In Los Angeles, there’s a 3-bedroom, 3-bath single-family home at the end of a cul-de-sac that’s currently empty and waiting to be rented. It’s got hardwood floors, exposed beams on the ceiling, a brick patio, and a hillside view of the city below. It can be yours for only $9,595 a month.

But there’s a catch: In September someone died in the house. That’s why it’s currently on the market.

The person who took their last breath there was the 26-year-old rapper Mac Miller, who had been renting the property before overdosing on Sept. 7.

Thanks to the California Civil Code, realtor Robert E. Howell must tell anyone who ends up buying or renting the property that someone died there if it happened within the last three years.

But if the house goes on the market again after 2021, realtors no longer have to disclose that information. It’s likely the person who lives in that house 20 years from now will have no idea not only of who Mac Miller was, but that he died there, as well.

So how do you find out if there was a death in the house you live in or are about to sign a lease for?

You go online; there’s a website for that.

With a straight-forward, no-nonsense name, Died in House is an online database of U.S. addresses that tells you who used to live in that house, whether anyone died there, and other information realtors aren’t generally obligated to disclose.

By cross referencing more than 118 million records, Died in House can tell you if there have been any fires or “reported meth activity” in the house, including labs, dumpsites, or seizures of chemicals and glassware. It also tells you if any sex offenders lived on the property, how many are registered in the area, and how many suicides happen per year in the state.