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Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
CuriositiesJUN 16, 2025

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit

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Today, we are going to take you on an eerie adventure. Now, now, don’t be spooked. You are safe from wherever you are reading this story. However, we can’t guarantee that your mind will be safe from the creepiness that’s going to be unleashed. Piqued your interest, have we?
The big reveal is that we are going to share people’s experiences about some of the most unsettling places that they visited in the US. It was Reddit user Bennevada who asked Americans to open up about these spots, and we have compiled the best ones for you. Just scroll down to check them out!
More info: Reddit

#1

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
Years ago, I was taking a trip while on leave and stopped in nowhere, Kentucky at some random gas station named Reds. The sun had just gone down, and when I went inside and got a drink and some chips, the m**h head behind the counter said "you ain't from around here are ya?"
I told him i was on leave and passing through.

He looked at me and said "don't stop anywhere else for at least 30 miles for your own sake"

I took the hint and never stopped. That's when I learned that Sundown Towns doesn't always mean black folks aren't allowed. No one is allowed.
67points

#2

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
The wife (American) and I (Brit) were driving through rural Alabama, where churches seem to outnumber homes, and most of those homes are trailers. We decided to stop for lunch at a diner in a small community. There were quite a few cars parked outside, including 2 police cruisers, so we figured it must be pretty popular. We walked in, and it was like a scene from a movie where everybody stops and turns to look at you, forks halfway to mouths, words half spoken etc. It went totally silent, and never in my life have I felt so spooked, so unsettled, and the wife felt the same. We turned round, got back in our car and left as fast as possible.
53points

#3

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
We detoured through Vidor TX due to a road closure. The residents hung white sheets saying ‘don’t stop’ and ‘go that way’. They seem to have lots of white sheets.
52points

I know that some of you, who are always on the lookout for something fascinatingly morbid, will devour this list in a jiffy. Don't worry, I am not judging you because even I often find myself reading about such places with complete awe. Even though it makes people question what really goes on in our heads, I can assure you, we are not the only ones.

The thing is, there's a whole science behind why we are attracted to such places, and today, we will shed light on it. The ones who shared their experiences on the list might be too spooked to ever visit them again, but I would jump on any opportunity to go there if I get one. In fact, just thinking about apparitions, mannequins, abandoned places, and cults gives me a thrill right now!

#4

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
Red Haw, Ohio.

I've driven through it four times. Every single time it's the same story. Cars parked on the sides of the road, but no traffic. Doors wide open but nobody visible. No music, no people. Legitimately saw a ball roll across the street once and nobody could have thrown it. It looks like everyone who lives there disappears whenever I drive through and then spontaneously they reappear when I leave.
47points

#5

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
Years ago, my husband was driving through Appalachia (SE Ohio/WV) by himself. He suddenly found himself driving through a small town that seemed to be completely abandoned. Except that there were life-sized mannequins posed all over doing everyday “tasks”. Walking dogs, fixing roofs, sitting at picnic tables. It was a tiny village in the middle of the mountains. He said he drove through as quickly as possible.
47points

#6

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
A Brit here but when I was a visiting prof I went on a road trip. My exhaust came loose as I climbed into the mountains out of Utah; I thought I could tie it up and make it back to Colorado but a trooper pulled me over and told me to pull off the freeway at the next exit and get it fixed.

I got off into this one street town and there was a hardware store with a rusted model T ford in the window through which I could see one very old guy talking to a slightly younger one. I went in and asked if they were open and they said ‘no, we shut down 20 years ago, but how can we help you?’ I said I needed some wire to tie my exhaust up and the younger guy said I have some at my house down the street, he can give me a ride to get it. British politeness insisted that I accept the serial k**lers kind offer to help by taking me to his m**der house rather than hurt his feelings. So I got in his truck, he gave me the wire and did not use it to tie me up and k**l me. Both of which I was grateful for. Turned out he had returned to his old town to pack up his parents’ house and visited the hardware store owner who he used to work for as a high schooler. If I had been m******d it would have been my just desserts for being such a dumb a*s who had apparently never learned a single lesson from any horror movie!
46points

Many of the stories in the list speak about abandoned places being spooky due to a lack of human presence. Research suggests that our brains are pretty much programmed to expect certain vibes from certain places. Like, when you walk into a concert stadium, you expect crowds, noise, lights, the whole wild experience.

The same goes for a school (you expect kids) or a parking lot (you expect cars). That’s the “story” those places usually tell us, what some people call spatial narratives. However, when you walk into one of those places and it’s totally empty, it throws you off.

That weird, slightly off feeling hits because it's your brain telling you that this isn’t how this is supposed to feel. There's no crowd to follow, no cues, no action, almost as if someone forgot to hand you the script. Suddenly, you're noticing stuff you normally wouldn’t, and it makes you see the space in a whole new and slightly unsettling way.

#7

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
I don't even know the name of it, somewhere in Ohio. Stopped to have some dinner, and not feeling fast food again we went to a local restaurant instead. It was the only one around. The place was mostly empty tables except one elderly couple and a big round table of maybe 10 people way in the back. Everyone went quiet when we walked in and a few people actively stared. We waited by the door for a few minutes before an employee approaches and tells us their kitchen is super backed up and there was no way they could serve us. So, back to the highway for fast food it was.
Davran, chatGPT
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41points

#8

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
Not American but similar circumstance. I'm Welsh and live in South Wales, if I go to North Wales and enter a pub/bar it's like that scene on a movie when some backpackers enter a village pub and all of its patrons stop what they are doing, put down there drinks and stare at you. I had it happen in a place called Portdinllaen. You'd think they'd recognise I am Welsh too, but nope it was such a strange experience felt like I was in some hick backwoods kinda place I wasn't supposed to be.
36points

#9

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
Clearwater, FL. Mostly everything about it is normal Florida beach town (or seemingly as normal as Florida can be), but the presence of the huge Scientology building downtown gives the city this weird and unsettling aura, like there's crazy s**t going on within those walls and you should stay far away.
35points

According to Francis McAndrew, Professor of Psychology at Knox College in Galesburg, Illinois, "Places can creep us out for the very same reasons that people can: by presenting us with ambiguous information that makes it unclear if the place poses a threat or not. Places have this effect on us because they activate an evolved psychological adaptation known as an agent-detection mechanism."

It's basically a mental alarm system that evolved to help us spot danger, like predators or enemies. When a space feels off or gives us vague, unclear vibes, that system kicks in. Even if there’s no actual threat, your mind thinks that it's better to be safe than sorry.

That's why, sometimes empty hallways or abandoned buildings creep us out, not because they are dangerous, but because they’re just confusing enough to make our instincts question them.

#10

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
Not a town, but there is a little backroad in Georgia named “Trail of Tears Road.” My wife and I drove on it, and it was a beautiful, sunny day when we made the turn.

As soon as we were on the road, it started raining, and the weather got worse and worse until it was like driving in a hurricane. Then, as soon as we got to the end of the road and turned onto the highway, the skies cleared up and it was a beautiful sunny day again.

Super weird experience, and now years later, when strange things happen in the world, we joke with each other that it’s all a dream and we’re still trapped on Trail of Tears Road.
32points

#11

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
Jasper, Texas. I’m not trying to be mean but there are enough observable birth defects to make you question if you should be drinking the water.
32points

#12

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
Harrison, Arkansas has billboards for White Power Radio. I had heard about it on the internet but had forgotten, until some friends and I went camping on the buffalo River. It's 100% legit.
31points

It has been observed that our fascination with something like creepy places or ghost tours stems from a fascinating blend of human psychology, cultural influences, and media portrayals. Basically, this attraction taps into our inherent evolutionary instincts, our natural curiosity about what lies beyond our understanding, and our desire for shared experiences.

Well, both the wild rush of a creepy place and the eerie fun of a ghost tour actually give us a safe spot to play with our biggest fears and curiosities. It's like a mini-vacation from real life, letting us peek into how our brains tick when we're a little scared.

Honestly, as long as we're hooked on mysteries and chasing thrills, haunted houses and ghost tours aren't going anywhere. It really just shows how much fear shapes us and how much we're drawn to it.

#13

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
I drove to Bonnaroo back in 2006 with 3 friends. 3 of us are not white. We stopped for gas and snacks in some small town in rural Tennessee and the gas station was one of those where you just walk up to the window and the clerk is basically inside a little room. There were maybe 8 or so locals lined up in front of us so we took our place at the back of the line.

All of a sudden the clerk makes a little head nod right at us and everyone just turned back to look at us, like literally everyone in the line, then they all just stepped to each side and one guy in a southern drawl says "whelp, better just git em on and git em out, fellas".

We walked up, paid for our stuff and as we were walking back to the car someone else said "you fellas better be heading right to the next county, best not to stick around long". There was a cop in that crowd too.

We bee-lined right tf out of there and didn't stop again until we got to the festival grounds.
30points

#14

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
Tonopha NV. On the north end of the Tonopha missle range and Area 51. It's the beginning of no where and is home to the world's largest Clown Motel.

Only reason to stop is for gas and get TF outta there as quickly as possible.
28points

#15

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
Not little town, but Salt Lake City always feels like I'm not supposed to be there...
28points

I think all that psychological reasoning pretty much shows that we are not crazy for being fascinated with such spooky places. Big sigh of relief, right? Anyway, that's it from our end, dear readers. Now we want to hear your spooky stories, so leave them in the comments.

Also, for all the thrill-seekers out there, you have a whole list of morbidly fascinating places to visit now, so what are you waiting for? Go check them out!

#16

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
The area around the Salton Sea in southern California. In particular I'm thinking of the upper half of the western shore, towns like Salton City, Desert Shores, and Oasis. None of them had cult vibes, I actually quite enjoyed the people there.

Back in the 1960s, a bunch of resort towns popped up along the sea. In the 1980s, agricultural runoff severely polluted the sea. There were also wild variations in the salinity of the sea, and those two factors combined to k**l off a ton of the sea's fish. The dead fish washed up on shore, the sight and smell of which pretty well k**led the tourism industry. What remains is an ecological disaster and a bunch of not quite ghost towns. It's a really eerie corner of the world, and as someone who's spent a lot of time in tiny back towns across the western states, the Salton Sea area is definitely unique in my memory.
27points

#17

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
Rural Alabama is a deeply depressing place, you'll pass towns with all the businesses shuttered up and nobody around.
25points

#18

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
Arco, Idaho


First town in the world to be fueled by nuclear power. They had an incident there in 1961. Stopped for gas on the way to Craters of the Moon National Monument. Dust balls rolling across the streets. Desolate at the time. Little kid no more than 10 years old sitting on the floor in the gas station looking at nudie magazines. Kid was the clerk’s son. I jokingly told my buddy to get back in the car and lock the doors. We were fully excepting to see people with three arms. 

If you’re from Arco, I’m certain it’s a nice place. This was the late 90’s and it was a boring weekday afternoon so please don’t be offended. Town was just a little eerie. .
25points

#19

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
I once was on a road trip from South Dakota to Pennsylvania. I stopped off the interstate in some small Wisconsin town to use the restroom inside a small bar.

Every inch of that bathroom was covered in the most disgusting racist graffiti you can imagine. Never seen anything like it before or since.
24points

#20

Americans Spill The Tea On 34 Of The Creepiest Places In The US That They Never Ever Want To Visit
One time my partner and I were driving through the absolute middle of no where in upstate New York. It’s getting dark. There’s snow on the ground. It’s creepy enough.

Then a deer slowly walks in front of our car. I slow down and stop. It stops..

It turns its head fully to look at us.

The entire other half of its face was shredded.

Just strips of raw red flesh hanging off.

The scream we scrumpt.
23points
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