Sister Wives – The End Of An Error! COYOTE PASS HAS SOLD!
After years of promises, false starts, and emotional turmoil, the day has finally come—Coyote Pass has officially been sold. The sprawling land in Flagstaff, once touted as the future of the Brown family legacy, has become a symbol of what could’ve been… and what never was. With its sale, we’ve reached the end of an era—or an error—depending on how you look at it.
What began in 2018 as a grand dream to build a family compound turned into a financial and emotional burden for the entire Brown clan. The original vision? To reunite the plural family under one land, with each wife getting her own slice of the property to build a home. Instead, it became a battleground of broken relationships, broken promises, and now, a broken dream.
Back when Kody and Robyn spearheaded the move from Las Vegas to Flagstaff, the family spent a whopping $820,000—money pooled from the group’s shared resources—on four undeveloped lots at Coyote Pass. While Kody has claimed he paid for one lot himself, it’s widely believed that all five adults, including Christine before her split, contributed equally. Even though Christine relinquished her claim to the land in 2021 to gain full control of her Flagstaff home, she still walked away with the cleanest exit.
But now, with the land sold, the big question is: who gets what?
Let’s talk numbers.
The four lots were recently sold for a combined $1.5 million. Two of the larger parcels, once co-owned by all four remaining adults—Kody, Robyn, Meri, and Janelle—went for $490,000 and $400,000. The smaller lots, held in the names of Janelle & Meri and Kody & Robyn respectively, each went for $35,000.
Doing the math, that gives us a potential windfall of $375,000 each for Meri and Janelle, while Kody and Robyn likely walked away with a hefty $750,000 chunk. Of course, these figures don’t account for realtor fees, taxes, or behind-the-scenes legal wrangling, but it’s clear that Kody and Robyn made out better than the rest.
As for Christine, her decision to sign over her interest in Coyote Pass in exchange for autonomy over her own home ended up serving her well. She sold her Flagstaff house for $700,000, a tidy profit from the $390,000 she and Kody paid for it back in 2018. After refinancing in 2020, paying off the original mortgage, and covering taxes and fees, she walked away with around $306,000. Not too shabby for someone who cut ties with Kody years ago and avoided the chaos that followed.
Christine’s story is increasingly looking like the smartest move of all. Not only did she escape the emotionally draining dynamics of the Brown family, but she also avoided the drawn-out drama that plagued Meri and Janelle for years. Her decision gave her financial independence and emotional peace.
And then there’s Meri—who, despite her equal investment in the land, was only ever allocated 15.5% of it, or 2.24 acres, based on the outdated logic that her single child somehow equated to less need. Ironically, Meri maintains relationships with more of Kody’s kids than he does. Her reduced stake in the property was not only unfair but emblematic of how much the family dynamics had skewed.
Now that the dust has settled, it’s hard not to wonder: what will the show even have left to explore in two years when this storyline finally airs? With the main piece of the Brown family’s dream now sold, are we seeing the last of the Sister Wives saga as we know it?
The sale of Coyote Pass closes a long and difficult chapter in the Brown family’s story. Once imagined as the land that would bring them together, it instead drove wedges deeper, highlighted favoritism, and exposed deep fractures in their unity. Now, with Christine living her best life post-divorce, Janelle and Meri finally free of Coyote Pass, and Kody and Robyn holding the largest slice of the financial pie, it’s clear the era of the “united” Brown family is truly over.
Whether you call it closure or collapse, one thing is certain: Coyote Pass is gone, and with it, the illusion that this family was ever going to find its happy ending under one roof.
Stay tuned—because with this kind of drama, there’s always more tea to spill. ☕🔥