Just about a month after getting sworn in as vice president and moving, J.D. Vance is selling his Virginia residence.
The 100-year-old farmhouse in Alexandria, a suburb of Washington, D.C., hit the market Thursday with a $1.695 million price tag, according to a listing on Homes.com and local media reports. Real estate agents Robert Crawford and Tyler Jeffrey of TTR Sotheby’s International Realty are representing the sellers.
Neither Crawford nor Jeffrey immediately responded to a request to comment.
Vance purchased the five-bedroom, four-bathroom house in February 2023 for $1.6 million, shortly after he was sworn in as an Ohio senator.
In January, after Vance and President Donald Trump officially took on their roles in the White House, Vance and his family moved to the U.S. Naval Observatory, the vice president’s residence.
During Vance's tenure in Alexandria’s Del Ray neighborhood, a historically liberal enclave, according to local media reports at the time, there was mixed feedback from neighbors to the conservative politician’s presence. For example, a local artist “yarn-bombed” the neighborhood near the Vances house with knit strips of rainbow flags and pride symbols.
Vance’s residency created other disruptions in the neighborhood, too. In July, after Trump announced Vance as his running mate, the Secret Service shut down a popular park near the house whenever the family was at home.
Once the Vances moved to the Naval Observatory, the park was reopened, according to local media and the city.