
VENEZUELA Fury may have just bagged a £5million wedding gift from her Gypsy King dad Tyson – but the teenager’s first marital home is a far cry from the millionaire lifestyle she grew up in.
The Fury dynasty toasted the teenager’s lavish wedding, which included Peter Andre performances, towering cakes, and a dress with a 50ft train, this weekend. But now, the 16-year-old bride and new husband Noah Price, 19, have moved into a £46,995 static caravan that had been sitting unsold for months – after furious buyers blasted the company’s homes as “absolute s**t”.
And in true Fury fashion, the story behind their first home together is every bit as dramatic as the wedding itself.
The young couple snapped up the two-bedroom caravan, named Manor House, exactly as it stood on the forecourt of East Yorkshire firm Carabuild – with no bespoke upgrades, luxury add-ons or personalised touches.
At 42ft long and 14ft wide, the caravan spans 588 square feet – roughly the same size as a large London studio flat.
That means Venezuela, who has spent her entire life surrounded by unimaginable luxury, is swapping Tyson and Paris Fury’s jaw-dropping £8million mansion for a static home that is 21 TIMES smaller.
Tyson’s sprawling estate stretches across 12,286 square feet, sits on historic land over 200 years old and boasts all the lavish trappings you’d expect from one of Britain’s richest sporting dynasties.
Yet now his eldest daughter is embracing traditional traveller life with husband Noah – and it seems the pair are doing it the old-fashioned way.
A source previously told The Sun: “Venezuela wants to start her married life in the traditional style of a traveller, just like her parents did.
“She has lived in luxury since she was born, but is willing to swap her home comforts to go and live in a static caravan.”
The source added: “She thinks it did her parents no harm and is looking forward to taking care of all the domestics while Noah goes out to work. Her parents approve.”
And it seems Venezuela took that traditional vision very seriously.
Because the caravan itself had been sitting unsold for months before Venezuela and Noah bought it.
Carabuild, which describes itself as a “bespoke manufacturer of luxury static caravans and lodges”, first advertised the home back in January with an asking price of £46,995.
By February, it still hadn’t shifted.
The firm posted another sales video online showing off the caravan’s “oak exterior” and “cream and gold” interior while urging potential buyers to get in touch.
Then in March came what insiders described as an increasingly desperate push to finally get rid of it.
In a social media plea, the company wrote: “Springtime offer. Be in this home for Easter. Available right now from stock. No waiting, no travelling, no stress.”
But while the videos attempted to paint a picture of luxury traveller living, furious online reviews underneath told a different story.
One furious customer blasted: “Stay well clear of this man Zane from Carabuild.
“Once he has your deposit, you never see him again.
“The homes are absolutely sh*t flat packs.”
The disgruntled reviewer continued: “Cheap made kitchen, cheapest of the cheapest, trust me, I am not joking.
“Please stay away from this company.”
Others accused the firm of poor insulation, broken radiators and “paper-thin walls”.
One scathing Google review read: “If I could give lower than one star, I would.”
Another raged: “Don’t give them a pound.”
Despite the controversy surrounding the company, Venezuela and Noah still chose the static home as the place they would begin married life together.
Carabuild proudly revealed the newlyweds had bought the home.
Sharing a video of the caravan to their Facebook page, the company wrote: “Congratulations to the new Mr and Mrs Price.
“We had the pleasure of designing and building Venezuela Fury and Noah Price’s very first marital home.”
It marks the latest chapter in what has become one of the most talked-about celebrity weddings of the year.
Venezuela – the eldest daughter of boxing superstar Tyson Fury and wife Paris – married Noah in a lavish traveller wedding on the Isle of Man earlier this month.
The wedding itself was pure Fury extravagance.
There were 20,000 flowers, a towering 12ft wedding cake, 18 bridesmaids, vintage cream wedding cars and a surprise performance from Peter Andre.
Venezuela wore a dramatic fishtail gown imported from Italy, complete with a staggering 50ft train – paired, brilliantly, with white Crocs.
Netflix cameras filmed the entire thing for the family’s hit reality series At Home With The Furys.
Tyson, emotional throughout the day, called himself a “big softie” as he walked his daughter down the aisle before later joking in his speech: “I told you – you shouldn’t have done it!”
And despite the glitz, glamour and eye-watering spending, the newlyweds appear determined to keep one foot firmly planted in traditional traveller culture.
The young couple will settle in East Yorkshire once they return from their lavish £30,000 honeymoon in Marbella – another gift paid for by Tyson and Paris.
And the honeymoon wasn’t the only present the pair received.
Tyson also gifted the newlyweds a traditional gypsy wagon as a sentimental nod to their roots.
Meanwhile, some family members were said to be stunned after Tyson and Paris reportedly handed the young couple £5million to help kickstart their married life.
“Some family members thought it was a lot of money for a young couple,” one insider told The Sun.
“But it’s up to Tyson and Paris.”
For now, though, despite the millions, the honeymoon and the reality TV cameras, Venezuela and Noah are preparing to start married life in the very caravan that buyers warned people to avoid.
