Murderer Chad Daybell’s Idaho Home Finds a Buyer After Less Than a Week, Despite the Listing’s Ominous Warning

Wikimedia Commons; Natalie Behring/Getty Images

The Idaho home where convicted murderer Chad Daybell once lived has found a buyer after just days on the market.

The listing didn’t shy away from the property’s tragic past. And apparently, the buyer wasn’t scared away—but quickly put in an offer, in fact.

The home hit the market on June 24 for a few hours, then—just as quickly—was removed. On June 27, the property reappeared, with an asking price of $350,000.

Now, the home is marked as in “pending” sale status. The details are yet to be disclosed, including the final sale price and the buyer’s identity.

In June, Daybell was sentenced to death for the murders of his first wife, Tammy Daybell, and his second wife’s two children.

In a horrifying discovery, the remains of the two children were found on the property.

Daybell’s second wife, Lori Vallow Daybell, was also convicted in the murders of her two children, Joshua “JJ” Vallow, 7, and Tylee Ryan, 17, in 2019.

The murders were apparently part of a “doomsday” plot.

Despite Daybell’s grisly ties to the home, he’s no longer the owner. In fact, according to property records, Daybell signed over the home’s ownership to his attorney, John Prior, in 2021—possibly to help pay for his legal bills.

The four-bedroom, 1.5-bath, 1,894-square-foot house “with lots of potential,” as the listing notes, is in Rexburg, ID. It features 3.75 acres, a large shop and other small farm buildings, and dry pasture that’s fenced.

The listing also comes with an ominous warning: “THERE IS A VERY TRAGIC SITUATION WITH THIS HOME, please HAVE YOUR REALTOR INVESTIGATE FOR YOU.”

The eerie listing photos only add to the property’s painful past. There, devastating reminders of the dwelling’s previous life remain: child’s toys, children’s bedrooms, and a play horse.

Murderer Chad Daybell’s house has a buyer.

Realtor.com

The buyer may choose to alter the home or simply tear it down.

Realtor.com

A child’s toy horse remains in the living room.

Realtor.com

The fenced property sits on 3.75 acres.

Realtor.com

Now it’s up to the buyer to decide what to do with the property that embodies so much anguish.

The next owner could alter the place or could opt to simply tear it down, as has happened with other infamous homes connected to murderous crimes.

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