But the Anne Frank Stichting said it had no plans to use the "other home" as a museum, like the one in Amsterdam's famous canal belt which draws thousands of visitors every year.
"It's important for the foundation that the home where Anne Frank lived in the 1930s remains intact and is looked after in a proper way," spokeswoman Annemarie Bekker said.
"It has a very special character... the home situated at the Merwedeplein (square) is inextricably linked to Anne Frank," Bekker added.
The Frank family lived in the modest brick building from 1934 until they went into hiding in 1944.
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Fuzzy black-and-white pictures show a smiling Anne looking from the home's window frame or sitting in a deck chair on its roof terrace.
On July 6, 1942 the Franks went underground as the Nazis were rounding up Jewish families after invading The Netherlands in 1940.
In her diary, Anne chronicled her life in hiding until August 1944, when her family was most likely betrayed and sent to Nazi concentration camps.
Her diary, writing during her time in hiding is one of the most moving testimonies of the war and among the most famous diaries of all time.
More than 30 million copies have been sold, and numerous adaptations of the book have been made, including plays, television series and a film.
The house has been restored to its original 1930s style.
Since 2005 it had been let out to the Dutch Foundation for Literature, which uses it as a home for writers forced to flee their countries because of persecution.
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