Brady Bunch House Opens for Public Tours — Everything You Need to Know

Brady Bunch House opens to Public
Credit: Mike Pingel

What To Know

  • The Brady Bunch house is now designated a historic landmark by the Los Angeles City Council.
  • Tickets for the Brady Experience are $289.75 per person, with proceeds benefiting Wags and Walks.
  • The owner highlights the emotional connection fans and original cast members have to the property.

The Brady Bunch house, one of television’s most recognizable homes, has been granted historic status by the Los Angeles City Council as fans prepare for a rare chance to step inside the iconic property.

The home’s owner, Tina Trahan, spoke with ReMIND about the upcoming Brady Experience, a limited-run walkthrough event taking place May 11–July 17. Tickets are $289.75 per person, with a portion of proceeds benefiting Wags and Walks, a Los Angeles and Nashville-based dog rescue organization.

“Wags and Walks is a charity that does great things,” Trahan said. “They have a lot of medical bills for these dogs, and everyone loves dogs and wants to rescue them. It’s a really great charity.”

The Brady Experience offers fans a semiprivate, self-guided tour of the meticulously recreated home featured on HGTV’s 2019 series A Very Brady Renovation. While the original sitcom, which ran from 1969 until ’75, used only exterior shots of the Studio City house, HGTV rebuilt the interior to match the show’s sets from Paramount Studios’ Stage 5. Original cast members Barry Williams, Maureen McCormick, Christopher Knight, Eve Plumb, Mike Lookinland, and Susan Olsen participated in the seven‑episode renovation series.

The Brady House living room

Photographer: Mike Pingel

Visitors will see the Brady living room and its famous staircase, Alice’s kitchen, complete with an era-appropriate telephone and a surprise inside the refrigerator; the kids’, Alice’s, Carol & Mike’s, and Greg’s bedrooms, plus the backyard play area. Guests are encouraged to recreate their favorite Brady moments throughout the home.

Trahan, who purchased the house from HGTV, said her connection to the property began long before she owned it.

“I grew up watching it after school like everybody else in the ’80s,” she said. “When I saw the house was for sale, I wanted to see it. When I walked in, I thought, I need to buy this house. I didn’t want anyone to tear down or change anything HGTV did. The only way to control what happens to the house was to purchase it.”

Though she describes herself as a fan, “not a super fan,” she joked. Trahan has a deep appreciation for the details inside the home. Her favorite item is Jan Brady’s yellow folder, recreated exactly as it appeared in the episode where Jan miscalculates her school contest entry. “It’s the exact handwriting, the exact color. A 13‑year‑old wrote that essay, ‘What America Means to Me.’ It’s probably my favorite.”

Trahan said visitors often have emotional reactions when they enter the house. “People cry,” she said. “For many, the show holds really fond memories of their childhood. They get overwhelmed.”

The Brady Bunch House

Photographer: Mike Pingel

Members of the original cast also remain closely connected to the home. “They love that it didn’t turn into something else or an Airbnb,” Trahan said. “Barry [Williams] and Chris [Knight] both have keys. If a relative or someone wants to see it, they can come anytime. As far as I’m concerned, it’s their house.”

Trahan admitted she has unintentionally slept in the home once, after a long day of press interviews this past week. “I sat on Jan’s bed, and the next thing I knew, it was 2:30 a.m. I fell asleep in my clothes.”

Before the public opening, Trahan plans to add one new feature: a recreation of the garage portrait Jan famously crashed into while riding her bike without her glasses. “I’m excited for that,” she said.

Brady Bunch House Owner

Credit: Mike Pingel

The Brady Experience previously opened for a sold‑out three‑day run in November 2025. This summer’s extended schedule continues Trahan’s support of Wags and Walks.

Guests will be able to open the refrigerator, sit at the dining table, pick up the vintage phone, and even pretend to call George Glass. The walkthrough is produced in partnership with Bucket Listers, the media experiences brand followed by more than 15 million users across the U.S.

More information and waitlist access are available at Bucket Listers.