6 min read
Angelina Jolie may be preparing to leave the U.S. behind and establish a life more grounded in a place she deeply cares about.
Recent reporting suggests she’s getting ready to put her Los Angeles home up for sale and spend much more of her future abroad, especially in Cambodia, which she’s long described as “in my heart.” But much remains unconfirmed, and the timing is still murky.
Let’s dig into what’s known, what’s rumored, and what to look out for.
She’s preparing her L.A. estate for sale and setting her sights abroad.
According to Us Weekly, Jolie plans to sell her historic Los Angeles home once her youngest children, twins Knox and Vivienne, turn 18. That would free her from some custody constraints that currently tie her to California.
She’s expressed that she never truly wanted to live in L.A. full-time. Her stay there, it seems, has been driven more by legal arrangements than by preference.
Her desire for a quieter, more private life also comes up regularly. Many reporting points to her valuing “peace,” “safety,” and a sense of humanity, she believes, is harder to find in Hollywood right now.

Cambodia holds deep personal, cultural, and creative ties for Jolie.
She adopted her eldest son, Maddox, from Cambodia more than 20 years ago, and has repeatedly spoken of Cambodia as more than just a spot on the map, but somewhere she feels emotionally connected.
Her film work reinforces that bond. She directed First They Killed My Father, which is tied to Cambodian history. She’s said Cambodia is “in my heart,” and that the country has influenced her sense of home.
Beyond adoption and film, her humanitarian work and conservation efforts have involved Cambodia for years. That gives credibility to suggestions that she might actually spend a significant part of her life there.
She’s made clear she doesn’t feel totally at home in L.A. or in some aspects of American life.
She’s discussed how legal and custody arrangements with her ex-husband have restricted her mobility and choices. Once those constraints lift, she’s indicated she intends to live more freely.
In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, she has indicated that she plans to “spend a lot of time in Cambodia” going forward. She’s also spoken of not feeling that Los Angeles or Hollywood offers the values of peace, privacy, and authenticity that she seeks for herself and her children.
No verified, finalized move yet.
There’s no public confirmation that she has purchased property in Cambodia or elsewhere abroad, or that she has legally migrated or changed her primary residence. Also not yet certain is how permanent any move would be. It’s unclear whether she intends to live abroad full-time, split time between countries, or just use other places as retreats or secondary homes.
Despite her declarations and preparations, there’s no solid timetable publicly confirmed for when the move would happen, aside from tying it loosely to when her youngest children become adults.
Custody and legal constraints are key.
Because of court orders, parental responsibilities, and legal agreements, living abroad full-time involves navigating a lot of complexity. The age of her children comes up in many reports as a condition for change.
Also complicated are residency, visas, taxation, and work obligations. If she moves much of her base abroad, she’d need to handle cross-border tax laws, property ownership, health care access, schooling for her children, and maintaining professional ties in the U.S.
Even emotionally and socially, uprooting a family is not trivial. Her children have built their lives in the U.S.; shifting to another country would mean changes in school, culture, social circles, and lifestyle.
Her creative and humanitarian work might shift in focus.
Being based closer to places she feels drawn to could allow more direct involvement in international projects, conservation, advocacy, or even film production centered in those regions.
For Jolie personally, the move could represent aligning her day-to-day life closer with her values, i.e., valuing privacy, authenticity, and peace. It could reduce the stress and public visibility that come with living in L.A. full-time.
For her children, it could mean a more international upbringing; richer exposure to culture outside the U.S., but also challenges like travel, transitions, and possibly being farther from other family and familiar surroundings.
Until those materialize, much of what’s out there is strong rumoring tied to earlier statements and intentions.
A shift among celebrities seeking less high-visibility lives.
Jolie’s desires echo a broader pattern: many public figures have expressed fatigue with the publicity, pressure, and invasiveness of Hollywood or major Western cities.
It illustrates how family structure, legal issues, and children’s needs can shape life decisions for public figures in ways the public often doesn’t fully see.
It highlights how values like peace, authenticity, and privacy are becoming more central in lifestyle decisions, especially for people with means who can choose where to live.

Angelina Jolie’s reported move from an America she now describes as “unrecognizable” toward Cambodia feels like more than media speculation.
It aligns with her past choices, her values, and long-standing personal connections. At the same time, the specifics: timing, permanence, and logistics, are not yet confirmed. What’s clear is she seems ready for change, drawn toward a place she calls home, and seeking something more authentic for herself and her children.
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This article was made with AI assistance and human editing.
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