Real Estate

Home with a fully functioning post office lists for $405K

Consider this listing signed, sealed andꦅ deಌlivered.

A 2,000-square-foot house in Paeonian Springs, Virginia, c♑omes with a perk that many modern-day Americans would covet: the simple ability of never, ever missing a shipment.

That’s because the home has a fully functioning post office attached to it.

Priced at $405,000, the three-bedroom, one-bathroom Cape Cod-style property comes with an “income-producing” twist, the listing says.

“The side of the home is rented out to the USPS, which is currently within lease, and has been for decades,” the listing notes, adding that any prospective buyers who want to break the decades-long lease with the post office have that option, too.

Standing on a “quiet established street,” the home first listed for sale in January for $465,000. Five months later it received a $60,000 price cut and has since entered contract.

Built in 1930, this is the first tim🌟e the property has hit t🐻he market in nearly 30 years.

The post office next door has been leased out for the past three decades. Jam Press/Jacob Reid
An image of the post office. Jam Press/Jacob Reid
The front porch. Jam Press/Jacob Reid
The entryway to the post office. Jam Press/Jacob Reid
The cute kitchen. Jam Press/Jacob Reid

Sara Duncan with ReMax 1st Realty holds the li๊sting.

It wasn’t long before the home went viral on Facebook, with many keen on the idea of living there — not just for having a post office close at hand.

“So sweet and simple… I would sit on the porch and ♛wave at everyone,” a user named Melanie Lemen Swope 🐽said.

A look inside the living space. Jam Press/Jacob Reid
The sole bathroom. Jam Press/Jacob Reid
One of three bedrooms. Jam Press/Jacob Reid
Another bedroom. Jam Press/Jacob Reid

“Good way to meet yo🔯ur neighbors,” a user named Patti Pierce Burns adde꧋d.

Susan Stevenson commented: “I love this and I would be happy livi༒ng next or with a post office.”

“This i🌃s what we needed. Neither of us 𒊎would have ever been late to work this way,” Alicia Spivey quipped.