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Meri Brown and Janelle Brown no longer have anything tying them to Flagstaff. Coyote Pass has sold, and they four Browns involved walked away with a profit.
It is officially the end of an era. While Kody Brown’s plural marriages disintegrated over an 18-month period beginning in November 2021, two of his exes were still legally tied to him and his legal wife via the Coyote Pass property they owned together until just days ago. That is no longer a problem. The Sister Wives stars have officially sold Coyote Pass just a month after redistributing the land for a more equitable split.
Coyote Pass is sold
Kody Brown, Janelle Brown, Meri Brown, and Robyn Brown no longer own property together. According to the U.S. Sun, the 14-acre land known as Coyote Pass was sold this month. The sale nets the former polygamists a tidy profit. Christine Brown, the first of Kody’s three wives to leave him, gave up her stake in the property years ago. She gave away her stake when she moved to Utah to start over.

According to the publication, the undeveloped land sold for a grand total of $1.5 million. It was purchased in four separate parcels. The loan on the property was paid in full in late 2023. The sale was all profit for the four Brown family members. Based on the new ownership distribution, Meri and Janelle Brown each walked away with $375,000, while Robyn and Kody Brown earned $750,000 on the sale before fees. The new owner remains anonymous.
The history of Coyote Pass
Purchased in 2018 for $820,000, the 14-acre Flagstaff, Arizona, property was initially intended to house separate homes for Kody Brown and his then-four wives. As relationships unraveled, so did the shared vision for the land. Coyote Pass might have started as a planned “fresh start,” but it stood, for several seasons of Sister Wives, as a symbol of the Brown family’s inability to move as a cohesive unit.
The family fought over which property to buy, how to use it, and later, how to get rid of it. Before COVID-19 hit, the Browns argued over whether they should build a single home to share or use the acres of unused land to build private houses for each wife. They waffled back and forth over building on the land or letting it sit unoccupied, as well.
By 2023, the property was fully paid off, but the Brown family, as a plural unit, ceased to exist. 2024 brought more drama over Coyote Pass. In fact, the Browns only settled their difference in 2025 when a land redistribution was submitted to make Kody Brown, Robyn Brown, Meri Brown, and Janelle Brown equal owners. The county recorded the change in late March. Less than a month later, the property was sold.