One of the world's most expensive street is in the UK - and it's home to a whole host of celebrities, millionaires, politicians and royaly.
The average house price on Kensington Palace Gardens in London is £37m, but many of the impressive mansions are worth more than double this - and it's easy to see while.
Swimming pools, cinema rooms, underground parking and other fancy features are pretty standard in the properties on the street - and their owners spent millions on the decor alone.
Vyomm , an online property portal, has looked at some of the most impressive and expensive properties on the street.

Founder of Utsav Goenka said: "Homes on Kensington Palace Gardens are like Picassos, extremely hard to come by, even harder to part from their previous owners, and often require a much higher sale price than expected. These works of art are part of London’s historic fabric and so on the rare occasion a door does open, you have to make an offer they would be foolish to refuse in order to keep it open.
"The reason that it is so hard to value and sell these properties is simple, they are a finite resource and one that is extremely sought after within the highest climbs of the London property market.

"These homes are never seen on the open market and they always change hands discreetly and away from the media’s glare. We’ve handled a number of enquiries and offers over the previous year but these are always carried out in secrecy and so without someone to help leverage such opportunities, making a sale materialise is all but impossible.
"So while many can attempt to value these properties based on what they were bought for and what the market has done since, the reality is, they are worth what their owner is willing to accept and not a penny less, if you can get to the offers stage first that is."
Kensington Palace
Home to the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, George, Charlotte, Louis, Princess Eugenie and several other members of the Royal Family - the palace is how the street got its name.
Purchased in 1689 for the equivalent of £4m, the property is absolutely huge.
The inside is split into lots of different apartments and cottages.

The Cambridges live in the biggest home - Apartment 1A. The four-storey building, which used to be Princess Margaret's home, has 20 rooms including a nursery, five reception rooms and dressing rooms.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle lived in another of the cottages before they moved out of London and to Windsor, but their two-bed home was much smaller.
Princess Eugenie and her husband Jack Brooksbank live at the palace's Ivy Cottage, and Prince and Princess Michael of Kent are a few doors down at Apartment 10.
Number 5-7
The Russian Embassy
Number 8
This gorgeous home is owned by Tamara Eccleston.
It has 57 rooms including a cinema room and there's also an indoor swimming pool.

The family bought the property in 2011 for £45m and it's now thought to be worth an incredible £171m.
The London Cage
Three buildings on the street, each with an impressive list of former owners and inhabitants, were joined together between July 1940 and September 1948 to create the London office for the Combined Services Detailed Interrogation Centre.
It became known as the London Cage, and was run by MI19, the section of the War Office responsible for getting information out of prisoners of war.
Very few people know exactly what happened there, but the building had a barbed-wire fence.
Number 9a
The property was bought by the Mittal family, who made their money in the Indian steel industry.
Lakshmi Mittal is the CEO of ArcelorMittal, the world's largest steel production company.

The family have another property on the street and are believed to have paid £117m to add this mansion to their property portfolio.
Number 10
This 51,000sq ft home is owned by the owner of estate agent Foxtons Jon Hunt.

He is believed to have bought it for £200m.
Number 11
French Embassy

Number 12a
Nepalese Embassy
Number 13
This huge mansion is home to Russia's Ambassador Alexander Vladimirovich Yakovenko.
Number 14
Home to the Finland's UK ambassador
Number 15a
China's richest man Wang Jialin bought the house directly from the Royal Estate.

He made his money through the movie industry and has an impressive property portfolio.
He paid £80 for it back in 2015 and spent millions refurbishing it.
Number 15b
Russian-American billionaire Leonard Blavatnic bought the home back in 2004 and has spent a lot of cash adding some very fancy features.
It now has an indoor swimming pool and underground parking.
Number 16
This 10,000 sq ft plot is owned by Chelsea FC owner Roman Abramovich.
The Russian-Israeli billionaire is a businessman and investor.

He bought the property back in 2011 for £90m and was granted permission for a £28m refurbishment in 2016.
He's added a leisure complex and pool over the years.
Number 18-19
This huge property is one of the most prestigious plots on the entire street, and that really is saying something.
It's owned by the Mittal family, who also own Number 9a.
It covers 55,000sq ft
The building has an impressive history and was originally built as two semi-detatched homes in 1845.
Sections of the walls were built from surplus stone from the Palace of Westminster.
Over the years it has been used as the Egyptian and Russian embassies before being turned into one property in the 90s.
Formula 1 boss Bernie Ecclestone bought the house for £50m in 2001 but his then-wife reportedly didn't like it so they sold up a few years later.
Number 20
This gorgeous building is owned by the Sultan of Brunei Hassanal Bolkaih.
Number 21
Lebanese Embassy

Number 23
Japanese Embassy