Who wouldn’t want to live in a real-life horror house?

The California home where David and Louise Turpin allegedly tortured their children — keeping them shackled to furniture with chains and padlocks — went up for sale Saturday.

Bidding for the 2,386-square-foot, single-story Perris house was up to $202,001 by Sunday morning on hudsonandmarshall.com.

The auction, set to close Jan. 2, is being conducted on behalf of an unnamed lender after the “house of horrors” foreclosed in November, the Press-Enterprise reported.

But the real estate website makes no mention of the house’s stomach-churning history.

A dozen emaciated and unwashed siblings, ages 2 to 29, were found chained and surrounded by filth inside the six-year-old home, about 70 miles east of Los Angeles, on Jan. 14.

The discovery was made when a 17-year-old girl escaped from the hell house through a window and called the cops on a cellphone she managed to sneak out with her.

“Sometimes I wake up and I can’t breathe because of how dirty our house is,” the teen said in the 911 call, which was played to the court at a pre-trial hearing for her parents.

When the sick couple were arrested, detectives described the inside of the house as filthy and smelly.

An inspection report attached to the auction listing described the inside conditions as “fair” and said that papers and a mattress were found inside. The report was provided by the seller.

A recent appraisal of the four-bedroom, three-bathroom property by Riverside County was for $353,138.

A customer service representative for Hudson and Marshall told the Press-Enterprise that the home’s sordid past “has been brought to our attention.” The company said they plan to add some of the details to the property description.

Based on California real estate law, agents need to reveal any deaths that occurred at a residence in the past three years or if there had been exposure to a controlled substance, like from a meth lab — but not any other criminal actions.

David Turpin, 57, and Louise Turpin, 50, are due to face trial on Sept. 3, 2019, on a collective 88 felony charges including torture, child cruelty and false imprisonment.