EXCLUSIVE: NO PRENUP, NO PEACE: JESSICA ALBA & CASH WARREN’S $600M DIVORCE COULD GET MESSY FAST
Estranged couple lists $19M Beverly Hills mansion
Jessica Alba and Cash Warren’s 17-year marriage may be ending—but the drama is just beginning.
#ShuterScoop can confirm that the couple did not sign a prenuptial agreement, meaning their divorce will be governed by California’s community property laws. Translation? Everything acquired during their nearly two-decade union—from homes and investments to business stakes and beauty products—is fair game for a 50/50 split.
That includes Alba’s once-booming baby, The Honest Company, which at its peak was valued at $1.7 billion and is still worth an estimated $609 million today. While Alba stepped down as Chief Creative Officer last year, she remains a board member—and now, possibly a co-defendant in a financial tug-of-war.
“They’re dividing a life,” a legal insider explains. “But with no prenup in place, this becomes a full inventory process. The house, the holdings, the handbags—everything.”
The split is already hitting the market. The couple just listed their Beverly Hills estate—a nearly 9,000-square-foot showstopper—for a cool $18,995,000. Originally purchased in 2017 for $10 million, the property was entirely remodeled under the direction of celeb-favorite designers Tommy and Kathy Clements.
The stunning home features 7 bedrooms, 8.5 bathrooms, rare marbles, reclaimed wood, a gym, a movie theater, and a gourmet kitchen—because even divorces deserve artisanal espresso.
Alba, 43, filed for divorce in February. Cash, 46, filed his response the same day. Both cited “irreconcilable differences” and listed their separation as December 27, 2024. But sources say the decision wasn’t as mutual as the paperwork suggests.
“She’s been ready to reinvent herself for a while,” a friend close to Alba says. “New chapter, new brand, maybe even a new man. She’s just done.”
Whether or not the divorce turns hostile, one thing is certain: splitting a fortune without a prenup isn’t just emotionally taxing—it’s legally brutal.
And with The Honest Company still on the books, let’s just hope this uncoupling stays honest.
More to come from the courtroom—and the real estate market.