for $4,495,000. According to the Redfin listing, the property measures 5 bedrooms, 5.5 bathrooms and 5,492 square feet on approximately 0.64 acres in the Encino Hills.
This is especially interesting because back in 2015, when I wrote about the South Seas Apartment complex in Reseda hitting the market, I mentioned that the only other major residential filming location still potentially available someday would be the Encino mansion of Ali Mills, which had not hit the market in a long time. I even wondered whether it might be due.
Well, more than a decade later, here we are.
The sale history makes the story even more interesting. According to public records shown in the current listing, the home sold on October 11, 2023, for $2,880,000 to the buyer who subsequently remodeled and relisted the property. Prior to that sale, the last recorded purchase was on January 29, 1987, for $750,000, meaning the home appears to have remained with the same owner for nearly 37 years.
It is fascinating to wonder whether that 1987 buyer had any idea they were purchasing what would eventually become a San Fernando Valley cultural landmark. At the time, The Karate Kid had only been released a few years earlier, and filming locations were not widely documented or easily searchable the way they are today. There was no internet archive of filming sites, no fan blogs, and no instant online way to confirm that the house on the corner was Ali Mills’ Encino home from one of the defining Valley movies of the 1980s. Perhaps they knew exactly what they were buying, or perhaps for nearly four decades they simply lived in a beautiful Encino home that happened to carry a little piece of movie history with it.
Unfortunately, for those hoping to purchase a perfectly preserved piece of 1980s movie nostalgia, the home no longer looks much like the residence seen on screen. The property has been significantly remodeled, modernized and redesigned, removing much of the original exterior and interior character that made it instantly recognizable from the movie. As a fan of the film and of original San Fernando Valley filming locations, that is honestly depressing to see. There is something special about visiting a location and still being able to connect it visually to the scene that made it memorable.
That being said, it is hard to argue with the finished product as a home for today’s buyer. The residence has been beautifully and thoughtfully updated into a polished modern Encino Hills estate with wide-plank wood flooring, soaring ceilings, a dramatic staircase, large windows, multiple fireplaces, a large gourmet kitchen, a spacious upstairs recreation room, and a resort-style backyard complete with pool, spa, outdoor kitchen, BBQ area and hillside views.
In other words, while it may no longer provide the same 1980s movie-location nostalgia, it certainly performs much better as a luxury home by today’s standards than it did during its appearance on screen.
One of the more disappointing losses is the original front entrance detail from the film. Fans may remember Daniel-son arriving at Ali’s house to meet her parents and nervously kicking loose one of the bricks near the front porch. Unfortunately, anyone hoping to reenact that awkward Daniel LaRusso moment will now be out of luck. The bricks appear to have been removed as part of the remodel, and a gate has since been added to the property. So not only is there no longer a brick to kick loose, but Daniel-son probably would not make it close enough to the front door without being buzzed in first.
For those who want to compare the home before its transformation, I previously included photos of Ali Mills’ house in my 2012 post covering the filming locations of The Karate Kid, The Karate Kid Part II and The Karate Kid Part III. Looking back at those photos and comparing them with the current listing images really shows how dramatically the property has changed.
Although much of its movie appearance has been erased, the home still carries one undeniable distinction: this is where Daniel-son entered Ali’s Encino world in one of the most iconic San Fernando Valley movies ever made. For a buyer with $4.495 million and a love of movie history, that alone may be worth the price of admission.
You can view the current listing and photos at Redfin.



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