👀Step Inside Joseph Duggar’s $400k Property Goes Up For Sale Ahead Of Trial — The Jaw-Dropping Detail Everyone’s Talking About!

The Duggar property in Arkansas is going on the market a few months after Kendra Duggar discussed selling the home with her husband, Joseph, during a jail phone call. Kendra Duggar is selling one of the Arkansas homes she co-owns with Joseph Duggar ahead of his trial.
The couple is asking $407,900 for the three-bedroom, two-bathroom house, which covers 1,738 square feet and sits on 1.14 acres in Siloam Springs, according to various real estate listings.
This is the same home where Kendra’s family had been staying rent-free before claiming they were asked to leave after the arrests of their daughter and Joseph in March. The listing does not come as a surprise, as Kendra and Joseph discussed the decision during a jail phone call on March 25.

In that call, which PEOPLE obtained, the couple talked about whether it would be better to sell the property or keep it as a rental, which could provide Kendra with steady income if Joseph ends up in prison.
The house is on land that also contains other homes, which Joseph and Kendra rent out for short-term stays. Property records in Arkansas show this land is currently valued at around $26,000.
Joseph first brought up the idea of selling the house in that jail call and told Kendra she could use the money to build a new home.
Joseph Duggar Back To Court To Ask For Change In Release Conditions
“It’s a lot cheaper to build, I think you build it for 60 [thousand dollars],” Joseph said. He is scheduled to appear in court on June 16 to ask for a change in his release conditions that currently ban him from having unsupervised contact with children under 18, seeking an exception so he can see his own children.
A motion filed last month in a Florida court stated Joseph had “been unable to communicate with his own biological children” since his initial court appearance on March 31.
He also had not been able to contact the children prior to his release, as he and Kendra faced four charges of endangering the welfare of a minor in the second degree and four charges of false imprisonment in the second degree in Arkansas.

These charges are unrelated to the Florida charges. Kendra was able to reunite with the children in mid-April, but the current order “is creating a hardship for the family unit,” Joseph’s attorney stated in his motion.
Joseph and Kendra have both pleaded not guilty to all charges.




