Creative
Haunted Location Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A haunted location generator hands you eerie settings with a history and a lingering presence, ready to anchor a ghost story, horror campaign, or unsettling scene. Choose how many you want and it returns a shuffled set — a lighthouse whose lamp still turns though the keeper drowned, a flooded village that surfaces in drought with its bells ringing, a station for a railway never built. Writers and game masters use it because a great haunting is rooted in place: the location, its tragedy, and the way the past refuses to stay buried do most of the work of building dread. Each entry pairs a setting with a specific, uncanny detail rather than a generic ghost. Pick one, decide what happened there and what the presence wants, and let the place itself unsettle your characters before anything appears.
Read the complete guide — 4 min read
Loading usage…
Free forever — no account required
How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Choose how many haunted locations you want.
- Generate a set and pick one for your story.
- Decide what happened and what the presence wants.
- Let the place unsettle before anything appears.
Use Cases
- •Anchoring a ghost story in a place
- •Setting a horror campaign location
- •Writing an unsettling scene
- •Building dread before a reveal
- •Sparking a haunting from a detail
Tips
- →Root the dread in a specific, uncanny detail.
- →Give the haunting purpose and unfinished business.
- →Show the place, not the monster.
- →Restraint unsettles more than spectacle.
FAQ
what makes a haunting effective
A specific, uncanny detail rooted in place. The lamp that still turns or bells in a drowned village unsettle far more than a generic ghost drifting through a generic house.
how do i develop the location
Decide what happened there and what the presence wants. The tragedy and the unfinished business give the haunting purpose, which is what makes it frightening rather than random.
do i need to show a ghost
Rarely. The place doing the work — wrong details, impossible events — builds more dread than a visible monster. Restraint and suggestion are the heart of good horror.
You might also like
Popular tools from other categories that share themes with this one.