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Buying a home is supposed to be one of life’s big victories. For one family, it’s turned into a nightmare that smells like stale smoke and mildew.
The homeowner, who closed on a $325,000 house just last week, said she’s been “ruminating and crying” ever since moving in. According to her Reddit post, at first she brushed off a faint musty odor during showings. The place had been vacant for six months, and her agent assured her it was nothing more than stale air. But once her family unpacked, the smell hit harder.
“To say I’m freaking out is an understatement,” she wrote. “I’m terrified I have ruined our lives and am exposing my kids to third-hand smoke.” What once seemed like a dream home—perfect school district, ideal layout—now feels like a trap.
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The homeowner admitted she knew the house needed work. There was visible mold in the basement, and the plan was always to fix it up. With similar homes in the neighborhood going for $450,000, the $325,000 price tag seemed like a steal. But instead of relief, she’s living with constant anxiety.
Before moving the kids in, she’s already committed to a long and expensive checklist: tearing out basement paneling and carpet for mold remediation, full duct cleaning, replacing 75% of the flooring, painting walls with primer, gutting built-ins, and even scheduling an ozone treatment to kill odors. “I’m so scared that we will do all this and it won’t matter,” she confessed. “I have so much regret and feel so dumb for buying this home.”
Responses poured in from seasoned homeowners, landlords, and renters who’ve fought the same battles. One blunt voice told her: “It’s a smell, not a haunting.” Their advice? Rip out the carpets, paint everything, and open the windows. Another added, “90% of the time, bad smell is repaired with new paint and new floor.”
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Several recommended ozone blasting—so long as nothing living is left inside—while others swore by washing every wall or coating subfloors with Kilz to block lingering odors. One landlord, who said he’s restored dozens of rentals ruined by smoke, pets, and mold, assured her: “It’s COMPLETELY repairable. Your house is gonna turn a total 180 after all this.”
The comments mixed tough love with empathy. Many admitted they’d cried after discovering hidden smells in their own homes but found fixes that worked. Others offered caution: timing matters with ozone treatments, and ignoring mold or duct issues could make remediation harder down the road.
Still, the thread revealed what every homeowner eventually learns—houses come with surprises, and not all of them are pleasant. One commenter summed it up with a wink: “Nobody wants guests leaving and saying, ‘Nice place… but what’s that smell?’ You’re doing the right things. Battle on.”
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And while one house can feel overwhelming, some people chase the dream of owning two, five, or even a dozen properties. That’s where things get messy—maintenance, tenants, taxes, and all the risks multiply. Arrived, a Jeff Bezos-backed platform, takes a different approach by letting people invest in fractional shares of rental homes for as little as $100. You don’t deal with mold remediation or hidden smoke damage, but you still get a cut of rental income and appreciation if the property rises in value. For many, it’s a way to tap into real estate wealth without the heartbreak of discovering a “smelly house” after closing.
For the family stuck in their $325,000 gamble, that reassurance might not erase the stress. But at least it proves they’re not the first—and won’t be the last—to discover that homeownership sometimes stinks.
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This article ‘I’m Terrified I Have Ruined Our Lives,’ Says Homeowner After Dropping $325k On A ‘Smelly House’ That Reeks of Cigarettes and Mold —’Feel So Dumb’ originally appeared on Benzinga.com
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