Sister Wives’ Stars Sell Family Land for $1.5M — Is the Coyote Pass Dream Dead?
Coyote Pass is officially gone! Sister Wives stars Kody Brown, Robyn Brown, Meri Brown, and Janelle Brown have offloaded the plots of land originally envisioned for the formerly polygamous family’s dream residences.
The Brown family has officially sold off Coyote Pass, the 14-acre property that had, for years, been presented to viewers of Sister Wives as the physical and emotional centerpiece of their polygamous lifestyle.
The land, originally purchased in 2018 with high hopes of constructing multiple homes to accommodate Kody Brown and his four wives — Meri, Janelle, Christine, and Robyn — has now been parceled out and sold for a total of $1.5 million, a figure that not only represents a financial gain of $680,000 but also symbolizes the final unraveling of a plan that had already been crumbling in slow motion for years.

Sister Wives - Coyote Pass Drama Ruined The Brown Family
According to property records, the family divided and sold off the land in multiple transactions, with a 2.42-acre plot owned by Kody and Robyn selling for $305,000 on April 24, followed by a similarly sized parcel under Meri and Janelle’s names that was also sold for $305,000, while an additional 4.48 acres fetched $400,000 and the final, largest slice — a 5.19-acre lot — closed for $490,000, completing the dissolution of a once-ambitious project that never quite made it past the planning stages.
What makes the timing even more telling is that just a few weeks prior to the land being sold, Kody and Robyn quietly transferred a portion of their ownership to Meri and Janelle, adjusting the balance so that the four co-owners each held a clearly defined share, with Kody and Robyn retaining 50 percent and Meri and Janelle each holding 25 percent — a move that likely cleared the way for a smooth sale and, perhaps, settled lingering tensions over who was entitled to what.
Long before these transactions took place, however, Christine Woolley (formerly Brown) had already distanced herself from the land and the family dream attached to it; she officially sold her share back in July 2022 for the symbolic price of just $10, a gesture that seemed to speak volumes about where she stood emotionally following her separation from Kody in 2021, after nearly three decades in a spiritual marriage that, like the land itself, began with high hopes and ended in quiet surrender.
Kody’s original vision for Coyote Pass was ambitious — perhaps even idealistic — as he imagined a single, enormous home that would serve as a shared residence for himself, his four wives, and their children, creating what he believed could be a modern, functional expression of plural marriage, but it didn’t take long for that plan to fall apart, as the wives expressed strong opposition to living under the same roof, prompting a pivot toward the idea of five separate homes, one for each wife and a fifth for Kody that would serve as a gathering space for family events.
That revised vision never came to life either, largely because a string of real-world challenges slowed everything down — first the pandemic, which brought construction plans to a halt, then the drawn-out process of selling their homes in Las Vegas, and finally, the unraveling of the family itself, as Christine’s departure marked the beginning of a steady exodus that eventually included Janelle and, later, Meri, all of whom left the marriage as their personal relationships with Kody grew increasingly strained and emotionally untenable.
All of this unfolded in real time on national television, as fans of Sister Wives watched the drama play out episode by episode, including a series of increasingly tense discussions about property shares, ownership disputes, and who had contributed what to the Coyote Pass project, with Kody at one point insisting during a January broadcast that he had paid for “at least 92 percent” of the land himself and that the wives had only covered costs on the smaller sections, an assertion that added fuel to an already simmering fire of resentment and confusion.
Although Kody and Robyn had previously floated the idea of selling the property — a proposal that Meri and Janelle were openly against at the time — the deal eventually went through, leaving behind not just empty land but a symbolic void where a family dream once stood, and raising the question of whether Coyote Pass was ever truly destined to bring the Browns together or if it was simply a placeholder for a vision that never aligned with the emotional realities of the people involved.
Now that the sale is finalized, what remains is not the land or the blueprints that were never used, but a trail of broken relationships, televised arguments, and what-ifs, all anchored to a piece of property that began as a promise and ended as a footnote in a much larger story of family, faith, and fracture.
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