His love affair with his California compound has fizzled.
Sean Rad, who co-founded the dating app Tinder in 2012, is looking to dump his Los Angeles estate.
The 37-year-old entrepreneur swiped right on the 10,600-square-foot property in 2018, picking it up from real estate investor Kurt Rappaport for $26.5 million.
Now, the startup investor and his wife, Lizzie Grover Rad, are seeking $32 million for the five-bedroom, nine-bathroom abode, which is listed with Aaron Kirman of AKG Christie’s International Real Estate.
“This home is a masterpiece. Every room is a work of art from the details to the quality of materials,” Kirman told The Post of the pad at 1375 N. Doheny Drive.
“It’s like unwrapping a Tiffany box over and over again,” he added.
Indeed, the Hollywood Hills home has made headlines over the years not just for its size and jaw-dropping price tags: It was also featured on the cover of Architectural Digest for being a celebrity-owned sprawler with a refreshingly memorable and tasteful aesthetic.
“I take a studied approach to the details,” Hallworth Design’s Jane Hallworth, who worked with the couple, noted in an interview with the mag, naming her own “catholic tastes and dexterity in moving between traditional and modern idioms” as some of her guiding lights.
Constructed in 1936, the property features plenty of natural light and double-height spaces.
There’s a marble-and-bronze-accented kitchen that opens to a courtyard, a wine cellar and bar in the lower level, a home theater and, naturally, a pool.
The “5-star resort-inspired” primary suite boasts a balcony, a Breccia Capraia marble bathroom and a large dressing room.
Rad paid $35 million last year for a Bel-Air compound owned by the late actress Yvette Mimieux, who died in January 2022 at the age of 80.
The Post reached out to Tinder for comment.