This creepy cottage looks beautiful from the outside, but the lakefront home is where cross-dressing accused killer Robert Durst, son of the late billionaire developer Seymour Durst, lived before his first wife’s disappearance.

The stately yet cursed home at 62 Hoyt Street in South Salem is now on the market for $1.1 million — far less than the $1.675 million that the late financial analyst Vincent Farrell paid for it in 2013, before he died of cancer the following year.

The 2,386-square-foot home boasts three bedrooms and four bathrooms.

Built in 1929, it sits on .62 acres and comes with more than 200 feet of frontage on the ironically named Lake Truesdale.

The listing boasts that the owner can “enjoy the water year round.” It goes on to say: “Boating, fishing, swimming and ice skating all at your doorstep. Enchanting with sophisticated details.” Nowhere does the listing mention that this is where Robert Durst lived with his first wife at the time of her disappearance.

The home comes with a vaulted ceiling in the living room, a stone fireplace and doors to the deck. This is the room where Durst and McCormack often argued — Durst was known to be both verbally and physically abusive to Kathleen McCormack before her disappearance. So much so that McCormack told her friends to make sure to investigate if she ever disappeared.

The home also features an open kitchen with a sitting area, a corner fireplace and “mesmerizing water views” according to the listing.

The master suite boasts an additional fireplace and a wall of windows overlooking “this water wonderland,” the listing goes on to say.

In addition, the property features three terraces, gardens, a private dock — perhaps for a quick escape — and a “lush lawn.”

After living here, Durst went on to be implicated in the murder of a female pal, Susan Berman, just as prosecutors were zeroing in on him for McCormack’s disappearance and about to interview Berman. Durst then fled to Texas where he lived as a deaf mute women before he killed his neighbor and hacked off his limbs.

Durst’s current wife is Debrah Lee Charatan, who uses Durst’s money to build her own killer real estate empire and who was also allegedly helping to plan Durst’s escape to Cuba before his current arrest last March in New Orleans for murder.

Durst’s childhood home, a Tudor in Scarsdale, went on the market last April for $3.8 million. It was de-listed in September.