Nearly two months after Johnny Depp won his bombshell defamation case against Amber Heard, the actress has quietly sold off her California desert oasis, The Post can confirm.
The three-bedroom, three-bathroom Yucca Valley estate,which sits on 6 acres of land in California, sold off-market.
Property records show, on July 18, the home traded hands for $1.05 million.
New Jersey-based Rickard and Carol-Jeanette Jorgenson, who also own property in Nevada and are founders of Jorgensen & Company LLC, are the new owners, The Post has learned.
It is unclear how the Jorgensons discovered the off-market home or if there’s a direct connection to Heard. The Post has reached out for comment.
Spanning over 2,450 square feet, the previous listing described the estate as “the chance to own a once in a lifetime property.”
Boasting rocks, mountains, and desert views, the compound comes with a 110-foot engineered bridge, which leads to a mountainside gazebo.
Features include solid iron front doors, a kitchen with a double griddle stove and wiring for for the whole-home surround stereo system.
The primary bedroom comes with dual walk-in closets and grand stone dual sinks, plus a soaking tub.
Meanwhile, the garage spans some 1,200 square feet.
Heard, 36, purchased the home for $570,000 in 2019. She is walking away with a hefty profit.
But considering the $8.3 million she was ordered to pay to Depp after being found guilty of defamation by the jury, every penny helps.
Overall, the “Aquaman” actress was asked to cover $10 million in compensatory damages, plus $350,000 in punitive damages.
After the counter-lawsuit she filed, in which Depp was ordered to pay $2 million and Virginia’s cap on damages, Heard is left to pay $5 million in total — money she says she does not have.
And she might now be kicking herself for that.
Newly unsealed court documents now show that Heard walked away from a divorce payout that could have run tens of millions of dollars.
Documents obtained by The Post show that Heard denied requests from lawyers to seek half of Depp’s $33 million he made filming the fourth installment of “Pirates of the Caribbean” — since it was made while they were married.
In an email submitted to the court, Heard wrote of her decision not to pursue $16.5 million, writing that she was being “amazingly true to (her) word, that this is not about the money.”
The email exchange never made it to the trial, since a judge refused to let that evidence be admitted during the defamation trial.
The Post has reached out to Heard’s reps for comment.