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    THE most expensive homes in the world are, for the most part, pretty much what you would expect: opulent, private and capable of making the neighbours sick with jealousy.

    What is surprising, however, is that in some parts of the world, they can be relatively modest. In Australia, the most expensive homes are located in Queensland and New South Wales.
    Forbes.com has compiled the first comprehensive list of the priciest residences on the planet.

    The list includes the top five homes in each continent, excluding Antarctica. We combed through thousands of property listings, compared hundreds of homes and contacted dozens of brokers and owners in our quest. Here’s what we found.
    The houses are large enough to contain entire neighborhoods, and yet not as large as you might expect. They are astoundingly expensive and, in some parts of the world at least, surprisingly cheap. They are lavish and gold-trimmed, modest and wood-sided, and perched on handkerchiefs of land and large private islands.

    Click below for related links:

    Slideshow: Most Expensive Homes in Australia/Oceania
    Slideshow: Most Expensive Homes in North America
    Slideshow: Most Expensive Homes in Asia
    Slideshow: Most Expensive Homes in Europe
    Slideshow: Most Expensive Homes in South America

    The most expensive home in the world was no secret: an infamously lavish new estate in England known as Updown Court. The 103-room mansion is set on 58 acres in the wealthy London suburb of Surrey. It has five swimming pools and every possible trimming, and it just hit the market this year.

    The least expensive on our list was a $5 million house in Sao Paolo, Brazil, a vintage residence that needs some updating.

    Expensive homes tended to be concentrated in particular areas. South Africa dominated the Africa list, for example, and Brazil had the bulk of the most expensive South American properties.
    The US listings were, unsurprisingly, in rich areas such as New York State and California. Overall, the most expensive homes were in the US, UK and France. Other places could hardly compare.
    That Britain was so expensive doesn’t surprise Trevor Abrahmsohn, founder of Glentree Estates in London and broker for the second-priciest home in Europe.

    “As far as property is concerned, London is probably is the capital of the world,” he says. “It straddles Eastern Europe as well as the Americas and Europe.”

    The owners of the US properties tended to be American citizens with gobs of cash to spare. For example, financier Martin Zweig, who owns the most expensive condo in the US, a $70 million penthouse atop New York City’s Pierre hotel.
    But in London, the pool of high-end buyers is far more international, says Mr Abrahmsohn. He’s in a position to know, having sold a house to steel tycoon Lakshmi Mittal, who last year set a world record for a residential sale when he purchased a London mansion for $100 million.

    “London is the epicenter of the international cognoscenti,” Mr Abrahmsohn says. “Since the 1970s, I’ve seen every nationality. Every time there’s a hike in oil prices, every time there is a political uprising, all the wealthy refugees come to the UK, and they buy super-luxury property.”

    They buy because values increase, and they won’t see their assets dissolve in a currency crisis or be confiscated by a rogue government.
    Not to mention “it enhances their status,” Mr Abrahmsohn says.

    At the other end of the price spectrum, real estate agents in South Africa argue that property is undervalued, and there are some serious bargains for international shoppers. There, the most expensive real estate tends to be game lodges or wine estates, bought by rich businessmen as retreats.

    “Property prices have more than doubled in the last few years,” says Jan Lindeque, a real estate broker with South African real estate agency Engel & Voelkers. “Still, if you compare the house for $4 million in Mallorca and you look for a similar house here, it’s much less expensive. You get much more value for the money.”

    REDWING

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