Documented haunts • folklore • eyewitness legends

Find the stories that still refuse to rest.

At PANICd.com, every location holds a story waiting to be uncovered. From forgotten cemeteries and abandoned asylums to historic landmarks hiding unsettling pasts, our database is built for those who seek more than just a place on a map. Each entry is a doorway into history, folklore, and firsthand paranormal claims gathered from years of exploration across the United States. Whether you are a seasoned investigator, a curious traveler, or someone drawn to the unexplained, PANICd.com invites you to step beyond the surface and explore the shadows where history and hauntings collide.

768 Documented haunted/historical locations
4,995 Documented paranormal claims
52 Documented stories
475 Locations personally visited

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Let viewers search by keyword, state, and haunt type right from the homepage.

Featured haunted locations

Card based storytelling similar in feel to major haunt directories, but styled for PANICd with stronger branding, cleaner search flow, and room for your own reports and cross promotion.

Browse All Locations
Hotels Marietta OHIO

The Hackett Hotel

The building that houses The Hackett Hotel was built in 1899 by Marietta oil man John H. Riley. More →

Theaters Cincinnati OHIO

Cincinnati Music Hall

Cincinnati Music Hall stands as one of the most recognizable landmarks in Ohio, rising in the Over the Rhine district across from Washington Park. More →

Homes or Mansions Hartford CONNECTICUT

Mark Twain House

The Mark Twain House and Museum in Hartford, Connecticut, was the home of Samuel Langhorne Clemens and his family from 1874 to 1891. More →

Browse by category

We have several categories to choice from to browse the locations. Below we selected just a few random selections.

Museums

Because museums house historical artifacts and objects that may hold strong emotional energy from their previous owners (including their remains), it is commonly believed that spirits can become attached to these items and thus the locations where they are kept and placed on display. This is especially true if the items are associated with tragic or significant events, making the museums potential hotspots for hauntings. These hauntings can manifest in various ways, such as unexplained sounds, sudden temperature drops, or even sightings of apparitions. Consequently, many museums have adopted ghost tours and paranormal investigations to explore these intriguing phenomena, attracting visitors curious about the supernatural.

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Bridges

Bridges are often thought to be haunted because they are the sites of tragic accidents, suicides, and violent events. This practice has led to the belief that the spirits of people who died there continue to linger at the location where their lives ended. This assumption is especially true when the deaths are sudden, gruesome, or associated with strong emotions like despair or fear. Bridges are elevated structures, which makes them more likely to be the site of accidents, falls, and even intentional self-harm. This creates the possibility of lingering ghosts. The fact that many bridges are in lonely locations might contribute to a feeling of discomfort and intensify the sensation of being alone with a ghostly presence. Numerous communities have stories of catastrophic events that have occurred on certain bridges. Some stories are frequently passed down from one generation to the next, which strengthens the belief that some bridges are haunted. In certain cultures, bridges are thought of as a symbolic connection between the living and the dead, which adds to the belief that ghosts are active on bridges.

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Bed and Breakfasts

There are instances when people feel that bed and breakfasts, which are typically attractive old properties, are haunted because of their historical context. Most often, bed and breakfasts are buildings with a rich and illustrious history, often dating back hundreds of years. After major events like deaths, disasters, or violent crimes, some buildings may acquire the reputation of being haunted within the community. Unlike hotels, bed & breakfasts often evoke uneasy feelings, as you are staying in someone's home or a museum. Such an experience can lead to feelings of intrusiveness rather than relaxation, as if you shouldn't be there. Bed and breakfasts may even choose to embrace their "haunted" reputation as a means of attracting visitors and ghost hunters. Such an approach would bolster the perception of haunted locations.

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Interactive haunted map

The PANICd Haunted Map is a powerful tool that brings hundreds of documented paranormal locations to life, allowing users to visually explore haunted sites across the country. By plotting real locations with precise geocodes, the map lets visitors discover nearby hauntings, filter by categories like cemeteries or historic buildings, and dive deeper into each site’s history and reported paranormal activity. Whether you are planning a road trip or simply exploring from home, the haunted map transforms raw data into an interactive experience that makes the unknown feel just a little closer.

Documented Stories We have several documented stories realted to biographies, folklore, true crime, cryptid, ufo, celebrity ghosts, obscure history and more.

Recently Added Locations

Here is a listing of our most recently added locations. Check back often as we are adding new locations as we find them.

Robert Louis Stevenson House

The Robert Louis Stevenson House in Monterey, California, is one of the oldest surviving buildings in the city, dating back to around 1836. More →

Joint Base Lewis–McChord

Joint Base Lewis-McChord has its origins in the early twentieth century when the United States military sought a strategic location in the Pacific Northwest for training and defense. More →

Fort Lewis College

Fort Lewis College is a public liberal arts college in Durango, Colorado, and the only four-year and graduate studies institution in the Four Corners region. More →

King George II Inn

The King George II Inn in Bristol, Pennsylvania, traces its origins back to 1681, when English settler Samuel Clift established a ferry crossing along the Delaware River and built a small public house to serve travelers. More →

Our Haunted Travels

Our Haunted Travels is based on locations that PANICd.com members and/or owners have visited to conduct research or an investigation based on reported paranormal claims within the PANICd.com database. All of the locations and articles posted here are based on personal experiences of the members and/or owners. We have also used the original PANICd.com YouTube channel to convert it over to Our Haunted Travels where have have documented the locations we have visited from the database on the channel. Below is a playlist on our videos within the most recent one produced.

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