メインコンテンツに移動する
JapaneseホームNewsホーム
Story

‘Isn’t she 24?’: Bill Belichick’s girlfriend Jordon Hudson now owns $8M rental property empire

Jing Pan

3 min read

Bill Belichick and Jordon Hudson at the 14th Annual NFL Honors at Saenger Theatre on Feb. 6, 2025 in New Orleans.

Michael Owens/Getty Images

Moneywise and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue through links in the content below.

We adhere to strict standards of editorial integrity to help you make decisions with confidence. Some or all links contained within this article are paid links.

It’s not every day you find out your landlord is a 24-year-old dating an eight-time Super Bowl winner.

But that’s exactly what happened to several stunned tenants in Boston after learning their properties were owned by none other than Jordon Hudson, the girlfriend of former New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick.

“How does she have her real estate? Isn’t she 24?” one tenant asked the New York Post, after discovering the cheerleader-turned-landlord owned the four-bed Dorchester home they were renting with others for $4,900 a month.

Hudson acquired three multi-family properties in late 2023, according to mortgage records reviewed by Realtor.com. Her real estate portfolio now includes a $2.2 million townhouse in Dorchester, a $2.3 million property nearby, a $3 million building in Boston’s Roxbury Crossing neighborhood and a $610,000 Cape Cod cottage in Harwich — about 80 miles southeast of the city.

That’s quite the empire — especially at a time when soaring costs have priced many young Americans out of the housing market entirely.

Dominic Fantoni, a student who splits $9,100 in monthly rent for one of Hudson’s apartments, was baffled by the discovery: “I’m 21 and we are all struggling to pay rent. I wonder how she came into all that.”

Read more: Rich, young Americans are ditching the stormy stock market — here are the alternative assets they're banking on instead

For accredited investors, Homeshares gives access to the $36 trillion U.S. home equity market, which has historically been the exclusive playground of institutional investors.

With a minimum investment of $25,000, investors can gain direct exposure to hundreds of owner-occupied homes in top U.S. cities through their U.S. Home Equity Fund — without the headaches of buying, owning or managing property.

With risk-adjusted target returns ranging from 14% to 17%, this approach provides an efficient, hands-off way to invest in residential properties across regional markets.