The āBreaking Badā House Officially Has a New Owner: A Streamer Who Bid $1.3 Million for the Ranch
The āBreaking Badā House Officially Has a New Owner: A Streamer Who Bid $1.3 Million for the Ranch
Kimberlee SpeakmanThu, February 26, 2026 at 6:24 PM UTC
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Credit: John Nacion/Variety via Getty; christensen group -
Streamer Adin Ross reportedly purchased Walter Whiteās home from Breaking Bad
The house had been up for sale for over a year, and initially had an asking price of $4 million dollars
The home was re-listed for $400,000 earlier this month by Alicia Feil of Keller Williams Realty and received about 20 offers
Walter Whiteās home from Breaking Bad is off the market.
Streamer Adin Ross reportedly purchased the house over a year after it was put up for sale by its previous owners. He bid $1.3 million to buy the property, according to TMZ and the Albuquerque Journal.
The four-bedroom, one-bathroom, 1,910 sq. ft. home located in Albuquerque, N.M. was initially listed with a hefty $4 million dollar asking price ā far more than its estimated market value of $343,100, per Zillow.
However, the owners of the house took it off the market and it was re-listed by Alicia Feil of Keller Williams Realty for $400,000 earlier this month, according to the outlets.
Feil told Albuquerque Journal that she had listed it for a lower price hoping to entice more potential buyers ā and it worked.
Credit: christensen group
Ross, an internet personality who gained recognition streaming on Twitch, was able to outbid around 20 other offers for the home, which was featured throughout all five seasons of the AMC series from 2008 to 2013.
āI was genuinely surprised by the sheer intensity of global interest, especially given that the series ended more than a decade ago,ā Feil told the Albuquerque Journal, adding that the sale is āa true testament to the quality of the show and the enduring, almost timeless, devotion of its fans.ā
While Feil did not confirm the buyer to the outlets, Ross reportedly announced during a livestream that he signed paperwork making him the new owner of the home, per the Journal.
āWe got that done, and Iām very happy about that,ā Ross said, according to the outlet.
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He also noted on the stream that he was trying to connect with a builder who could redesign the home into a āone-to-oneā replica of how the interior appeared in the Breaking Bad show, saying, āIām very excited to dissect this house and get there and do all that fun stuff.ā
PEOPLE has reached out to Ross and Keller Williams Realty for comment on the purchase.
Eric Padilla, whose family owned the home for more than 50 years told the Journal that it was āa reliefā that they were able to sell it and they are ready to let someone else enjoy it. He told the outlet, āIt worked out to our benefit and weāre good.ā
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The home is a popular pilgrimage site for fans of the show, and people often gather in front of the home to take pictures and videos. Instagram user @santi.s._ offered viewers a behind-the-scenes look at a day in the life of owner Joanne Quintana, who previously lived at the property.
She could be seen spraying fans with a hose as they looked at the house from behind a tall metal gate and warning them not to get too close to take pictures.
While Quintana didnāt confirm the exact reason for her family's decision to sell at the time, she did tell the outlet that the constant attention was becoming too much for them. She noted that once fans sent a package addressed to Breaking Bad character āWalter Whiteā and they called authorities, which led to a bomb squad being sent to the home.
āMy brothers said, thatās it, weāre done, fence is going up. Thatās too close for comfort,ā she said, adding that an average of 300 cars would drive by the property each day.
on People
Source: āAOL Entertainmentā