


Comedian Amy Schumer has sold her Upper West Side penthouse, according to a StreetEasy listing update.
The spread was last asking $15 million — with the listings portal noting that the home has entered contract, but the final sale price isn’t yet known.
Monday’s Olshan Luxury Market Report also reported that the penthouse was in contract, adding that Schumer purchased the Riverside Drive spread in 2016 for $12.14 million.
The “Life & Beth” star — who brought some good luck to a newlywed Brooklyn couple by hilariously crashing their photo shoot over the weekend — once described the penthouse as her dream apartment, and it’s easy to see why.
The full-floor aerie is perched above a landmarked, Beaux-Arts building at 190 Riverside Drive.
The five-bedroom, 5½-bath home is 4,500 square feet and features 3,000 square feet of outdoor space over two levels.
That said, notable features particularly include glass walls that open to a wraparound, landscaped terrace with panoramic views of the Hudson River, the George Washington Bridge and the city skyline.
The home itself opens from a key-locked elevator into a solarium-style living room anchored by a stone and glass gas fireplace. This leads to a media room hidden behind “sound-buffering” pocket doors, according to the listing.
There’s also a chef’s kitchen, complete with a breakfast bar, which opens to the outdoors. Meanwhile, a private bedroom wing includes a main bedroom suite with its own terrace, a spa-like bath and lots of closet space.
It’s also a long way from how she grew up.
“I’m someone who came from having to share a bed with my mom,” Schumer once told the Wall Street Journal, adding that they “had no money.” Another time, Schumer shared a studio in Chinatown with a stranger she met on Craigslist, she said.
Schumer and her husband, chef Chris Fischer, have since bought the “Moonstruck” townhouse in Brooklyn Heights — a 19th-century, 26-foot-wide property for $12.5 million ($1.5 million over ask) last year, as Gimme Shelter exclusively reported.
Schumer once quipped that after having her baby, Gene, the move to Brooklyn was inevitable.
“It’s pretty obvious where we are going,” she told the Journal. “If you leave this borough, what borough do people usually move to? It’s not rocket science.”
Building amenities include a doorman, bike storage and a garage.
The listing broker was Adam Modlin of the Modlin Group.