How ‘Sister Wives’ Divided the $1.5 Million Coyote Pass Cash — Who Got What?

For years, Sister Wives viewers have watched the Browns wrestle with the weight of a decision they made back in 2018 — the moment they left Las Vegas for Flagstaff and poured $820,000 into a sweeping stretch of land known as Coyote Pass.

The dream was straightforward: Kody Brown and his then-four wives would each build their own homes, creating a “polygamist cul-de-sac” of sorts. The reality, of course, became anything but simple.

Now, after endless delays, internal fractures, and a slow unraveling of the family itself, that chapter is officially closed. A buyer has stepped in, ending the long-running real estate limbo surrounding the Arizona property.

The land sold on April 14 for $1.5 million — and fans immediately wondered: How does a dissolved family divide a profit like that?

Breaking Down Who Owned What

According to reporting from The U.S. Sun, the property wasn’t a single unified chunk of land. Instead, it was split into four separate parcels, each with different ownership combinations — a setup that perfectly reflected the fractured nature of the Brown family by the time the sale went through.

Here’s how each piece landed:

A 2.42-acre parcel owned by Kody and his legal wife, Robyn Brown, closed at $305,000.

Another 2.42-acre parcel, owned jointly by Meri Brown and Janelle Brown (50/50), also sold for $305,000.

A 4.48-acre piece — split 50% to Kody and Robyn, 25% each to Meri and Janelle — went for $400,000.

And the largest, a 5.16-acre parcel with the same ownership breakdown, sold for $490,000.

Once the dust settled, the math painted a clear picture: Kody and Robyn walked away with roughly $750,000, while Meri and Janelle shared the remaining $750,000, giving each woman about $375,000. Not a bad boost — especially for Janelle, who’s been eyeing a flower farm in North Carolina.

Who Bought the Land?

Public records show the new owners are a Scottsdale-based couple who paid the full $1.5 million in cash — all for a slice of Arizona with sweeping views of the San Francisco Peaks.

It’s the scenic backdrop that once inspired the Browns’ dream of building a family compound, long before the family’s cracks turned into chasms.

Where Christine Brown Stands in All This

One name missing from the payout list is Christine Brown, but her situation has an important footnote. Before leaving the plural marriage in 2021, Christine owned a portion of Coyote Pass. But on July 28, 2022, she signed over her share to Kody and Robyn for just $10.

It’s a symbolic price that reflected her desire to break ties swiftly — and she was already sitting comfortably after keeping all the proceeds from the sale of her Flagstaff home. In hindsight, she made the cleanest exit of them all.

A Multimillion-Dollar Ending to a Multi-year Drama

Coyote Pass was supposed to be the Browns’ next great beginning. Instead, it became a battleground of stalled construction plans, financial strain, and shifting loyalties.

With the land finally sold and the money divided, the family’s ambitious Arizona dream is now officially in the rearview — leaving each member to build whatever comes next, on their own terms.

Be sure to catch up on everything happening on Sister Wives now. Come back here often for all Sister Wives spoilers, news, and updates.

 

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