So, I got curious the other day about where Joe Rogan actually lives. You hear about the big move to Texas, the massive studio, all that stuff, and you just kinda wonder, right? What’s the place look like? Figured I’d spend a bit of time seeing what I could dig up online.

First thing, obviously, I just jumped onto Google. Typed in the basic stuff like “joe rogan home address texas” and variations like that. You get a ton of results, mostly news articles talking about the move, maybe mentioning the city, Austin, but nothing specific. Lots of articles about the price he paid, but not the street name, you know?
Okay, so basic search didn’t cut it. Then I started thinking, maybe look for property records? Texas has public records, right? So I started digging into that angle. Spent some time on county appraisal district websites. Problem is, you usually need a name or an exact address to start with. Just searching “Joe Rogan” in a massive county database? Good luck. It’s not like searching for a regular John Smith, but still, it’s often not that straightforward. Sometimes properties are under LLCs or trusts to keep things private. Found myself going in circles a bit.
Trying Different Angles
I tried searching for clues indirectly. Maybe look for news reports about disturbances, permits filed, stuff like that near areas he was rumored to have bought in. That felt a bit creepy, honestly, and didn’t really yield anything solid either. Just more speculation, fan forum posts guessing.
Found a bunch of those dodgy-looking websites, you know the type, “celebrity addresses dot info” or whatever. Clicked on a few, half expecting my computer to start smoking. Most of them are just junk. They list addresses that are clearly old, or maybe just business addresses, PO boxes, sometimes completely wrong info. It’s mostly clickbait, trying to get you to view ads.
What I ran into:
- Lots of news articles, but no specifics.
- Public records are hard to search without exact details.
- Properties often hidden behind LLCs.
- Tons of garbage, fake address websites.
- General lack of reliable information.
After a while, I sort of gave up on the direct approach. It’s clear finding a specific, confirmed home address for someone that high-profile, who likely wants their privacy, isn’t something you just stumble upon in a few minutes of searching. They take steps to keep that stuff under wraps, and honestly, it makes sense. You see why they do it. Spent more time hitting dead ends than finding anything useful. It was an interesting exercise in seeing how much (or how little) information is truly public, but didn’t get me the pin on the map I was initially curious about. Probably for the best.