"Alive" singer Sia is flipping her California home.

Sia, the 39-year-old singer-songwriter known for hits like "Chandelier" and "Breathe Me," is selling her Los Feliz property for almost $5 million, Los Angeles Times reported. The popular hitmaker only bought the property four months ago for $4.7 million, the news outlet noted. Thus, Sia may actually have a profit of nearly $300,000 from the sale once it gets finalized.

The Australian-born music artist's 5,161-square-foot Los Angeles residence features five bedrooms. The California dwelling place also displays a rotunda foyer, round sunroom, step-down living room, formal dining room, den that doubles as an office, billiards room equipped with a bar, study room, poweder room, four bathrooms and six fireplaces.

The future residents will find the master suite relaxing with its private sitting room, another "separate sleeping chamber" and a private balcony, Variety informed in July. The suite also comes with a charming and "vintage-tiled bathroom" with a shower.

The Mediterranean Revival-themed mansion, built in the 1920s and designed by architect A.F. Leicht, is definitely a standout based on the photos featured on the news site and on the blog. The property reportedly boasts some intricate wooden decorations, aesthetic windows and ceilings and artistic "stained-glass murals."

Aside from its amazing interiors, the next owners of the house will also be delighted with panoramic city views and a beautifully landscaped outdoor garden. Fountains, spa and a swimming pool, which could be reached via curved stairways, complete the over one-third of acre grounds of the luxury California estate.

Certified Hitmaker

The singer has six albums under her name and has reportedly announced her seventh, titled "This Is Acting."

Sia is successful in her songwriting, too. She wrote Rihanna's "Diamonds," which she only accomplished in 14 minutes, New York Times informed in 2014. She also wrote David Guetta's "Titanium" that featured her vocal range.

However, despite being a certified hitmaker, she actually resents the fame that comes with it, and even hides her face during public events, HollywoodLife noted. In an open letter published in 2013 via Billboard, Sia revealed why she is opposed to being "famous."

"If anyone besides famous people knew what it was like to be a famous person, they would never want to be famous. Imagine the stereotypical highly opinionated, completely uninformed mother-in-law character and apply it to every teenager with a computer in the entire world. Then add in all bored people, as well as people whose job it is to report on celebrities. Then, picture that creature, that force, criticizing you for an hour straight once a day, every day, day after day," wrote Sia.