Anna Faris has put the home she shared with Chris Pratt on the market.
The pair – who have son Jack, five, together – filed for divorce in December and Anna, 41, has now listed her three-bedroom, three-bathroom Hollywood Hills home for $2.5 million, Trulia reports.
The single-story Nicholas Canyon home was built in 1950 and sits on an acre of land.
Anna initially lived in the house with her first husband Ben Idra, before they divorced in 2008.
She and Chris also own a 4,700-square-foot home across the street, which they bought in 2013 for $3.3 million.
Anna and Chris filed for divorce in December after calling time on their relationship five months prior, with both parties citing "irreconcilable differences" as the reason for their breakup.
In both papers, the date of separation for the former couple – who got married in July 2009 – was listed as July 13, 2017.
The pair are understood to be seeking joint legal and physical custody of their child.
A source previously said: "They have a prenup. [In mirroring divorce documents,] they are both asking for joint custody of five-year-old [son] Jack. We’re told the property settlement agreement is almost completely worked out."
Fans were hoping that the former couple would get back together, but hearts shattered across the world when Anna was spotted on a dinner date with her new boyfriend, cinematographer, Michael Barrett back in September.
The pair met on the set of her new movie ‘Overboard’ and have so far showed no desire to hide their new relationship from eagle-eyed fans and her ex-husband.
Anna split from Chris over summer but she is adamant they are still "great friends".
She said previously: "We’re great. He’s amazing. We’re great friends and we always will be. He was so kind to [write the foreword]. I decided to write a book about my life experiences and when I started, I thought, ‘This will be a great journey. This is a great idea. I know what I’m doing. I’m 40, I can write a book.’ [Then] it’s like, ‘No. What was I thinking? This is a terrible idea.’
"But what I like to think is the takeaway [is] that a lot of our problems tend to be universal – the idea of jealousy, loneliness, heartbreak. There’s a commonality no matter what profession you’re in or where you live and that’s something the podcast has taught me. We all have the same stuff going on."