This property is ready for a comeback play.
The Texas estate custom-built by NFL Hall of Famer Deion “Prime Time” Sanders is back on the market — this time listed for $5.5 million, and in need of a serious revival.
Constructed in 1999 at the height of Sanders’ playing career, the nearly 30,000-square-foot mansion was designed to match his larger-than-life persona.
Set on what was once a 112-acre spread in the town of Prosper, roughly an hour north of Dallas, the home reflected Sanders’ flair with towering ceilings, gleaming marble floors, and amenities that include a home theater, an indoor training field, a bowling alley and a basketball court.
The residence also features nine bedrooms, 11 bathrooms and sweeping floor-to-ceiling windows that overlook the 6 remaining acres of the original estate.
Appearing a bit outdated, from the 1990s, the residence is outfitted with bright colors including red paint and velvet floors, and paneling throughout.
Outdoors, the property includes a resort-style pool, an 8-acre pond and a 14-car garage.
Though Sanders sold the property in 2014 — before the bulk of the land was parceled off and redeveloped into a subdivision called “The Montclair” — his mansion remained untouched.
It has sat vacant for over a decade.
The home last changed hands in 2021 when a Frisco-based LLC purchased it at auction, reportedly intending to restore it for the owner’s wife. Those plans never came to fruition.
It hasn’t been lived in since Deion owned it, Heather Stevens of The Agency Frisco, who is handling the new listing, told Mansion Global.
The property was once listed for $12.8 million in 2016, but after multiple price cuts — including a drop to $7.5 million in 2019 — it ultimately sold at a significant discount.
Now appraised at around $7 million, the current asking price offers what Stevens described as “$1.5 million in built-in equity.”
The re-listing comes as Sanders, now head football coach at the University of Colorado, is back in the spotlight amid coverage of his son Shedeur Sanders’s unexpected tumble to the fifth round in this year’s NFL Draft.
Sanders himself won two Super Bowl titles in 1995 and 1996, first with the San Francisco 49ers and then the with the Dallas Cowboys. He also made one World Series appearance in 1992, making him the only athlete to play in a Super Bowl and World Series.