Donald Trump’s childhood home, a spacious brick and stucco Tudor house, has gone on sale.

While you don’t need a look inside the rustic property to know the Republican Presidential Candidate was born with a silver spoon in his mouth, it definitely feeds into our curiosity.

Unsurprisingly, Jamaica Estates in the New York borough of Queens is a firmly upper middle class neighborhood, with million-dollar homes and plenty of trees lining the streets.

His birthplace at 85-15 Wareham Place is no exception, with its last list price of $1,399,000 (€1,246,788.80, £1,054,300.39).

So, what’s the house Trump was born and spent a good part of his childhood in like?

First of all, it’s big, stretching over roughly 2,500 square feet (232.3 square meters). It also sits in a 4,800 square foot (445.9 square meter) lot.

It’s built on a full basement, accesible through two outside entrances, which hosts a multi-purpose room as well as a full bath and summer kit.

On the ground floor, the living room, boasting a working fireplace, leads through to the formal dining room.

From the eat-in kitchen sliding doors open into the sun room.

The office can double as an extra bedroom, with a half-bath completing the floor’s layout.

Bed- and bathrooms entirely take up the property’s other floors.

On the second floor, four bedrooms share two full bathrooms, none of them with en-suite access.

A bit more privacy is awarded on the third floor, which is exclusively home to the fifth bathroom and another full bathroom.

Outside the property, a detached garage can hold two cars, with the paved driveway having enough room for another five.

Now, the current owners have decided to sell the property through auction, because they want to ‘let buyers dictate the market’ and find out what the property is really worth.

‘We’re not going to have a problem selling it,’ the property’s listing agent, Howard Kaminowitz of Laffey Real Estate, told Newsday.

‘This is the perfect opportunity to take advantage of the Trump bump.’

The auction, set for 19 October, will take place at Manhattan’s Roosevelt Hotel; participants will need to bring a bank of certified check of $90,000 (€80,208, £67,824.9) to the auction.