- April 13, 2026
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Mike Bryan, who along with his twin brother became one of the greatest doubles player in professional tennis history, has put his St. Pete Beach house up for sale.
The house is at 151 Punta Vista Drive and sits on Boca Ciega Bay, just north of The Don Cesar Hotel.
The three-bedroom, two-full and one partial-bathroom home is 2,182 square feet with 180-degree views of the bay. It's listed at $2.59 million, according to Coldwell Banker Realty, which is listing the house.
Just last week it was named the House of the Week by the Wall Street Journal.
Bryan and his wife Nadia paid $1.9 million for it in 2024, buying it in the name of a Pasco County LLC named Beyond the Baseline Coaching. According to the Wall Street Journal, the couple bought it planning to use it as a vacation retreat and spent $300,000 on renovations. They live full-time in Wesley Chapel.
The house, according to the listing, “stands out for its wood finishes and sculptural form, which has been likened to a sailboat, featuring a split layout designed to maximize light and water views from nearly every angle and room.”
Among its features are five balconies, a custom children’s loft with catamaran‑style hammock and play features, lower‑level bonus living area, a private beach with a fire pit area and 9-person hot tub and a deep-water dock that can also be used as a fishing pier.
“You see all the new houses going up — kind of cookie cutter, modern houses,” Bryan told the Journal, comparing his house, the paper says, to a treehouse. “It just felt different, like it could be in Hawaii or Tahiti.”
The house is listed by Johane Bucaille, a broker associate and team leader with Coldwell Banker’s La Belle Vie Signature Group.
Mike Bryan and his identical twin brother Bob are known as one of the most successful double teams in the modern era of tennis.
According to their entry at the International Tennis Hall of Fame, they won 16 Grand Slam titles in their careers — six Australian Opens, five U.S. Opens, three Wimbledon titles and two French Opens.
Between 2005 and 2014, they won at least one Grand Slam each season and they hold the record for the most weeks at No. 1 in the ATP doubles rankings — 438 weeks, including 139 consecutive weeks between Feb. 25, 2013, to Oct. 25, 2015.
If that weren’t enough, the brothers won an Olympic gold medal in 2012 in London.
The brothers, who turn 48 April 28, retired in 2020. They were inducted into the Hall of Fame last year.