A Look at All of Martha's Beautiful Homes Over the Years

From her iconic Turkey Hill residence to her summer home in Maine, our founder has put down roots all along the East Coast.

la103231_1007_martha.jpg
Photo: Eric Piasecki

It should come as no surprise that Martha Stewart has impeccable taste in picking a place to call home. Over the years, she's owned more than a handful of different properties, and though each home was unique in its own right, they're all also distinctly Martha.

Her Turkey Hill farmstead in Connecticut is what many consider Martha's most iconic home even though she hasn't lived there since 2007. She purchased the historic farmhouse in the early '70s, and while renovating, Martha first began to explore her passion for houseware. Since then, she's also put down roots in New York City, the Hamptons, and Maine. Want to get an even closer peek at all of the homes Martha Stewart has owned? Come on in and take a look.

01 of 05

Turkey Hill

martha stewart's turkey hill home

Robert Polidori

Turkey Hill was Martha's first, and perhaps most famous, home. She and her then-husband bought it in the early '70s, and she spent the next 30 years renovating it, creating its iconic gardens, and buying the surrounding land to turn the farmhouse into an honest-to-goodness farmstead. It was an early 19th-century home that is the epitome of Martha's story and style.

02 of 05

Skylands

container-gardens-skylands-maine-martha-24-01-d111522-0216.jpg
Pieter Estersohn

Martha's estate in Seal Harbor, Maine, is called Skylands, and it was originally built in 1925 for auto executive Edsel Ford. Today, the house, which is located just outside of Acadia National Park, features a pink-granite driveway, 12 bedrooms, naturalistic landscaping, antique furniture, and sun-filled rooms that befit the property's nickname. Martha purchased the home in 1997 and returns there every summer to escape the heat.

03 of 05

Cantitoe Corners

parlor of Martha's Bedford home
Pieter Estersohn

Martha spends most of her time at her home in Katonah, N.Y., which she calls Bedford Farm or Cantitoe Corners. After she purchased the monochromatic 1925 farmhouse in 2000, she turned the 152-acre Westchester property into a horse farm that has both modern and historic buildings, a gorgeously manicured garden, dozens of different animals, and a kitchen that home chefs could only dream of.

04 of 05

Lily Pond

exterior of marthas 19th-century shingled cottage hamptons home
Noe Dewitt

Lily Pond Lane was home to Martha's East Hamptons house, a gorgeous historic house she purchased in the early '90s and sold in 2021. In typical Martha fashion, she fixed the home's cracked plaster walls, updated the floors, added a pool, and decked it out with gorgeous antique homewares, turning it into a cozy but elevated retreat. "I still can't believe how beautiful it is out here," she has said of this home.

05 of 05

Perry Street

martha new lifestyle collection home launch

Martha is known for her rustic, antique style, but that doesn't mean it's the only look she's drawn to. Case in point: Her glassy, modern condominiums on Perry Street in New York City's West Village, which were designed by famed architect Richard Meier. Although Martha has since left her unit, her daughter, Alexis, still lives in the building.

This wasn't Martha's only Manhattan residence: She has also called a one-bedroom apartment on Fifth Avenue home. It was in a grand limestone building that looks right out onto Central Park.

Was this page helpful?
Related Articles