Houses For Sale In Europe (page 11)

Houses for sale in europe - homestra offers the largest amount of european real estate with over 200,000+ properties, find any type of property within your budget from villas to country homes. buy or rent your perfect home in europe. (page 11)

Picture this: a Sunday morning in rural Deux-Sèvres, the kitchen smelling of fresh bread from the park's delivery service, a coffee in hand, French doors open wide onto a south-facing garden already warm by nine. The only sound is birdsong and, faintly, the satisfying thwack of a golf club from the 27-hole course that runs along the park's edge. This is the quiet rhythm of life at Domaine Le Bois Senis — and this two-bedroom bungalow puts you right at the center of it. Les Forges sits in the gentle countryside of Deux-Sèvres, a department that most international travelers drive through on their way to somewhere more obvious. Their loss. This pocket of Poitou-Charentes has the kind of rolling agricultural calm that's almost impossible to find in over-touristed parts of France — sunflower fields in July, morning mist over the bocage hedgerows in autumn, local markets where the vendor knows your name by your third visit. The village center is literally a five-minute walk from the park's gate, where you'll find a well-stocked local shop and the kind of unpretentious English pub that becomes a social anchor for the international community that's made Domaine Le Bois Senis its second home. The bungalow itself sits at 80 square meters, compact but genuinely well-thought-out. High ceilings with exposed wooden beams keep the living room from ever feeling small — there's a generosity to the proportions that photographs struggle to convey. The open fireplace isn't decorative; come November, when the countryside turns amber and the pool closes for the season, you'll actually use it. Air conditioning handles the other end of the spectrum during July and August when Deux-Sèvres bakes pleasantly under long Aquitaine-adjacent summers. ... click here to read more

Photo 1 of Le Bois Senis 70

Imagine waking up on a Saturday morning in September, the smell of pine drifting in through the bedroom window, the surface of Bullaresjön completely still. You pull on a sweater, put coffee on, and stand at the kitchen window watching the mist lift off the water. That's not a fantasy—that's a Tuesday here at Klageröd 5, in one of Bohuslän's quieter, less tourist-trampled corners. Bullaren sits in Tanums kommun, about 20 kilometers inland from the dramatic granite coastline of the Swedish west coast. If you know the area, you already know why people keep coming back. If you don't, here's the short version: it's the kind of place where your phone starts feeling irrelevant by mid-afternoon. The house itself is a single-story 78-square-meter property in solid condition—renovated, clean, and genuinely move-in ready. Two bedrooms, one well-fitted bathroom with a proper shower, and an open-plan living and dining area built around a wood-burning fireplace. That fireplace isn't decorative. Come November, when the temperature drops and the lake turns gunmetal grey, it's the center of the whole house. Evenings are spent there. Long weekends are organized around it. There's a reason Swedish interior culture puts such stock in the concept of eldstad—a real fire changes the character of a room entirely. The kitchen has been updated without losing the practical, unfussy character that Swedish country homes do so well. Enough counter space to actually cook a proper meal—and you will, because the local food culture here is built around doing exactly that. The village store in nearby Östad stocks local honey, smoked meats, and seasonal produce. In summer, the roadside stands along Route 163 sell strawberries and new potatoes by the ki ... click here to read more

Front view of the house and garden

Picture a Saturday morning in late June. The Swedish sun has been up since four, and by the time you pull on your jacket and step onto the wrap-around terrace with a mug of coffee, the birch forest at the edge of the garden is already doing that thing it does in Södermanland summers — throwing long gold light through the leaves while the air smells faintly of pine resin and damp earth. Lake Långhalsen is a four-minute walk down the path. Nobody else is awake yet. This is Utterspåret 11. It's a compact, honest house — 57 square meters built in 1979, maintained with genuine care, and set on a 1,620 square meter plot that gives you the kind of breathing room that's increasingly hard to find at this price point in Sweden. Two bedrooms, one bathroom, a kitchen that works, and a living room anchored by a wood-burning stove that you'll use far more than you expect once October settles over Nyköping and the lake mist starts rolling in each morning. The stove isn't decorative. Come winter, it's the heart of the house. The terrace wraps the exterior and has both open and covered sections — a deliberate design that Swedes know well. You want sun in May when the temperature is still erratic. You want shade in July when it isn't. You want cover in August when the afternoon rain passes through. The terrace handles all of it, and it's large enough for a proper outdoor table, a couple of sun loungers, and whatever outdoor project you get absorbed in over a long weekend. The plot itself borders forest on one side, with no immediate neighbours on that flank. The garden is flat, open, and generous — room for a vegetable patch, a trampoline, a fire pit, a hammock between the birches. The side building currently runs as a small workshop a ... click here to read more

Exterior view of Utterspåret 11

Saturday morning, and the only sound is birdsong threading through the open bedroom window. No traffic hum, no city noise — just the low rustle of a southwest breeze moving through the garden hedgerow and the distant clang of a church bell from the old Sint-Petrus church in Ravels village. You came here for exactly this. And somehow, it's even quieter than you imagined. De Buskens 13 sits in one of the most sought-after residential pockets of Ravels-Eel, a corner of the Belgian Campine region that manages to feel genuinely off the beaten track while staying remarkably well-connected. The Dutch border is barely five minutes by car. Antwerp is about an hour. Eindhoven — with its international airport — sits comfortably within reach for European weekenders flying in. Yet when you're standing in this garden on a Tuesday afternoon, the rest of the world feels optional. Built in 2010, the villa covers 347 square metres across three well-considered floors, and the thing that strikes you on a first walk-through is how thoughtfully it all flows. Nothing feels squeezed or tacked on. The entrance hall sets a composed, unhurried tone — there's a guest toilet immediately off it, a detail that sounds minor until the tenth dinner party when you're grateful for it. The main living space opens generously off the hall, anchored by a wood-burning fireplace that becomes the undisputed centrepiece from October through March. Pull the chairs close, light it, and the room transforms completely. In summer, the same room breathes outward toward the dining area and into the garden beyond, the southwest orientation meaning light pours through well into the evening. The kitchen is fully fitted with modern built-in appliances and includes a break ... click here to read more

Front view of De Buskens 13

Step outside on a July morning at Örviks byväg 18 and the air carries something particular — a mix of pine resin, cut grass, and the faint salt tang drifting in from the Baltic just 1.7 kilometres away. The southwest sun is already hitting the glazed conservatory. Coffee in hand, you watch a pair of cranes pick their way across the meadow. This is Roslagen in its quietest, most honest form. Not a postcard. The real thing. Herräng sits roughly 100 kilometres north of Stockholm along the Uppland coast, tucked into the northern reaches of the Roslagen archipelago — a region Swedes have been quietly keeping to themselves for generations. This particular property sits about 4 kilometres south of Herräng village proper, on a lane where the neighbours are mostly birch trees and the occasional tractor. The address, Örviks byväg 18, places you on the edge of the Örvikssjön lake, roughly 350 metres from the water's edge. On still evenings you can hear the lake. On windy ones, you can hear the sea. The main house is a 1.5-storey building measuring 130 square metres, in good condition and ready to move into without a renovation project hanging over your first summer. Ground floor has a proper layout for a family: a hallway that opens naturally into a generous living room, a kitchen that works, a bedroom, and a laundry room with WC. Upstairs, two more bedrooms and a bathroom share the space with a family room and, critically, a balcony with partial views over Örvikssjön. That balcony matters more than it sounds on paper — sitting up there as the light shifts over the water at 9pm in June, with the sky still pale gold, is one of those Swedish summer moments that makes people buy property in this country and never fully leave. The g ... click here to read more

Main house and yard

Saturday morning, the coffee is already made. You carry your mug out onto the wide wooden deck and the forest is right there — birch and pine, close enough to hear the wind move through it. A woodpecker hammers somewhere out of sight. The cul-de-sac at Torsborg is completely still. No passing traffic, no sirens. Just the slow, unhurried feel of a Swedish summer morning doing exactly what it's supposed to do. This 1958 country home on the elevated end plot of Torsborg sits on a generous 1,638 square meters of garden and woodland-edge land in the Torsborg area of Eskilstuna — a location that doesn't get talked about enough outside Sweden, which is partly why properties here still represent genuine value. At 89,500 EUR for a move-in-ready holiday home with a guest cottage, fiber internet, and 35 square meters of well-kept interior space, this is the kind of find that serious second-home buyers move on quickly. The house itself is compact and considered. One bedroom, one bathroom, a kitchen that works hard for its size, and a living room centered around a modern air-source heat pump that handles both the warmth of late-autumn visits and the cooling relief of a July heatwave. Large windows face the garden, and the light on a long Swedish summer evening is something you genuinely can't replicate — the sun barely sets, casting that particular Nordic gold across the wooden floors for hours. It doesn't feel small. It feels edited. Everything here has a purpose. What the footprint lacks in size, the land more than compensates for. The plot wraps around the house with room for a kitchen garden, a hammock between the pines, a fire pit on the far edge — whatever you want to make of it. The deck is wide and south-facing, and if you ... click here to read more

Front view of the holiday home

Picture this: it's a Saturday morning in late September, the birch trees along Kantarellvägen have gone full gold, and you're sitting on a wide timber terrace with a mug of coffee watching mist lift off Nedingen lake. No traffic noise. Just the faint knock of a rowboat against a dock somewhere down the hill, and the occasional rustle of something moving through the undergrowth at the edge of your 1,958-square-meter garden. This is the rhythm of life at Fornbo Kantarellvägen 58 — and it's about 100 kilometers from Stockholm's Centralen station. The house sits on a peninsula that juts into Nedingen, one of the cleaner and quieter lakes in Södermanland, within the well-established Fornbo recreational community. It was built in 1980 and has been kept in genuinely good condition — this isn't a project property requiring gut renovation before you can enjoy a single weekend. The structure is solid, the winterization means you can use it from January ice to December snow, and municipal water and sewage connections spare you the headaches that come with private wells and septic systems on older Swedish holiday properties. Move in, turn the key, light the fire. That fireplace deserves a moment. The living room has large windows that face toward the water, and on evenings when the temperature drops, the fireplace does real work — not decorative work, but actual warmth-producing work that makes the room feel like somewhere you'd genuinely want to spend three hours after a day of hiking. The living area flows naturally, 65 square meters used efficiently without feeling cramped, and the kitchen is practical and well-equipped for the kind of cooking that happens at a lake house: big pots of elk stew, fresh-caught perch fried in butte ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the winterized holiday home

On a Sunday morning in Gemmenich, before the rest of the household stirs, you step out onto the southwest-facing stone terrace with a cup of coffee and watch the light crawl slowly across the rear meadows. No traffic. No neighbors in sight. Just rolling green hills, the distant silhouette of the Ardennes, and 26,776 square meters of land that is entirely yours. This is the everyday reality of life at Rue de Terstraeten 39—a substantial country estate in the Plombières municipality of the Belgian-Dutch-German border triangle, where the pace of life genuinely slows down and a property of this scale still makes financial sense. The estate sits in what locals half-jokingly call the Tuscany of Belgium. It's a fair comparison. The hills around Gemmenich are softer and greener than true Tuscany, but the spirit is similar—unhurried villages, agricultural landscapes, and a genuine sense of being removed from the urban grind without being stranded. Plombières itself is a commune of forested ridges and open valleys, home to some of the most quietly coveted countryside in the country. Properties here rarely come to market at this scale. When they do, they go fast. The main house—currently operating as a vacation rental sleeping up to 14 guests—is 490 square meters of practical, well-finished living space spread across three active floors plus a basement. Walk through the front door and the entrance hall immediately signals the property's character: an authentic original staircase, wide proportions, and a sense of solidity that newer builds simply can't fake. The ground floor revolves around a generous dining room with an open kitchen fitted with stone countertops, a Whirlpool four-burner stove, an induction hob, and a BEKO dishwas ... click here to read more

Front view of Rue de Terstraeten 39

On a still morning in Saint-Cyr-la-Campagne, you'd wake to the sound of water. Not distant or muffled — the river runs right along the edge of the property, close enough that you hear it through an open window while the coffee brews. There's no road noise, no neighbors peering over the fence, no reason whatsoever to be anywhere else. This is rural Normandy at its most honest: green, quiet, and completely unhurried. The house itself was built in the 1980s, solid and unpretentious, sitting on a fully enclosed and wooded 1,000-square-metre plot that feels twice as large thanks to the riverbank it borders. Since 2021, the owners have been steadily bringing it up to speed — new electrics throughout, a fitted kitchen, a redesigned bathroom with a proper walk-in shower and bathtub, and freshly renovated upstairs bedrooms completed in 2025. The bones were always good. Now the finishing is catching up. Come through the front door and the ground floor opens into a living room that immediately earns its keep. Terracotta floor tiles run underfoot — the warm, slightly uneven kind that makes a room feel lived-in rather than showroom-perfect — and a wood-burning stove anchors one wall. On a grey October afternoon, when the Normandy rain comes in sideways and the leaves on the riverbank go copper and gold, this room becomes the entire reason you bought a house in France. The kitchen adjoins it directly, recently fitted and fully equipped, functional without being clinical. A hallway off the living area leads to a ground-floor bedroom with its own dressing room — a practical touch that works well as a guest room or for anyone who'd rather avoid stairs entirely. The new bathroom sits nearby, tidy and complete. Upstairs, the landing is ... click here to read more

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The wood-burning stove is already crackling when you pull on your boots and step outside into a Södermanland morning. Frost on the grass. Birch trees catching the low autumn light. Not a sound except a crow somewhere in the spruce forest behind the meadow. This is Marö Lillhult — a small red cottage on a generous stretch of land just outside Gnesta, and the kind of place that makes you wonder why you ever needed anything more complicated than this. Set on 1,930 square meters of open plot, the cottage itself is 60 square meters of honest Swedish country living. Classic falu red exterior, white trim, a small veranda facing the garden — the look is straightforward and entirely at home against the rolling landscape of central Södermanland. It's been well maintained, and while it carries the authentic character of a traditional Swedish sommarstuga, it's genuinely in good condition and ready to use from day one. Step inside and the wooden floors creak just enough to feel real. Paneled walls, low ceilings, afternoon light slanting through windows that frame views of your own meadow and the treeline beyond. The ground floor has a hallway, a kitchen with everything you need to cook a proper meal, and a living room where that wood stove does serious work on cold evenings. One bedroom sits on the ground floor; a second sleeping area with sloped ceilings waits upstairs — the kind of room where children insist on claiming the best spots, and adults sleep better than they have in months. A practical note worth being upfront about: the cottage runs on summer water and uses an outdoor privy rather than indoor plumbing. For many buyers, that's not a compromise — it's precisely the point. Sweden has a deep cultural relationship with th ... click here to read more

Front view of Marö Lillhult 1

Step outside on a July morning and the first thing you notice is the smell of warm pine resin. Not the synthetic kind you find in a candle — the real thing, rising from the forest floor as the sun climbs over the eastern gable of this 1969 house in Havängs Sommarby. The birds are already going. Somewhere down the lane, a bicycle bell rings once and fades. This is what summer sounds like in Österlen. Havängsvägen 6 sits on a freehold plot of 1,289 square meters in one of the genuinely rare corners of Swedish coastal property — Havängs Sommarby, a small community tucked between Kivik and Brösarp on the Skåne coast. Freehold plots in this particular village are uncommon. Most of the surrounding vacation properties sit on leasehold land, which makes this one a different proposition entirely for buyers who want clean, uncomplicated ownership. The same family held it for over fifty years. That kind of tenure tells you something about a place. The house runs to 79 square meters across one and a half floors, sensibly arranged with two bedrooms on the ground level, both catching morning light through south- and east-facing windows. The open living room pulls you in with original wooden floors and a proper fireplace — the kind that makes an October weekend here feel genuinely cosy rather than just possible. There's something quietly satisfying about a house that still has its original bones intact. The spiral staircase leads up to a third bedroom tucked into the eastern gable, and beyond that, an attic space with real potential for conversion if the family grows or the guest list expands. The kitchen is compact but works well — room for a small table, good light, the kind of setup where breakfast happens unhurriedly and nobody ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the house and garden

Stand on the south-facing terrace on a clear winter morning and you can pick out the switchbacks of the Coll de Rates snaking up into the mountain behind a patchwork of orange groves and old almond terraces. The air has that particular inland Costa Blanca quality — dry, warm even in January, carrying the faint sweetness of citrus blossom. This is not the Spain of beach bars and high-rises. This is the Jalon Valley, and once you've spent a week here, the coast starts to feel like a commute rather than a destination. The villa at Calle Benarrosa 1 sits on a generous corner plot of roughly 976 square metres on the edge of Alcalalí village. Corner plots in this valley are genuinely hard to come by — the extra breathing room means you get open sightlines in two directions and the light that comes with it. The total built area runs to around 227 square metres across two fully independent levels, which is what makes this property so versatile compared to a typical single-dwelling purchase. The upper level is the main residence. The L-shaped living room is large enough that the sitting area and the dining table don't compete for space — something you appreciate the moment you're hosting eight people for Sunday lunch and nobody feels squeezed. The kitchen has a utility room off it, useful for the kind of practical storage that always gets overlooked in holiday property searches. A covered terrace runs along the south face of this floor, catching the afternoon sun deep into October, sheltered enough to eat outside in a light jacket well past the point when the coast has gone grey. Below, the guest apartment is fully self-contained. Its own entrance, its own living room with kitchen, two bedrooms, a bathroom, and a private terra ... click here to read more

Main exterior view of Calle Benarrosa 1

The first thing you notice on a summer morning here is the light. By seven o'clock it's already cutting low and golden across Bräckeviken, bouncing off the water and right through the kitchen window while the wood-burning stove crackles to life. That's the rhythm of a day at Vårviks-Backa Bräcke 1 — unhurried, deeply Swedish, and utterly removed from the noise of ordinary life. Set on a 5,510-square-metre plot in the Dalsland region of western Sweden, this 1840s farmstead sits just 150 metres from the calm inlet of Bräckeviken, which feeds directly into the celebrated Dalsland Canal. The canal — a 250-kilometre waterway connecting dozens of lakes across Värmland and Dalsland — is one of Scandinavia's great slow-travel routes, and having it practically at your doorstep changes the texture of daily life in ways that are hard to overstate. You can kayak from the property's public jetty to the next village before breakfast. You can watch narrowboats drift past in the evening from the terrace, awning cranked out, glass in hand. The main house is 110 square metres of considered, authentic renovation. The original structure from 1840 has been kept honest — thick walls, low doorways, the kind of spatial logic that only comes from buildings that have weathered nearly two centuries of Swedish winters. Walk into the kitchen and the centrepiece is a traditional wood-burning stove with a proper baking oven. Not decorative. Actually used. The smell of fresh bread on a Sunday morning in here is reason enough to buy the place. The living room is anchored by a Royal Viking fireplace, a cast-iron Swedish classic that throws serious heat and creates the kind of amber glow on a November evening that you'll remember long after you've gone ... click here to read more

Main house and garden with lake view

The smell hits you first. Cut grass, sun-warmed pine, and somewhere behind the old apple tree, the faint salt of the Baltic coast drifting in over the garden wall. You're standing on the glass veranda at Söderängsvägen 2, coffee in hand, watching a pair of starlings argue in the birch tree. It's not even eight in the morning and you already know — this is exactly what you were looking for. Set on a generous 3,019-square-meter plot outside Östhammar in Sweden's Uppsala County, this classic red-painted country cottage is the kind of property that doesn't need to try hard. Forty square meters of honest, well-kept living space in the main house. A separate guest cottage. A proper woodshed. A garden that took years of patient hands to get this good. And the sea — close enough that cycling to the communal bathing area takes less time than finishing your morning newspaper. The main cottage has the proportions of a traditional Swedish sommarstuga but with enough in the right places. The living room holds both a dining table and a sofa corner without feeling cramped, anchored by a wood-burning stove that turns October evenings into something genuinely atmospheric. The kitchen is compact and functional — the kind of space where you make smörgås for everyone after a swim, not where you host a dinner party. The single bedroom is quiet and set back from the garden, and the natural light through the afternoon is the kind that makes naps feel earned. The glass-enclosed veranda is the real heart of this property. It faces south over the garden and acts as a room in its own right from April through October — warmer than outside but fully connected to it. You can watch the light change over the flower beds from a lounger, track thunder ... click here to read more

Front view of the red cottage

On a clear morning in Dalhem, you open the bedroom shutters and the first thing you see is Wodémont Castle sitting on the ridge across the valley, catching the early light. The garden is still dewy, the pool is glinting, and somewhere down the lane a rooster is doing his thing. This is what 225 square metres of well-built Belgian countryside living actually feels like — and it's a long way from anything you'd call ordinary. Fêchereux 17 is a detached four-bedroom house on a south-facing plot of just over 2,100 square metres, constructed in 2000 and sitting in excellent condition today. The bones are solid: double glazing throughout, gas central heating, a tiled gabled roof, and an energy label of B — a genuinely good score for a property of this size and age in the region. You won't be walking into a renovation project. This one is ready. Step through the front door and the entrance hall sets the tone — calm, generous, practical, with a cloakroom and guest WC already sorted before you've even reached the main living space. The living room is the real centrepiece: nearly 53 square metres of bright, open space with countryside views rolling out in every direction and a wood-burning fireplace that earns its keep from October through to March. Belgian winters are mild by Alpine standards but genuinely grey, and there's something deeply satisfying about a real fire when the fog sits low over the Herve plateau. The kitchen comes in at over 21 square metres with a separate dining area and its own exterior entrance — useful when you're carrying groceries or hosting a summer lunch that's moved between indoors and the 67-square-metre south-facing terrace without anyone quite noticing the transition. Upstairs, four proper bedroo ... click here to read more

Front view of Fêchereux 17

On a still September morning, the kitchen window at Vargmossevägen 44 frames a wall of birch trees already tipping gold. The coffee is on the stove. Somewhere out past the tree line, a woodpecker is working at something. This is what a Swedish country home actually feels like — not a postcard version of it, but the real, quiet, deeply restorative thing. Almunge sits roughly halfway between Uppsala and Arlanda Airport in the rolling, lake-dotted countryside of Uppsala municipality. It's one of those villages that locals guard without advertising too loudly. The pace here is genuinely different. People wave from tractors. The air smells of pine resin and damp earth after rain. And once you've spent a weekend in this part of Uppland, the idea of going back to city noise starts to feel faintly absurd. The house on Vargmossevägen was built in 1971 and has been maintained with evident care. At 48 square meters of living space plus an additional 16 square meters of auxiliary area, it's honest about what it is: a well-proportioned two-bedroom country home designed for people who want to actually be outside, not just look at the garden through floor-to-ceiling glass. The two bedrooms are comfortable and properly sized for couples, small families, or friends visiting from abroad. The living room is the kind of space where board games come back out and phones stay face-down on the table. Large windows run throughout the main living areas, and in the afternoon the western light comes through with that particular warmth that high-latitude summers produce — long, low, golden, lasting until nearly 10pm in June. The kitchen is functional and well laid out, with room to cook properly. Not a show kitchen, but a working one, which is ex ... click here to read more

Front view of the house and garden

Stand in the garden on a Tuesday morning in early June and the only sounds are the wind moving through the tall birches at the edge of the lot and, faintly, a tractor somewhere out past the rye fields. That's the rhythm of life at Löneboställsvägen 10 & 12 in Östra Herrestad — unhurried, grounded, and genuinely quiet in a way that most people don't find until they've driven well off the motorway. This is a proper Swedish country home, built in 1941 on a 2,150-square-meter plot in the soft, rolling farmland of Simrishamn municipality, in the southeastern corner of Skåne. Sixty-four square meters of living space, two bedrooms, one bathroom, and enough outdoor room to do basically whatever you want with it. The house has good bones — solid construction from an era when things were built to last — and the interior is practical and light-filled, with windows sized generously for the latitude, pulling in the long Nordic summer light until nine or ten at night. The kitchen faces the garden, which matters more than you might think. Morning coffee while the grass is still wet. Dinner prep with the back door open. There's a reason Swedes are obsessive about the connection between indoors and out, and this house gets it right. The living area is comfortable without being fussy, and the two bedrooms are the kind of sizes that actually sleep people well — not the architectural illusion of a bedroom that's really a glorified corridor. Outside is where this property earns its asking price. The lot is substantial — 2,150 square meters gives you mature trees for shade, open lawn for whatever you need it to be, and genuine room to breathe. There's realistic potential here to subdivide (subject to municipal approval), add outbuildings, ... click here to read more

Front view of the country home and garden

Stand at the kitchen window on a still October morning and the Seine is right there — silver-grey and unhurried, sliding past your private riverbank without a sound. No road between you and the water. Just your garden, the soft thud of a fallen apple from the old tree, and a heron working the shallows. This is Chantemesle, a hamlet so quiet that even locals in nearby Vétheuil will raise an eyebrow when you mention you live there. And that is precisely the point. Set on the Haute-Île between Vétheuil and La Roche-Guyon, this four-bedroom house with an independent studio and private Seine frontage sits in one of the most quietly remarkable stretches of the Vexin Normand — a region that somehow manages to be both genuinely rural and less than 70 kilometres from central Paris. Monet painted the cliffs at Vétheuil obsessively between 1878 and 1881, and once you see the light here in late afternoon, bouncing off the river and catching the limestone bluffs, you stop wondering why. The house itself reads like a proper family home that has been lived in and loved. Ground floor: a sitting room anchored by a working fireplace — the kind you actually use from November through March — a separate dining room, a fitted kitchen, and a WC. On the first floor, three bedrooms and a master suite with its own dressing room and bathroom, plus a second shower room. Four bedrooms and a bathroom configuration that works equally well for a couple wanting room to spread out as it does for a multi-generational family pulling in from Paris for the long weekend. 158 square metres in total. Not oversized. Just right. The independent studio is the feature that makes this property genuinely interesting for buyers thinking beyond personal use. Fully s ... click here to read more

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Picture this: it's a Saturday morning in late September, the birch trees outside have gone full amber, and you're standing on a 22-square-meter terrace at 359 meters above sea level with a cup of coffee, watching low cloud roll through the valley below Omnsfjellet. Not a sound except wind and the occasional crack of a branch somewhere uphill. That's the daily reality at this cabin on Knubbvegen in Søvasskjølen — and it costs less than a studio flat in Oslo. This is a proper Norwegian hytte. Not a glossed-up weekend pod, not a developer's interpretation of rustic. It's a cabin that was built in 1960, extended and seriously upgraded by the current owners since the 1980s, and it shows the kind of considered, incremental care that only happens when people actually love a place. The bones are original. The comfort is modern. Electricity is connected, the septic system is sorted, and water comes from a shared drilled well with two neighbouring properties. You arrive, unlock the door, and it works. No renovation project waiting to swallow your summers. Inside, 63 square metres is used efficiently — entrance hall, living room, kitchen, two bedrooms, a bathroom, and a toilet room, plus a small loft that works well as an overflow sleeping area or just somewhere to stack the ski gear. The living room gets the big windows, which is the right call: the mountain and forest views framed from that room are the kind you don't tire of across seasons. Spring brings the thaw and the green creeping back up the hillside. Midsummer, the light barely leaves. Autumn is all that amber and copper. Winter turns the whole landscape white and quiet in a way that has to be experienced to be understood. Step outside through the living room and you'r ... click here to read more

Welcome to Knubbvegen 60!

Sunday morning in Marvejols, and the market on Place du Soubeyran is already alive with the smell of aged Laguiole cheese and fresh-pulled lavender honey. You walk back along the old ramparts, coffee in hand, and push open the wooden gate to a property that somehow manages to feel both grand and genuinely lived-in. The pool catches the early sun. The petanque court is waiting. Six bedrooms, 274 square metres of renovated living space, and 459 square metres of outbuildings sit on a fully fenced, tree-lined plot of 4,150 square metres. This is what that phrase "rare find" is supposed to mean. The house itself has been completely renovated — and done with real care, not a quick cosmetic flip. The main living area faces south, which in this part of the Massif Central means serious sunlight from October through May, not just the obvious summer months. Light floods across the stone floors and into a kitchen that opens directly onto the garden. Cooking here in August, with the doors flung open and the sound of cicadas carrying in from the trees, is a different relationship with a kitchen entirely. Six bedrooms give you options that most holiday properties simply can't offer. A family reunion. A rotating group of friends across a long summer. Or, more practically, a conversion into chambres d'hôtes or a gîte — the Lozère tourism office actively promotes rural accommodation in this corridor, and demand from hikers, cyclists, and nature travellers has grown consistently over the past decade. Those outbuildings are worth pausing on. A barn. A summer kitchen. Three garages. A workshop. A storage room. That's 459 square metres of space that most buyers in this price range would kill for. The summer kitchen alone transforms the pro ... click here to read more

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Stand at the edge of the plot on a still July morning and you'll hear almost nothing — a distant outboard motor somewhere on the fjord, the soft creak of birch trees, maybe a curlew calling from the hillside. That kind of quiet is genuinely rare in 2024, and this 5,822 square metre freehold plot at Førlandsvegen 460 sits inside it completely. Aksdal is a small but well-connected community in Rogaland, in the heart of Sunnhordland on Norway's southwestern coast. It's the kind of place that locals know well and visitors almost never stumble across by accident — which is precisely what makes finding a plot here with sea rights feel like something worth paying attention to. The E134 runs nearby, linking you to Haugesund in around 35 minutes and to Bergen in roughly two hours. Haugesund Airport handles direct flights from several European cities including London Gatwick and Copenhagen, which matters a great deal if you're planning to use this as a seasonal escape from somewhere further south. The existing cabin dates from 1943 and sits at 12 square metres of usable interior. Let's be honest about it: the structure needs either thorough renovation or a fresh rebuild. The condition is what it is. But what you're really buying here is the land, the legal sea rights, and the freedom that comes with freehold ownership of a substantial plot in a setting like this. Norwegian countryside doesn't give up these kinds of parcels easily, and a 5,822m² plot with direct sea access in Rogaland is a genuinely uncommon find. The sea rights attached to this property are worth dwelling on for a moment. They grant the owner access to the adjacent coastal area for activities including fishing, swimming, and mooring a small boat. Western Norway ... click here to read more

Welcome to Førlandsvegen 460 - presented by Sivert Velde Rasmussen at PrivatMegleren / Photo: Panomax Studio

Stand at the kitchen window on a Saturday morning and watch two herons circle the garden pond while coffee brews on the granite countertop. The automatic gate is closed, the mature trees are doing their job blocking out the world, and the only sound is birdsong filtering through the pines at the back of the plot. This is Essensteenweg 53 — a 360-square-meter villa on 4,255 square meters of land in Brasschaat, one of the most coveted green addresses in the entire Belgian province of Antwerp. Brasschaat sits roughly twelve kilometers north of Antwerp's cathedral spires and diamond quarter, close enough to catch a weeknight concert at the deSingel arts campus or a Sunday morning stroll through the Vrijdagmarkt antique market, yet far enough that the streets here are lined with century-old oaks rather than tram cables. The municipality has a reputation — fiercely protected by the people who live here — for wide forested avenues, exceptional international schools like the Antwerp International School on Dref, and the kind of quiet that money genuinely can't buy in the city itself. Families relocating from London, Amsterdam, or Paris who want a proper garden and room to breathe without sacrificing urban access tend to discover Brasschaat and stay for decades. The villa itself sits behind an automatic gate with a videophone system, and the driveway alone tells you something about the scale of the property — there's room for multiple cars before you even reach the double integrated garage with its separate automatic doors. Inside, the entrance hall opens up generously, with a guest toilet tucked away and the main living space spreading out in front of you across three distinct zones. The formal sitting room has an open firepla ... click here to read more

Front view of Essensteenweg 53

Picture this: it's seven in the morning, the Norwegian sun is already cutting low across Midt-Gumøykilen, and you're standing on your private slate terrace with a coffee in hand, watching a small wooden boat drift past the end of your pier. The water is so still it mirrors the pine-covered shoreline on the opposite bank. This is what a Tuesday looks like at Vestre Gumøyveien 7. Sitting on a 1,102 square metre freehold plot on Gumøy Island, deep in the Kragerø archipelago, this architect-designed chalet is one of the genuinely rare properties along this stretch of the Norwegian coast. Not rare in the way estate agents tend to throw that word around — rare in the sense that the combination of a 110-metre private shoreline, two working piers, a boathouse with sleeping quarters, a sandy beach the kids will actually want to use, and a considered, liveable interior all exist on the same plot. That doesn't happen often out here. The chalet itself was built in 1950 and has been looked after with real care. At 138 square metres of indoor living space spread across two floors, it doesn't try to be something it isn't — this is a Norwegian coastal home, and it wears that identity with confidence. The architect who shaped it clearly understood that in a place like this, the building should frame the view rather than compete with it. Large windows throughout the ground floor put the sea in every room. On overcast September afternoons, when the sky goes pewter and the light turns dramatic, those same windows make the living room feel like the front row of something cinematic. Two living rooms, each with its own built-in fireplace. That detail matters more than it might first appear. The Kragerø archipelago isn't just a summer destin ... click here to read more

Welcome to Vestre Gumøyveien 7!

Stand at the front windows on a Saturday morning and you'll understand why people move to Borgloon and never leave. The park across Graethempoort is still dewy, a few dog walkers cutting through the chestnut trees, and the tower of the Sint-Odulphuskerk is catching the first real light of the day. The smell of fresh bread drifts up from the bakery two streets over. That's the rhythm here — unhurried, grounded, genuinely Belgian in the way that Liège waffles and abbey beer are genuinely Belgian. Not performed for tourists. Just lived. This 1905 mansion at Graethempoort 16 is one of those buildings that Borgloon has quietly kept for itself. At 381 square metres of living space on a 918 m² plot, it's rare by any measure — the kind of address that almost never surfaces on the market. And when you walk through the front door and hit that entrance hall, with its original wooden staircase rising up through the centre of the house, you get it immediately. The bones here are exceptional. High ceilings throughout the ground floor — we're talking the kind that make rooms feel like they breathe. Decorative plasterwork cornices, original parquet and terrazzo mosaic floors, ornate period doors, an open fireplace. None of it is reproduction. None of it was added later for effect. It's simply what the house was built with in 1905, and it's been looked after. The front living room and the generous dining room both receive strong natural light through large windows, and the proportions are generous enough that a dining table for twelve wouldn't look out of place. The kitchen connects directly to a glass veranda at the rear, and this is where the garden announces itself. Two terraces, a pond, mature planting — the kind of outdoor space ... click here to read more

Front view of Graethempoort 16, Borgloon

Step off the road between Fardhem and Linde on a still June morning and you'll hear it first — the absolute quiet. Not the silence of emptiness, but the full, living quiet of 3.4 hectares of mature garden, open fields, and old forest pressing in from every side. This is Gotland at its most unhurried, and this 1909 wooden farmhouse sits right in the middle of it. Built when Swedish craftsmen still fitted houses with hand-planed wooden floors and deep-set windows designed to hold the long Nordic light, this three-bedroom country home has spent over a century earning its character. The bones are solid. The atmosphere is unmistakable. At 94 square metres of living space, plus an additional 44 square metres of secondary area, the house is compact in the way that Swedish farmhouses always were — every room deliberate, nothing wasted. The original wooden floors creak in exactly the right places. Windows frame views of the farmyard and fields beyond like paintings that change with every season. The property needs work — that's stated plainly here because buyers who find this listing will appreciate honesty over gloss. Maintenance has been deferred over the years, and the kitchen in particular is ready for a proper overhaul. But that's precisely why this is such a rare find on the Gotland second home market. Properties with this much land, this many original features, and this kind of quiet address almost never come available at this price point. Buyers who've been priced out of the increasingly competitive Visby market have been quietly turning their attention south, and Hemse-area farmhouses like this one are exactly what they're looking for. The outbuildings deserve a paragraph of their own. Several former agricultural stru ... click here to read more

Front view of the farmhouse and garden

Sunday morning in Châteauneuf-du-Faou starts with the smell of buttered crêpes drifting from the boulangerie on Rue de la Mairie, and if you crack open the upstairs window, you'll catch the faint echo of church bells bouncing off the stone facades across the square. That's the kind of detail you can't manufacture. It's either there or it isn't — and here, it absolutely is. This is a rare find in the heart of one of Finistère's most quietly compelling villages: two adjoining stone houses, sold together as a single property, sitting right in the village core with everything you need within a short walk. At 80 square metres combined and priced at €123,500, this is the kind of opportunity that makes serious buyers move fast. Five bedrooms spread across two interconnected dwellings, a landscaped enclosed garden, a garage, and a timber-framed attic just waiting to be converted. The bones are solid — natural slate roof, mains drainage, stone walls that have quietly absorbed two centuries of Breton weather. Let's talk about the layout, because it's genuinely interesting. The first house opens at ground level into an entrance hall that flows into a living and dining room anchored by a working fireplace — the kind you actually use from October through April, not just for Instagram. A kitchen with a shower area sits alongside, and a connecting living room links the two houses together. Head upstairs and you get two good-sized bedrooms. The second house has its own front entrance, kitchen, shower room, WC, and a ground-floor bedroom, with two more bedrooms up top. An attic caps the whole structure, unconverted but full of potential — a home office, a games room for the kids, a reading loft. The layout gives you options that most s ... click here to read more

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There's a particular kind of quiet you only find in the Norwegian countryside — the kind where the loudest thing on a Saturday morning is the crack of wood going into the stove and the distant call of a bird somewhere out in the spruce trees. That's what greets you at Malmervegen 89. Step onto the glass-panelled terrace with a cup of coffee before the rest of the cabin wakes up, and you'll understand immediately why people buy places like this and never let them go. Situated in Åbogen, a rural pocket of Eidskog municipality in the Innlandet region, this three-bedroom cabin sits on a generously sized 1,308 square metre private plot. The surrounding landscape is classic inland Norway — rolling forest, wildflower edges along gravel tracks, and lakes close enough to swim in by midsummer. At €106,000, it represents one of the more accessible entry points into the Norwegian second home market, especially given its year-round accessibility and the fact that it comes fully furnished. The cabin itself was built in 1996 and spans 45 square metres of indoor living space. That figure sounds modest on paper, but the layout earns every square metre. The kitchen sits just off the entrance and opens directly into the living room via a bar-style counter — a smart design choice that keeps social energy flowing when you've got a full house. And you will have a full house. Three bedrooms, each fitted with custom-built bunk beds, means this cabin comfortably sleeps more people than its footprint suggests. It's genuinely set up for the way Norwegian cabin culture actually works: long weekends, school holidays, three generations under one roof. The living room is the cabin's core. Two heat sources — a fireplace and a wood-burning stove — ke ... click here to read more

Welcome to Malmervegen 89 - Well-maintained and cozy cabin with garage!

Step outside on a January morning and the world is completely white and completely silent. The ski tracks cut through the snow maybe three hundred meters from the front door. You clip into your skis on the porch, push off, and within minutes you're gliding through birch forest with no one else in sight. That's a Tuesday here at Hagströmsvallen 105. This two-bedroom country home sits on a generous 3,500-square-meter lot on the slopes above Bruksvallarna in Härjedalen, one of Sweden's most celebrated mountain regions. At 61 square meters, the house is compact and honest—every square meter works. The open-plan living and kitchen area anchors the interior, with a wood-burning fireplace that earns its place on a cold March evening when the temperature outside drops to minus fifteen and the snow is still falling. Both bedrooms are quiet. The bathroom has a washing machine, which matters more than people think when you're spending a full week. And then there's the sauna, with its own small relaxation room—not a luxury addition but a genuine necessity up here, the place you end up after a long day on the trails with aching legs and cold feet. Outside, the lot is substantial. Mountain birches frame the property. In summer, the neighboring field fills with grazing cattle, and if you leave the kitchen window open you hear the bells. There's an outbuilding for storage, a woodshed stocked for winter, and a störrös—a traditional small cabin with an open hearth—that speaks directly to the older rhythms of this mountain landscape. Fäbodvallen culture, where highland summer farms dotted these slopes for centuries, left its mark on the architecture and atmosphere of this whole valley, and you feel it here. The Nordic ski tracks groomed ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the mountain home

Step outside on a Saturday morning in Wuustwezel and the air carries something you simply don't find in the city — a mix of damp grass, pine, and absolute quiet. The nearest neighbor is far enough away that you hear birds before traffic. This is what 289 square meters of private villa life on the Belgian-Dutch border actually feels like. Built in 2012 to high specifications, this five-bedroom detached villa on Moleneind sits on a 2,545 m² plot that wraps around the property with a landscaped garden, a serene pond, and open green space being freshly leveled and seeded as part of an ongoing upgrade. The bones of this home are exceptional — an A energy label, full underfloor heating via heat pump, roof-to-floor insulation, and double glazing throughout. Your energy bills will surprise you. In the best way. Walk through the front door and the entrance hall sets the tone immediately. It's generous, with a guest toilet tucked away and a staircase rising to the floors above. Double doors pull open into the main living space — a wide, open-plan area where the dining room flows into the kitchen without any awkward transitions. There's a practical storage room off the kitchen and a separate utility space that handles the behind-the-scenes business of daily life so the main rooms stay uncluttered. Late Sunday afternoons in this kitchen, with the garden visible through the rear windows and something slow-cooking on the hob, genuinely feel like a different pace of life. The first floor is where the master suite earns its name. A proper dressing room connects to a bathroom that comes with a freestanding bathtub, walk-in shower, and double washbasin — not a compromise version, but the real thing. There's also a laundry room on this ... click here to read more

Photo 1 of Moleneind 9

Step through the heavy front door of this brick-and-flint maître house on a crisp October morning and you hear it immediately — the kind of silence that costs money in most of France. No traffic, just a wood pigeon somewhere in the garden and the faint metallic ring of the Goderville church bell carrying across the Pays de Caux plateau. This is what 172,000 euros buys you in northern Normandy right now: a real house with bones, history, and a plot of land big enough to breathe. Bretteville-du-Grand-Caux sits right on the edge of the Seine-Maritime plateau, a few minutes from the market town of Goderville where the Tuesday morning market draws farmers and locals who've been shopping the same stalls for generations. Pick up a thick wedge of Neufchâtel heart-shaped cheese, a bottle of Calvados from a producer who doesn't export, and a baguette still warm from the boulangerie on Rue du Général de Gaulle. This is everyday life here, not a tourist performance. The house itself is the kind you used to find everywhere in Pays de Caux and now increasingly don't. Brick and silex — that distinctive local flint — laid in the traditional Norman pattern, with generous ceiling heights that make the reception rooms feel genuinely grand rather than merely large. The ground floor opens into spacious living areas that get proper afternoon light through tall windows facing the garden. There's a scale to these rooms that's hard to fake: wide floorboards, high cornices, proportions that belong to an era when builders weren't counting square centimetres. Upstairs, four bedrooms spread comfortably across the first floor. Two face the rear garden and catch the morning sun. The remaining rooms have that characteristic Normandy quietness that c ... click here to read more

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On a still Tuesday morning in Neeroeteren, the only sounds drifting through the kitchen window are the distant low of cattle in the rear meadow and the soft hiss of an espresso machine. That's the pace of life here. No traffic. No noise. Just open Belgian countryside stretching out behind a 450-square-metre house that genuinely has everything — and then some. Drievekkenweg 70 sits on a 1,175-square-metre plot at the edge of Neeroeteren, a village that most people outside Belgian Limburg couldn't point to on a map. That's part of the appeal. This is the region where the Maas river curves lazily through farmland and heath, where cycling routes like the famous Fietsknooppunt network fan out in every direction, and where weekends move at a rhythm that cities have completely forgotten how to do. The house itself was built in 2007, kept in genuinely good condition, and carries a B energy rating — rare for a property with this much indoor volume. Walk through the front door and the entrance hall sets the tone immediately. White-lacquered doors with matte black hardware, stone carpet underfoot — not the scratchy kind, the polished, low-maintenance kind that actually stays looking good five years in. The ground floor opens into a living area that doesn't feel like it was designed to impress visitors for thirty seconds before they start noticing the flaws. This room works. Oversized windows pull in the meadow views. A gas fireplace from Faber anchors the space in winter. The kitchen — fully equipped with Siemens appliances and an Italian granite island — has a breakfast bar on one side and enough counter run to cook a proper Sunday roast without anyone getting in each other's way. Off the kitchen, a utility room handles the lau ... click here to read more

Front view of Drievekkenweg 70

Step outside on a Saturday morning in late June and the air smells like cut grass and pine resin. The garden at Ryfylkeveien 736 is still dewy, the greenhouse door is propped open, and somewhere down the valley a church bell carries on the wind. This is what owning a holiday home in Rogaland actually feels like — not a postcard, not a brochure image, but a quiet, grounded kind of joy that you don't find in beach resorts or city-break apartments. Sandnes sits just south of Stavanger, Norway's fourth-largest city, yet Ryfylkeveien 736 occupies a world that feels genuinely removed from the urban pace. The address places you along the old Ryfylke road, a route that traces its way through some of inland Rogaland's most compelling countryside — rolling farmland, dark forest ridgelines, and the occasional flash of fjord water when the light hits right. The plot itself covers approximately 2,488 square meters, a rare expanse of private land that gives the property its most immediate selling point: room. Room to breathe, to garden, to let children run without ever reaching a fence. The house was built around 1938, and it carries that era's honest craftsmanship without pretending to be something it isn't. Eighty-odd years of Norwegian winters will do that to a building — either they break it or they make it solid. This one is solid. The main structure spans 70 square meters of internal usable space, arranged across a living room, kitchen, and two bedrooms. The total usable area, once you factor in the annex and outbuildings, reaches 105 square meters, which gives the property genuine flexibility for how you actually use it. The living room is the heart of the place. Large windows face the garden, so on clear days you're watchin ... click here to read more

DNB Eiendom presents Ryfylkeveien 736

Stand on the upstairs balcony on a clear morning and the Seine Valley rolls out in front of you like something you'd stop to photograph on a road trip—except this is just Tuesday, and you own it. That 49m² master suite behind you, the smell of coffee drifting up from the kitchen below, the garden still dewy and quiet at that hour. This is the kind of house that doesn't announce itself loudly. It earns you over, slowly, room by room. Boissise-le-Roi sits in the Seine-et-Marne département, tucked into a green loop of the river about 40 kilometres south of Paris. It's not a name you'll find on tourist maps, and that's exactly the point. This is a residential village where people actually live—where the boulangerie on Rue de la Fontaine knows its regulars, where the school run and the Sunday walk along the Seine riverbank are the defining rhythms of the week. For a second home buyer, that's rare. You get the proximity to Paris without the noise, the price inflation, or the sense that you're always surrounded by other visitors. The house itself sits on a landscaped plot of 2,600 square metres—generous by any standard, genuinely rare this close to the capital. The garden has been thought about: terracing that runs to roughly 63 square metres of outdoor living space, a covered parking area for two vehicles, a garden shed, and a well with rainwater recovery that keeps the green looking like this in August without sending the water bill through the roof. On warm evenings, this terrace is where dinner happens. There's no competition from traffic noise, no neighbours pressed close on either side. Just the garden, the view down toward the valley, and the kind of stillness that city dwellers come a long way to find. Inside, the gr ... click here to read more

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Close your eyes for a second and picture this: it's a Tuesday morning in late June, the air smells of pine resin and cut grass, and you're standing in a garden the size of a small meadow with a cup of coffee, watching swallows cut low over the wildflower patch. Nobody is calling you anywhere. That's the daily reality at Skredsviks Hede 317, a red-painted Swedish torp built in 1787 that has somehow made it to the modern era with its soul completely intact. This is genuine West Sweden countryside — the kind of place people from Gothenburg have been quietly keeping to themselves for generations. Uddevalla sits at the edge of the Bohuslän coast, a region where the granite archipelago crumbles into the Skagerrak, and where the summer light at 10pm still paints everything gold. The property itself sits in Skredsvik, a rural parish about 20 minutes by car from Uddevalla's city center, and cycling distance from open water swimming spots that don't appear in any guidebook. The house is small by modern standards — 47 square meters of living space in the main building — but that's part of the point. Everything here is intentional. You're not managing a mansion; you're maintaining a piece of history. The original wooden structure from the late 18th century is still the bones of the building, and the owners have kept the character rigorously intact: exposed ceiling beams with the kind of patina that takes two centuries to develop, tongue-and-groove wall paneling, wide-plank wooden floors that creak in exactly the right places. Walk into the combined kitchen and hallway and you'll immediately understand the logic of how these old Swedish farmhouses worked. There's a wood-burning stove for warmth, a traditional baking oven (function ... click here to read more

Front view of the cottage and garden

The first thing you notice on a July morning is the light. It comes off Valdemarsviken early — pale gold, almost white — and it finds its way through those big water-facing windows before most people are awake. You're standing in the kitchen, the wood stove ticking with the last of last night's birch logs, and the bay is out there doing that glassy, still thing it does before the wind picks up. That's the daily reality of owning Lövudden Kaptensbostället. Built in 1909 as a captain's residence, this four-bedroom house carries its age well. Not in a dusty, museum way — the original pine floors still have their warmth, the paneled walls still have their craft — but in the way that a well-sailed boat does. Things were built to last here. The bones are honest. Set on a 1,909 square meter plot at the edge of Lövudden, the property sits just 50 meters from the shoreline on Valdemarsviken, the long sheltered inlet that cuts into the eastern Östergötland coast. The plot itself is thick with mature trees — mainly birch and pine — that create a natural screen between you and the outside world. Somewhere in there, wood pigeons call back and forth through the afternoon. The garden has multiple spots where you can watch the water change color through the day, from silver-grey at dawn to deep blue by afternoon to something almost copper when the sun drops behind the ridge. The house stretches across 107 square meters of thoughtfully arranged living space. A later extension gave the ground floor a proper living and dining room with large windows that frame the bay like a painting you never get tired of. This is the room where winters happen — long dark evenings with the wood stove going, candles on the table, the kind of coziness th ... click here to read more

Front view of Lövudden Kaptensbostället

Step outside on a September morning and the air carries something you can't quite name at first — pine resin, damp earth, the faint sweetness of ripening apples from the three old trees at the edge of the lawn. The forest starts just beyond the fence line, and somewhere in there a woodpecker is hammering away at a birch. This is Norra Källbomark 40, a 130-year-old Swedish country house sitting on over a hectare of land outside Byske, and mornings here feel nothing like anywhere else. Built in 1891 and standing in genuinely good condition, this 1.5-story house has the solid bones of late 19th-century Swedish rural construction — thick walls, wooden floors that creak in the right places, windows that frame the surrounding meadows like paintings you never get tired of looking at. The 80 square metres of living space is arranged across two to three bedrooms depending on how you use the upper half-storey, a living room, and a functional kitchen that gets good afternoon light. It's the kind of layout that doesn't waste space on formality. You cook, you eat nearby, you move outside. And outside is really the point. Over 10,000 square metres of plot means you have genuine room to breathe — to grow things, to let children run without watching the edge of a terrace, to set up a proper vegetable garden or just leave most of it as the open meadow it already is. The three apple trees produce reliably each autumn; last year's crop was enough for sauce, cider, and still giving away bags to neighbours. The traditional barn at the back is built for purpose — storage, a workshop, a place to keep firewood bone dry through a Swedish winter. The separate sauna building is not a luxury add-on here. It's a Thursday evening, a Sunday afternoo ... click here to read more

Front view of the house and garden

On Sunday mornings in Fourges, the only thing you hear is the river. The Epte moves quietly past the old mill at the edge of the village, and if the kitchen window is open, you catch the faint smell of damp grass and whatever someone nearby is baking. This is a village that hasn't tried to reinvent itself. It's just still here — stone walls, a mill that's been grinding for centuries, a pace of life that feels almost unreasonably good. This two-bedroom house sits in that village, in good condition, single-storey, with a generous 1,000 square metre garden running down to the voie verte — a dedicated greenway trail that cuts through the Vexin-sur-Epte countryside. Step straight out of the back gate and you're on a route that takes you through meadows and orchards, past apple trees whose fruit ends up in the local calvados, all the way toward Gisors or down toward the Seine valley. You don't need a car to feel like you're deep in rural Normandy. The landscape just arrives at your doorstep. Inside, the layout is all on one level — no stairs, no fuss. The entrance leads into a living space with a wood-burning stove that makes the room feel entirely different in November than it does in July. In winter it crackles, the walls hold the heat, and the whole house takes on that particular quality of a place that's actually lived in rather than merely visited. The fitted kitchen is practical and fully equipped. There's a large master bedroom, a proper bathroom, a separate WC, and a second smaller room that works equally well as a guest bedroom or a home office for those who work remotely and want to do it somewhere with better views than their city apartment. Under the eaves, a third sleeping space with storage gives you genuine fl ... click here to read more

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Picture this: it's early July, the Norwegian sun is still above the horizon at nine in the evening, and you're sitting on a fifty-square-meter timber terrace with a cold glass of something local in hand, watching a fishing boat cut a slow white line across the Trondheimsleia strait. The smell of salt air drifts up the slope. Somewhere behind the cabin, a trail winds up into Sundfjellet. Nobody is in a hurry. This is Sundlandet — and it gets under your skin quickly. The chalet at Snillfjordsveien 4530 sits on a generous 1,206-square-meter plot in the coastal reaches of Trøndelag, about a hundred meters back from the water's edge. It's not a new build trying to imitate tradition — it's a cabin that's actually been lived in, cared for, and gradually improved since it first went up in 1980. A thoughtful modernization in 2006, a new bathroom fitted in 2018, a replacement hot water tank in 2023, a new washing machine in 2024: the kind of rolling, sensible upgrades that signal an owner who used the place properly and respected it. The result is a property in good condition, move-in ready, and comfortable in all four seasons. At 80 square meters across three bedrooms, the main cabin is compact without feeling cramped. The living room — around 24 square meters — carries large windows that track the sun east to west throughout the day, pulling Trondheimsleia's shifting light right into the room. Morning, the water is steel-grey and calm. Afternoon, it can turn a deep greenish-blue. Evening, on a clear day, there's a particular gold that comes off the fjord that you simply won't find anywhere else. A wood-burning stove sits at the heart of the room, and in October — when the birch trees have turned amber and the air bites — it ea ... click here to read more

Welcome to Snillfjordsveien 4530!

Stand in the courtyard at seven in the morning, coffee in hand, and listen. A wood pigeon calls from the old walnut tree. Water trickles from the decorative pond. Somewhere beyond the stone walls, the Loire Valley is waking up. This is the kind of quiet that city people spend years chasing — and here, it's yours before breakfast. At 1585 Route de Pierrefitte, this former abbey farm sits on a fully fenced 5,435 m² plot in Vézelin-sur-Loire, a small commune perched in the rolling hills above Saint-Étienne, roughly equidistant between Lyon and the volcanic highlands of Auvergne. The estate has spent the last twenty-five years operating as a sabbatical and retreat center — a place where executives, academics, and creatives came to think clearly and leave restored. That history has shaped every room. The proportions are generous, the finishes are honest, and the whole place carries the unhurried confidence of a building that has seen several lifetimes and survived them all. The main building runs to approximately 450 m² across two floors. Ground level holds a sitting room anchored by a working insert fireplace — the kind you actually use in October, not just admire — plus a formal dining room with an original alcove that seats a long table comfortably. There's a separate office or secondary lounge, a ground-floor bedroom with its own en-suite bathroom, and a professional restaurant kitchen fitted with commercial-grade equipment. Spend a Sunday afternoon in that kitchen producing a pot-au-feu with vegetables from Roanne market and you'll understand exactly why the retreat guests never wanted to leave. Upstairs, approximately ten guest rooms spread across the floor alongside a shared lounge that has doubled as a conference ro ... click here to read more

Front view of the estate

The first thing you notice on a summer morning at Pålviksvägen 28 is the quiet. Not the dead quiet of an empty place, but the alive kind — pine resin warming in the sun, a woodpecker working somewhere deeper in the trees, the faint glitter of the Baltic just visible through the spruce. Three hundred meters to the water, and not a single car passing your door. That's the daily reality of this year-round holiday home in Harkskär, on the southern edge of Gävle's extraordinary archipelago. Sweden's High Coast gets most of the international press, but the Gästrikland shoreline around Utvalnäs and Harkskär has been the quiet obsession of Stockholm weekenders for generations. Good reason. The archipelago here is gentler than the rugged north — low granite skerries, calm sheltered inlets, water that warms enough by July for actual swimming rather than just the intention of it. The local Gammel Annabadet is a proper old-fashioned bathing spot, with wooden jetties and the kind of unpretentious summer-Sweden energy that's increasingly hard to find closer to the capital. The property itself sits at the end of Pålviksvägen — literally the last address on a no-through road — on a southwest-facing plot of roughly 2,383 square meters. That size matters. It means genuine privacy from neighbors, a proper mix of maintained lawn and natural forest that you walk through rather than just look at, and terraces that catch the evening light until surprisingly late in a Nordic summer. June evenings here, the sun barely touches the treeline before 10pm. You can sit on the main deck with a glass of something cold and watch the light do things to the forest that don't happen anywhere south of the 60th parallel. The main house was built in 1964 an ... click here to read more

Main house and garden view