A multilevel Laguna Beach home owned by head coach Brian Keefe of the Washington Wizards is on the market for $4.995 million.

Located at the end of a cul-de-sac, this 4,634-square-foot house sits on a quarter-acre lot with mountain and ocean views. It features four bedrooms and four bathrooms, with floor-to-ceiling glass doors that open to multiple ocean-view decks.

Records viewed at PropertyShark.com show Keefe and his wife, Cynthia, bought the property for $3.3 million in July 2020.

The sales history indicates the house initially listed in August 2024 at $5.75 million and later dropped the asking price twice — first to $5.495 million in October 2024, and then to its current asking price on April 2.

Designed by architect Marshall Innins and featuring interiors by Christine Hallen-Berg, the house is made for indoor-outdoor living. It opens into a sunlit foyer.

Take the elevator or ascend the stairs to the main floor’s gourmet kitchen equipped with stainless steel appliances, a walk-in pantry and a breakfast nook with banquet seating. There’s extra seating at the kitchen island.

A double-sided fireplace wall divides the dining and living rooms, which open to a deck with an ocean view. The space also connects to a courtyard with stone wall fountains and olive trees.

Upstairs, the primary suite features a walk-in closet and a bathroom with a double vanity, soaking tub and glass-enclosed shower. A separate lounge area opens to a balcony.

Other highlights include an office, Brazilian cherrywood floors and abundant storage.

A two-car garage rounds out the listing.

Josh and Matt Altman of the Altman Brothers Team at Douglas Elliman of California have the listing.

Keefe, 48, was recently named head coach of the Washington Wizards, after nearly two decades of assistant coaching in professional basketball, including for the Los Angeles Lakers from 2016 to 2019.

Before going pro, he played collegiately at UC Irvine and the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, from the mid to late ’90s and coached at the University of South Florida and Bryant University in the early 2000s.