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In-N-Out heiress who was America’s youngest female billionaire puts LA mansion on market for $16.8m

House features 11 bedrooms, a wine cellar, tasting room, billiards room and a movie theatre

Louise Hall
Tuesday 23 March 2021 16:40 EDT
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139-year-old Victorian house moves to new address

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The heiress of the In-N-Out Burger fast-food chain, Lynsi Snyder, who is among the 1,000 richest people in the world, is selling her Los Angeles mansion for $16.8m (£12.2m).

According to a report by The Los Angeles Times, Ms Snyder, whose grandparents founded the well-loved burger chain, has recently put her luxurious mansion on the market.

The four-acre estate reportedly sits just a few miles north of Baldwin Park in Bradbury Estates, a guard-gated community.

With a $16.8m (£12.2m) price tag, the house is the most expensive property currently on the market in the San Gabriel Valley city, the newspaper said.

Ms Snyder’s grandparents, Harry and Esther Snyder, opened the first In-N-Out Burger in 1948 in the California city.

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The house itself is said to feature 11 bedrooms, 13 bathrooms, a wine cellar, a tasting room, a billiards room, a movie theatre and a gym.

The two homes on the estate are said to comprise than 18,000 square feet, as well as offering a 3,400-square-foot recreation centre.

On top of that are a two-hole golf course, tennis court, basketball court, infinity-edge pool and cabana set among vineyards and fruit trees, and manicured gardens.

Ms Snyder, who is from Glendora, California, serves as the president and owner of In-N-Out Burger, which celebrated its 70 year anniversary in 2018 and has 334 locations in six states.

The heiress’s worth is listed by Forbes magazine as $3.6bn (£2.6m), making her the 827 richest person in the world on their billionaire's index. When she inherited the business in 2017 at the age of 35 she was said to have been America’s youngest female billionaire.

According to The Times, Ms Snyder bought the mansion from former Dodgers star Adrián Beltré for $17.4m (£12.6m) in 2012.

The chain owner previously tried to sell the mansion at $19.8m (£14.4m) in 2017, the newspaper said.

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