The haunted house, so-called 'House from Hell' in the US media, is on sale for about $600,000, or 680 million won, attracting extraordinary attention from the local housing market.



According to CNN and others, Falcon Property Company, a real estate broker in Colorado Springs, USA, put a house on the housing market as a test as house prices soared as demand for housing soared.



This five-bedroom and four-bath house looks good from a distance, but over the years it has turned into a 'horror house' in fact, a haunted house.




The house was stained with black spray paint graffiti, and bones of dead animals were found.



When the electricity went out, the basement freezer filled with rotten meat leaked a strong stench, making it impossible to look around the house without wearing a mask.



The house had tenants for 10 years until 2019, but was evicted for not paying the rent, and the tenants messed up the house with their wrath.



Afterwards, the landlord could not repay the mortgage and the house was in danger of foreclosure in February last year.



Eventually, when the grace period for foreclosure approached, the landlord commissioned a broker to sell the house that had become atrocious.



This house, posted on the real estate sales site Redfin, was introduced as "every homeowner's nightmare."



The brokerage posted an introductory post: "If you dream of owning a piece of hell and turning it into a piece of heaven, don't look far away."



However, word of mouth spread that the home could be an interesting investment, and it has garnered 750,000 views on Redfin to date.



There were people who offered to buy the house for $625,000 in cash without even visiting the site.



The market price around this house is set at 750,000 to 800,000 dollars, and the basic structure of the house is strong and the surrounding scenery is good, so buyers who want to re-sell the house at a higher price after repairing the house are starting to appear.



"The housing market is crazy. Investors are starving for any type of housing," reports Market Insider, an economic media outlet. "Even 'Horror House' is seen by investors as a windfall."



"This is happening in housing markets across the United States," he said. "Because of skyrocketing demand and supply restrictions and low mortgage interest rates, buyers are skipping home inspections and buying houses with cash."



(Photo=Capture of Redfin, Yonhap News)