House hunters were left scratching their heads at a £330,000 property featuring a four-toilet communal bathroom.
The six bedroom house, in Milwaukee, United States, comes with four toilets but the challenge is that they are all in one room.
Even more bizarrely, the toilets are stood next to one another in a row with no partitions walls to allow for privacy.
So while multiple people can use the bathroom all at once, they will have to look at each other while they do so.
The bathroom also features four sinks which are also positioned neatly in a row opposite their respective toilet systems.
An additional two bathrooms means the six-bed house has enough toilets for everybody to have their own porcelain throne.
Despite its unconventional layout, the house in Wisconsin state received 25 viewings in a single week and an offer has since been accepted from a buyer.
The property is modern and stylish throughout measuring 3,913 sqft plus a front yard and garden area.
Online sales particulars show a stunning farmhouse kitchen with a modern twist, large bedrooms and a conservatory area.
Photographs also show a seating area with period windows, elaborate ceilings and beautiful wooden flooring.
And a decadent dining room includes old fashioned-style radiators, wooden beams and an entire wall of windows.
The building was originally a farmhouse named Hawthorne House built in 1851 by the Fowle family, reports TMJ4.
It was eventually donated to the Girl Scouts of America who made additions including the unusual bathroom suite.
Herbert Hoover's wife shared tea with girl scouts at the house, according to Jane DiChristopher, a broker associated with Mahler Sotheby's International Realty in Milwaukee.
The current owner bought the bizarre property two years ago with plans to put it on Airbnb.
Its previous residents had owned the property for 40 years and it never had any partitions between the toilets.
The home was put back on the market in early January with a price tag of $450,000, or £329,870.
Not one of its several owners have installed partitions in the communal loo since 1851 and the future owner's plans are not known.