Houses For Sale In Belgium With A Garden (page 2)

Houses for sale in belgium - 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 2)

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 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

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

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 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

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 Meerle and the first thing you notice is the silence—not the heavy, empty kind, but the alive kind. Birds in the tree line behind the garden, a light wind moving through the mature oaks, and nothing else. No traffic noise, no urban hum. Just the particular quiet that only comes when a house sits at the edge of a forest on a generous plot of land, with no immediate neighbors rushing past. This is Lage Rooy, a small residential lane in one of Belgium's most underrated rural corners, and this three-bedroom bungalow has been making that morning possible for its owners for years. The plot alone—roughly 1,054 square metres—sets the tone for everything else. The rear garden is a proper park-like space: a stone terrace that catches afternoon sun, a wide lawn rolling toward mature trees and ornamental borders, a gazebo for evenings when the light goes golden, a pond that draws dragonflies in summer, and a wooden storage shed tucked neatly out of sight. The house wraps around this garden on two sides, so the sense of being inside a green envelope is constant. Multiple sets of doors open directly onto it from the living room, the dining room, and the master bedroom, which means the garden isn't just something you look at—it's somewhere you actually live. Inside, the footprint is 217 square metres across two floors, organized with real intelligence around the ground-floor master suite. That bedroom, roughly 15.5 square metres, opens via French doors onto the rear garden and connects directly to a dedicated walk-in closet of about 7.5 square metres with fitted wardrobes. The en-suite bathroom—around 9 square metres—has a walk-in shower with a glass partition, a full bathtub, a vanity unit, and ... click here to read more

Front view of Lage Rooy 23 E

Stand at the back of the garden on a July evening and you'll understand immediately. The meadow stretches out behind the property with nothing between you and the open sky — no fences, no rooftops, no neighbor's barbecue smoke drifting your way. Just grass, light, and the kind of quiet that people drive hours to find on weekends. At Heerbaan 40 in Maaseik, that quiet is built into the foundations. Maaseik sits at the northeastern edge of Belgium, right where the Maas River forms the natural border with the Netherlands. It's one of those small cities that locals fiercely love but tourists haven't yet overrun — the kind of place where the Tuesday morning market on the Marktplein still draws actual residents rather than souvenir hunters. The twin Gothic towers of the Sint-Catharinakerk dominate the skyline in a way that never quite loses its effect, and the Carolus Borromeus museum houses the oldest surviving book in Belgium, the eighth-century Codex Eyckensis. History isn't something the city performs here. It just is. This four-bedroom semi-detached house is a new-build scheduled for completion in 2026, and at 198 square metres across three floors, it gives you real room to breathe — rare for this price bracket anywhere in Belgian Limburg. The architecture is clean and contemporary: a sleek rendered façade, large format windows that pull in the southern light, and a layout that makes the most of every square metre without feeling squeezed. From the living room and kitchen, the garden and the open meadow beyond frame the view like a painting that changes with every season. Spring here means cycling. The Maasland region has one of the densest networks of signed cycling routes in Europe, and from Heerbaan you can roll str ... click here to read more

Front view of Heerbaan 40, Maaseik

On a Sunday morning in Rijkevorsel, the light comes in sideways through the kitchen's wide garden-facing windows. Coffee is already brewing — the built-in machine handles that — and outside, dew is still sitting on the grass of the fully fenced rear garden. No neighbors in the sightline. Just open Flemish countryside rolling out behind the terrace. This is the pace this villa runs at, and once you've spent a weekend here, it's hard to argue with it. Sint-Lenaartsesteenweg 80 sits on a 1,389 square meter plot in the heart of the Kempen region, one of Belgium's most underrated pockets of calm. The house itself is 267 square meters — a substantial four-bedroom villa that has been thoroughly renovated without losing the bones that gave it character in the first place. The wrought-iron interior door that separates the entrance hall from the main living area? That stayed. The oak parquet floors throughout the ground floor? Those stayed too. What changed is everything you don't see at first: the insulation, the systems, the kitchen, the bathrooms — all brought squarely into the present. The living room revolves around a gas fireplace that earns its keep from October through March, when the Kempen afternoons turn grey and the garden takes on that particular Belgian stillness. The room is generous enough for a proper sofa arrangement without feeling cavernous, and it flows directly into the kitchen — the real centerpiece of this house. The island is the kind you actually gather around. Appliances include a cooktop with an integrated extractor, a steam oven alongside a conventional oven, a built-in coffee machine, a warming drawer, a vacuum drawer, and a dishwasher. Everything is built in, everything is considered. Whoever desig ... click here to read more

Front view of Sint-Lenaartsesteenweg 80

Step outside the back gate on a Tuesday morning, and you're already in the forest. No traffic, no noise — just the crunch of leaves underfoot and the particular stillness that only old trees can produce. That's the daily reality at Roelerdreef 18, a solid, well-kept detached house on one of Lanaken's most quietly sought-after avenues, just a few kilometers from the Dutch border and the unmistakable energy of Maastricht. Lanaken sits in Belgian Limburg in a way that feels almost accidental — a calm, unhurried municipality that happens to border the Netherlands and find itself within easy striking distance of three countries. The house on Roelerdreef occupies 212 square meters across two floors, sits on an 800-square-meter plot, and backs directly onto woodland. For buyers looking at second homes in Belgium or a European base that doesn't sacrifice nature for convenience, this is a combination that's genuinely hard to find at this price point. The avenue itself sets the tone immediately. Stately trees line both sides of the road, their canopy meeting overhead in summer to form the kind of dappled light you usually only find in countryside much further from a city. Drive along Roelerdreef on a weekend afternoon and you'll understand why locals don't tend to leave. The street is quiet. Not the performed quietness of a gated development — the genuine article, helped along by the fact that a nearby school is being phased out, which will only deepen the sense of calm in the years ahead. Inside, the ground floor spans 123 square meters and opens with a marble-floored entrance hall — a small but considered touch that signals the overall quality of the finishes throughout. The living room is where daily life properly begins: oa ... click here to read more

Front view of Roelerdreef 18

Step outside on a Saturday morning and the bakeries on Hamont's Markt are already doing brisk business. The smell of fresh bread carries down Graanstraat before most people have poured their first coffee. That's the rhythm of life here — unhurried, grounded, and genuinely pleasant in a way that a lot of European towns have quietly lost. This detached single-level bungalow at Graanstraat 4 is a new-build in its final construction phase, which puts a buyer in an unusually strong position. The structural shell is complete, utilities are roughed in, and the messy groundwork is done. What remains is the interior — flooring, kitchen fittings, wall finishes — and that's entirely yours to decide. It's not a compromise; it's an invitation to build something exactly right rather than inherit someone else's choices. The footprint is 135 square meters of single-floor living on a 618-square-meter plot. No stairs. No split levels. Everything accessible, everything logical. Two bedrooms sit quietly at the back of the house with garden views. The open-plan living and dining area runs wide and faces outward through oversized windows that track light across the space from mid-morning through the afternoon. The kitchen zone is ready for installation — the space is already planned and proportioned properly, so there's no puzzling out awkward corners or inadequate ventilation. The bathroom is a serious one. Provisions are already in for a walk-in shower, a full bathtub, underfloor heating, and a washbasin. A separate guest WC keeps mornings civilized when the house has visitors. The utility room handles the practicalities, and the fully insulated attached garage does what garages should do — keeps the car dry and gives you genuine storage ... click here to read more

Front view of Graanstraat 4

Saturday morning. The automatic gate swings open, the gravel crunches underfoot, and from somewhere behind the stables you can already hear the low sound of the Maas valley countryside waking up — birds, wind through the pasture, total quiet beyond that. This is Langstraat 86, and it doesn't feel like a second home. It feels like the life you kept pushing off until later. Sitting on a generous 6,760 square metre plot in the village of Elen — part of Dilsen-Stokkem in the Belgian province of Limburg — this detached three-bedroom house with two stables and dual pastures is a rare find on the European second home market. Properties like this, where you get genuine rural scale, equestrian infrastructure, and a house that's already been modernised, simply don't come around often at this price point. At 555,000 euros for 115 square metres of living space plus all the land, it sits in a different category from the holiday villas you'll see advertised for twice as much further south. The house itself was built in 1958 and carries the bones of that era — solid concrete intermediate floors, thick walls, a structure built to last. But between 2005 and 2015, it got a proper overhaul: cavity wall insulation, new PVC double-glazed windows throughout, updated bathrooms, a redesigned kitchen with granite countertops and induction cooking, a new gas central heating boiler, and a freshly painted and coated exterior. The result is a home that holds its character while actually being comfortable to live in. No draughty windows. No outdated plumbing surprises. Step inside through the entrance hall — tiled floors, clean lines — and the living room opens up with light. Large windows face the garden and meadow, and in winter the wood-burning ... click here to read more

Front view of Langstraat 86, Dilsen-Stokkem

Early on a weekday morning, the only sound you'll catch from the kitchen at Jagersdreef 7 is birdsong. Not the vague, generic kind — woodpeckers working the oaks at the edge of the garden, the occasional rustle of a deer moving through the reserve that begins literally where the grass ends. There are no through roads here, no delivery trucks, no neighbours' engines warming up. Just a 325-square-metre villa sitting on 3,302 square metres of private land in one of Flemish Brabant's most quietly coveted pockets, where the Lichtaart heathlands fade into the residential fringe of Herentals. This is the kind of property that takes a while to fully understand. It doesn't announce itself loudly. Pull up the private driveway — long enough to park several cars well off the road — and what you notice first is the sense of proportion. The gabled roofline, the mature trees framing the facade, the way the building sits back from the lane as if it has nothing to prove. The 2023 renovation was thorough without being aggressive: original exposed beams were kept, the fireplace in the living room still draws the eye when you walk in, but the kitchen is fully modern, the bathroom is genuinely spa-quality with both a bathtub and a walk-in shower, and solar panels on the roof mean running costs stay honest. Inside, the layout flows logically rather than fashionably. The entrance hall has a proper cloakroom — something that disappears in properties with more focus on staging than living — plus a guest toilet before you've even reached the main rooms. The kitchen is set up for people who actually cook: good storage, modern appliances, a layout that keeps the chef in the conversation rather than buried in a corner. It opens onto the living roo ... click here to read more

Front view of Jagersdreef 7

On a quiet stretch of Merksplasseweg, the morning light filters through the trees that line the front of the property and lands on oak floorboards that have never once felt cold underfoot — because below them, a full ground-floor heating system hums quietly to life before you've even thought about getting up. That's the kind of detail that makes a house feel like it was thought through, not just built. Ravels sits in the Antwerp province of the Campine region, a part of Belgium that most international buyers overlook entirely. That's a mistake. The area around the Turnhoutse Vennen nature reserve and the Kalmthoutse Heide — one of Western Europe's largest inland heathland landscapes — draws hikers and cyclists from across the Benelux, yet the villages themselves have stayed quiet, unhurried, and genuinely local. The Saturday market in nearby Turnhout, just 10 kilometres away, is where you'll find Campine asparagus in spring, local Trappist cheeses, and the kind of butcher who knows every farmer supplying his counter. Turnhout itself has a striking Beguinage, a castle, and a surprisingly good food scene clustered around the Grote Markt. This isn't rural isolation — it's rural intelligence. The house itself was built in 2000 on a 832-square-metre plot and sits on Merksplasseweg 31 with an unobstructed view over woodland to the front. Four bedrooms, one well-fitted bathroom, 190 square metres of living space, and a freestanding garage that measures 70 square metres on its own. That garage alone makes this property unusual. Fully insulated, fitted with two electric sectional doors and a groundwater pump for garden irrigation, it functions comfortably as workshop, car storage, hobby room, or overflow accommodation for a ren ... click here to read more

Front view of Merksplasseweg 31

Saturday morning in Grote Heide sounds like this: a wood pigeon calling from somewhere deep in the oak canopy, the faint crackle of a wood-burning fire coming back to life, and absolutely nothing else. No traffic. No sirens. Just the kind of quiet that reminds you why you wanted a second home in the Belgian countryside in the first place. Vinkendreef 4 sits in one of Pelt's most coveted villa districts — a wooded pocket of north-east Belgium where the plots are generous, the neighbours invisible behind mature hedgerows, and the pace of life runs at a completely different frequency from Brussels or Amsterdam or wherever you're escaping from. This is a proper house. 280 square metres of it, on a landscaped plot of 3,551 m² — more than a third of a hectare — with a south-facing garden that gets the sun from breakfast until the last glass of evening wine. Walk through the entrance hall and the first thing you notice is how much light there is. Large windows pull the garden inside, and the living room feels less like a room and more like a viewing platform onto all that green. The wood-burning fireplace anchors the space on cooler evenings — and in the Belgian Kempen, autumn comes early and beautifully, the birch trees outside turning gold while the fire does its work. The kitchen is practical and well-equipped, with direct access to a laundry room and storage area. No awkward layouts, no carrying shopping halfway across the house. It just works. The ground floor gives you two bedrooms — one currently configured as a dressing room, one with an ensuite bathroom that also opens to the hallway — plus a separate office that converts easily to a fifth bedroom if you need it. This kind of flexibility matters. It means multi-gene ... click here to read more

Front view of Vinkendreef 4

On a quiet Sunday morning in Lommel, with the window above the kitchen breakfast nook cracked open, you catch the faint rustle of pine trees from the Sahara nature reserve a short bike ride away. The smell of fresh coffee fills a kitchen big enough to actually cook in. That's the kind of morning this house was built for. Standing on Pieter Paul Rubensdreef — a tree-lined avenue in one of Lommel's most established villa parks — this five-bedroom home sits on a 1,588-square-metre plot and covers 423 square metres of interior space across two floors, plus a full basement and attic. Built in 1977 with an emphasis on durability over trends, it has aged well. The bones are solid, the materials were chosen to last, and the layout still makes sense for how families actually live. Walk through the front door and the entrance hall does something most modern homes forget to do: it makes you pause. The marble floor catches the light in the afternoon. There's a cloakroom to your right, a guest toilet tucked neatly away, and a dedicated home office just off the hall — genuinely separate from the living areas, which matters more than people expect until they're two years into working from home. The living room and dining room flow naturally from here, both laid with warm parquet that's far easier to love on a grey November day than polished concrete. The open fireplace in the lounge isn't decorative — it's the room's centrepiece, the thing that makes the space feel lived-in and real rather than staged. Five bedrooms give a family real breathing room. Each one has parquet flooring, and there's genuine flexibility here: one space could become a sixth bedroom with minimal effort. The two bathrooms are generously fitted — double sinks, ... click here to read more

Front view of Pieter Paul Rubensdreef 2

Step outside on a Saturday morning and within minutes you're on horseback, following a private path that opens straight onto the Turnhout nature reserve — no roads to cross, no trailers to load, just open countryside rolling ahead of you. That's the daily reality this 330 m² farmhouse on more than nine hectares makes possible. It's a rare setup, and in this part of the Belgian Campine, it's the kind of property that doesn't come to market twice in a generation. Built around 1935 and thoroughly overhauled in 2005, the farmhouse has that particular quality old Belgian rural homes develop when someone has genuinely cared for them over decades: solid, warm, full of character without being precious about it. The beamed ceiling in the living room still carries the weight of the original structure, and the open fireplace — used, not decorative — turns January evenings into something you actually look forward to. A ground-floor master bedroom with its own dressing room and en-suite bathroom means guests or elderly family members never have to tackle the stairs, which matters more than you'd think on a working estate. The country kitchen at the back of the house is where this place really shows its hand. Big windows, a central island, direct access to the inner courtyard — it's designed for the kind of cooking that takes all afternoon. Think Belgian stoofvlees slow-simmering while the kids come in muddy from the paddocks, or a long Sunday lunch spilling out into the courtyard when the Campine summer finally arrives in June. Upstairs, two further rooms flex easily between bedrooms, a home office, or hobby space, depending on what phase of life you're in. A second bathroom and generous built-in storage complete the upper floor wi ... click here to read more

Front view of Steenweg op Baarle-Hertog 65

On a quiet Sunday morning in Neerharen, the only sounds coming through the upstairs bedroom window are birdsong and the distant church bells drifting over from Maastricht. The garden below is already dappled with light, and the coffee is on. That's the kind of morning this address delivers — and it does it with almost unfair regularity. Reistraat 74 sits in the Goudkust residential area, one of those neighbourhoods that locals quietly keep to themselves. Tree-lined, unhurried, and genuinely green in a way that most suburban developments promise but rarely deliver. The 708-square-metre plot wraps around the villa with mature lawns, established trees, and a full perimeter fence secured by an electric gate. Children can play outside without supervision anxiety. Adults can eat dinner on the terrace without a neighbour's window staring back at them. Both things matter more than most property descriptions acknowledge. The villa itself is 251 square metres spread over three floors — twelve rooms in total, including three generous bedrooms. A fourth is achievable without significant structural work, which opens up real flexibility for a home office, a guest suite, or a room that changes purpose as the years go by. The renovation that's been carried out here isn't cosmetic. Roof, electrical systems, drainage, windows, doors, both bathrooms, the kitchen, utility room, air conditioning, and central heating have all been replaced or substantially upgraded. The Vaillant eco tec 30kW gas boiler was installed in 2023. Triple glazing and floor-to-ceiling roof insulation give the property an energy label C — solid performance for a home of this scale and era. The building is also certified asbestos-free, which matters to buyers who've ... click here to read more

Front view of Reistraat 74, Lanaken Neerharen

Saturday morning in Meerle moves at its own pace. The bakery on the village square opens early, the smell of fresh bread drifting down Heimeulenstraat before most of the street has stirred. You slide open the large garden doors off the kitchen, coffee in hand, and the lawn is still wet from the night. Six bedrooms. Four bathrooms. A kitchen island big enough for a proper family breakfast. This is the kind of house that earns its keep every single weekend. Meerle sits at the northern tip of the Kempen region in the Belgian province of Antwerp, tucked right against the Dutch border and surrounded by the flat, forested landscape that defines this quiet corner of Flanders. It belongs administratively to Hoogstraten, a market town about ten minutes' drive south where the Gothic Sint-Katharinakerk dominates a square lined with café terraces. The area draws people who want countryside without isolation — Breda is 25 kilometres north, Antwerp under an hour south on the E19. Eindhoven airport and Brussels Airport both sit within comfortable driving range, which matters enormously for international buyers treating this as a second home in Belgium or a base for extended stays. The house itself stands on Heimeulenstraat in a low-traffic residential street. Originally built in 1980, it has been comprehensively renovated — not the kind of cosmetic refresh that hides problems behind fresh paint, but a genuine overhaul that touches the electrical installation, glazing, energy systems, and finishes throughout. The EPC label B rating is the honest proof of that. The heating runs on a gas HR++ system with high-efficiency glazing across the entire house, which keeps running costs sensible even through the grey Belgian winters. Inside, 32 ... click here to read more

Front view of Heimeulenstraat 53

Stand at the kitchen window on a Saturday morning and you can hear the bells from the Sint-Pieterskerk drifting across the rooftops of Oud-Rekem. The village has that rare quality of feeling genuinely unhurried — cobbled squares, centuries-old facades, a handful of locals having coffee outside the same café they've been going to for decades. And this 169 m² detached house on Rekemerstraat puts you right in the middle of it, with a 952 m² plot, a covered terrace, and an unfinished attic that could change everything about how much space you actually end up with. The house is in good condition, so you're not walking into a project that will eat three summers of your life. But there's enough left to shape — the attic, the extension, the garden — that you can genuinely make it yours. That balance is harder to find than people think. On the ground floor, the living room is generous and light, with ceramic tile floors and manual shutters that let you dial the afternoon sun up or down depending on your mood. The kitchen is properly equipped: a Zanussi induction hob, extractor hood, built-in oven, and a connection already plumbed for a dishwasher. Functional without being fussy. Beside it sits a tiled extension — currently open-ended in its purpose — that connects through to the terrace on one side and the driveway on the other. Some buyers will use it as a dining room. Others will knock through and open everything up. The layout invites both. The utility room handles the practical side of life quietly: washing machine and dryer connections, a Vaillant gas wall-mounted boiler that covers both heating and hot water. There's also a ground floor shower room with a walk-in shower, double washbasin, and an illuminated mirror — plus ... click here to read more

Front view of Rekemerstraat 78

Step through the gate on Chaamseweg on a Saturday morning in late spring, and the first thing you notice is the silence. Not the silence of isolation — the silence of land. Twenty thousand square metres of it, rolling out in every direction in shades of green that shift with the light. Somewhere near the animal meadow, a donkey ambles along the fence. The smell of cut grass drifts through the open kitchen window. This is Meerle, and it gets under your skin fast. Set in the Flemish Kempen countryside just a stone's throw from the Dutch border, this four-bedroom detached villa on Chaamseweg 79 is the kind of property that makes you reconsider what a second home can actually be. At 536 square metres of living space — and with a substantial 380m² multifunctional outbuilding that locals know affectionately as 't Schuurke — this isn't a weekend bolt-hole. It's a proper estate, the sort of place you buy and never quite want to leave. The approach alone sets the tone. A long, sweeping driveway frames the house before you even reach the front door, flanked by mature hedgerows that deliver genuine privacy from the road. Inside the main villa, the entrance hall has that grounded, unhurried quality you find in houses built with care: original brick floor tiles underfoot, sleek plastered walls, and a cloakroom niche tucked neatly to one side. It tells you immediately that the people who kept this house took pride in it. The living room — roughly 38 square metres — has a bay window looking out over the rear garden and an open fireplace that makes winter weekends here feel genuinely restorative. This flows naturally into a study with windows on three sides, the kind of room where you could actually get work done or lose an afternoon ... click here to read more

Front view of Chaamseweg 79

Sunday morning in Lanaye sounds like this: a coffee machine hissing to life behind the bar, wooden shutters swinging open over the rear terrace, and the faint chime of bells drifting across from the Dutch side of the Meuse valley. You're standing in your own kitchen — a professional one, twelve gas burners and all — and the border is a ten-minute walk away. This isn't a weekend fantasy. This is Place du Roi Albert 19, and it's one of the most quietly remarkable properties on the Belgian market right now. The building itself goes back to before 1906. That age shows in the best possible ways: thick walls that hold the cool in summer, a gabled tile roof that's seen more than a century of Meuse valley winters, and the kind of proportions you simply don't get in new construction. At 159 square metres spread across three floors, it divides cleanly between a ground-floor café/brasserie of 75 m² and a private residential section of 83 m² above, each with its own entrance. Live upstairs, run a business downstairs, or rethink the whole layout — the building has the bones to handle any of it. The café itself is genuinely equipped. Not "has a coffee machine" equipped — we're talking a 12-burner gas stove, a salamander grill, a griddle, a convection oven, and a bar setup with a four-door cooler, wine on tap, and an ice maker. The front and rear terraces together seat 36 guests, and there's a realistic possibility of expanding the terrace footprint across the quiet street, which would push capacity higher. The rear terrace faces east. Morning light, private, sheltered. Exactly where you want to be with a coffee before service begins. Climb the private staircase to the first floor and the pace shifts entirely. The living room is gen ... click here to read more

Front view of Place du Roi Albert 19

On a quiet Tuesday morning at Neerveldstraat 1B, the light does something remarkable. It pours through roughly 150 square metres of rear glass façade and turns the entire living floor into something that feels less like a house and more like a greenhouse for humans — warm, alive, connected to the fig trees and Japanese maple just outside. You make coffee in the industrial kitchen, and through the glass you watch a blackbird pick at the cherry tree. That's the daily reality here. Not a view from a balcony over rooftops. An actual garden, arms-length away, folding into your living room. This is a genuinely rare house. Architect-designed with a structural steel frame that gives the whole place its bones — visible, honest, deliberately industrial — and then softened by the wood terrace off the first-floor living room, the lush enclosed garden, the carefully chosen plantings. The steel sliding front door sets the tone the moment you arrive. It's not trying to look like something it isn't. 339 square metres of living space across three floors, plus a basement and attic adding another 134 square metres. That's a serious amount of room for two people, or a family that keeps growing into its spaces. The ground floor has a 56m² room currently used as a bedroom and studio — with its own direct garden views — plus a full bathroom with double sinks and shower, and a guest WC. The first floor is where the architecture really pays off: the living area opens via a large sliding glass door onto a raised wooden terrace, and the industrial kitchen runs the length of the space with a five-burner gas stove, double fridge-freezer, dishwasher, and extractor. Air conditioning keeps it comfortable through July and August when Limburg summers p ... click here to read more

Front view of Neerveldstraat 1B

Step outside on a Tuesday morning, coffee in hand, and the only sounds reaching you are wood pigeons in the old oaks and the faint rustle of wind crossing open fields toward the Dutch border. That's Schuivenoord 2. It's the kind of quiet that city dwellers spend years chasing, and here it's simply the default setting. Meerle sits in the northern tip of the Belgian province of Antwerp, tucked into the Noorderkempen — a region of heathland, river valleys, and working farms that feels genuinely unhurried. The village itself is small enough to know the baker's name but connected enough to reach Breda's Grote Markt or Antwerp's Meir shopping street in under an hour. For buyers seeking a substantial second home in Belgium that genuinely delivers on both space and serenity, this is about as good as it gets. The villa was built in 1971 but underwent a full renovation in 2016, and it shows. The bones are solid — think generous ceiling heights, exposed timber beams in the main living area, and a floor plan that spreads across 546 square metres without feeling labyrinthine. The renovation brought everything up to contemporary spec: energy label B, central heating with partial underfloor heating, and fittings chosen for longevity rather than trend. Walk through the front gate — electric, with plenty of room for several cars along the private driveway — and the house announces itself through its garden rather than its facade. Five thousand, seven hundred and twenty-five square metres of it. Mature trees frame long views across the lawn, espalier fruit trees line one wall, and multiple terraces give you options depending on where the afternoon sun lands. There's a covered seating area for the kind of Belgian summer evenings that st ... click here to read more

Front view of Schuivenoord 2

Step outside on a Tuesday morning in early October and the only sound you'll hear is wind moving through the birch trees at the edge of the garden. No traffic. No neighbors close enough to matter. Just the soft creak of branches and the particular kind of quiet that Belgium's Kempen region does better than almost anywhere in northwest Europe. That's daily life at this compact, move-in ready bungalow on Verbindingsstraat in Merksplas — a property that punches well above its size through smart design, a genuinely impressive 1,148-square-meter plot, and an energy setup so efficient the running costs will make you rethink what a second home can cost to maintain. Built between 2022 and 2024, the bungalow sits in a recreational wooded zone on the outskirts of Merksplas, a small Flemish municipality about 45 kilometers northeast of Antwerp. The plot wraps around the house on all sides, giving you garden views from every room. Mature trees anchor the perimeter. Multiple seating areas mean you can follow the sun across the day — and the west-facing orientation means long, golden late-afternoon light floods the rear terrace through spring, summer, and well into autumn. Inside, 62 square meters sounds modest until you stand in the main living space and realize how well the layout breathes. The living room and open kitchen run together across roughly 37 square meters — polished concrete floors underfoot, underfloor heating humming quietly beneath, large sliding doors opening directly onto the garden. On cold February weekends, that floor stays warm from the Vaillant heat pump alone. In July, you prop the doors open and the garden effectively becomes an extra room. The kitchen is the kind of setup that makes cooking feel purposef ... click here to read more

Front view of Verbindingsstraat 1

Picture yourself stepping through wrought-iron gates into a private sanctuary where century-old trees frame a historic Belgian rectory, yet cafés and train stations to Antwerp sit just minutes away on foot. This is the rare equilibrium of Essen living: a peaceful, established neighborhood where architectural heritage meets practical modern infrastructure, where 62 solar panels power your sustainable retreat, and where 2,129 square meters of private garden create an urban oasis impossible to find in Belgium's competitive property markets. Built in 1903 by architect Louis Gife as the village rectory, this eight-bedroom residence offers international buyers an exceptional opportunity to own a piece of protected Belgian heritage while enjoying the lifestyle flexibility that few European properties can match. Whether you envision multi-generational family gatherings, a home office setup with dedicated guest quarters, or a vacation rental generating consistent income from Antwerp professionals and Dutch visitors, this former rectory adapts to your vision while maintaining its dignified character. Essen occupies a strategic position that Belgian locals treasure but international buyers often overlook: nestled against the Dutch border in the province of Antwerp, this municipality of 18,000 residents combines small-town tranquility with exceptional connectivity. Your morning routine might begin with coffee in the 75-square-meter living room overlooking the rear garden, followed by a twenty-minute cycle through Grenspark De Kalmthoutse Heide, one of Belgium's most biodiverse nature reserves spanning 6,000 hectares of heathland, dunes, and pine forests. By midday, you could be browsing Antwerp's diamond district or touring its fas ... click here to read more

Front view of Nieuwstraat 96

Picture yourself stepping through automated gates into a private sanctuary where centuries-old oak trees frame your view of an adjacent castle estate. The late afternoon sun filters through the leaves, casting dappled shadows across Belgian blue stone terraces as you settle into your covered outdoor lounge, watching your family enjoy the heated pool. This is life at your Belgian vacation home in Oud-Turnhout, where 718 square meters of refined living space offers the perfect retreat from everyday life, just 20 minutes from Eindhoven and 40 minutes from Antwerp. This partially thatched villa represents a rare opportunity for international buyers seeking a European second home that combines privacy, versatility, and authentic Belgian character. Set on nearly 2,000 square meters of landscaped grounds, the property functions as multiple residences in one: a spacious family retreat, a separate guesthouse studio, a professional office wing, and entertainment spaces that transition seamlessly from intimate gatherings to large celebrations. For families seeking a vacation home in Belgium that accommodates extended stays, multi-generational visits, or even rental opportunities, this property delivers exceptional flexibility. The Kempen region of Belgium, where Oud-Turnhout sits nestled among forests and heathlands, offers a lifestyle dramatically different from Europe's busier tourist corridors. Here, your holiday rhythms follow the changing seasons through pine forests and nature reserves. Spring brings wildflowers blooming across the Turnhouts Vennengebied nature reserve, perfect for cycling the region's extensive network of car-free paths that wind through protected wetlands. Summer means lazy afternoons by your automated po ... click here to read more

Front view of Bosdreef 35 villa

Picture yourself sipping morning coffee on a sun-drenched southeast-facing terrace, surrounded by 1,000 square meters of private gardens, while planning your day's forest hike through the pine woodlands that stretch for miles beyond your property line. This is daily life at this versatile 363-square-meter villa in Lommel, where the Belgian Kempen region's natural beauty meets contemporary family living. Built in 1989 and meticulously maintained, this home serves families who value both connection to nature and professional functionality, with a dedicated office entrance that seamlessly blends work-from-home requirements with vacation property potential. Lommel's position in northeastern Belgium creates a unique vacation home proposition for international buyers. The town anchors the Bosland region, home to Europe's largest accessible forest network, with over 4,500 hectares of walking and cycling paths literally minutes from your door. Spring brings wildflowers carpeting the forest floor and the return of songbirds to the surrounding pines. Summer means long cycling expeditions through interconnected trails, family picnics by forest lakes, and evening barbecues that stretch past sunset. Autumn transforms the landscape into a tapestry of amber and gold, while winter offers crisp forest walks and cozy fireside evenings in the 50-square-meter living room with its working fireplace. The property's layout anticipates how modern families actually use vacation homes. The ground floor flows naturally from the spacious entrance hall through to the open-plan kitchen equipped with induction cooking, steam oven, and granite work surfaces. Sliding doors connect the living space to a 25-square-meter covered veranda, creating an indo ... click here to read more

Front view of Luikersteenweg 230

Picture yourself cycling along the tree-lined paths of the Albert Canal on a crisp autumn morning, the spires of Maastricht visible across the border, before returning to your sun-filled veranda for coffee overlooking your private south-facing garden. This is the rhythm of life that awaits at this completely renovated bungalow in Kesselt, a tranquil Belgian village that offers the perfect basecamp for exploring one of Europe's most culturally rich border regions. This 138m² residence sits on an exceptionally generous 892m² plot in the heart of the Benelux region, where Belgian warmth meets Dutch urban sophistication. The location places you at the crossroads of three countries – Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany – opening up a world of weekend escapes, cultural experiences, and lifestyle opportunities that few European vacation homes can match. Maastricht's cobblestone squares, Michelin-starred restaurants, and world-class art galleries are less than 10 kilometers away, easily reached by bicycle along dedicated cycling paths that make car ownership almost optional. The property underwent comprehensive renovation in 2017, transforming it into a move-in ready vacation retreat that balances modern comfort with practical functionality. New PVC window frames with double glazing ensure year-round comfort, while the stylish bathroom and contemporary flooring throughout create an atmosphere that feels fresh and inviting the moment you arrive for a weekend getaway or extended summer stay. The home's fully basemented design – a feature increasingly rare in new construction – provides an astounding 108m² of additional space below the main living level, solving the eternal vacation home challenge of where to store sports equip ... click here to read more

Front view of Sint-Michielsstraat 16

Picture yourself stepping through iron gates into your private Belgian sanctuary, where 1,940 square meters of manicured gardens surround a heated swimming pool that glimmers under summer skies. This is Maaseik, a historic riverside city in Limburg where Flemish heritage meets modern convenience, and where this 418-square-meter villa offers international buyers a sophisticated base for exploring the heart of Europe. Within 30 minutes, you can cross into the Netherlands for lunch in Maastricht's medieval squares, or venture south to discover the German wine regions, making this property an exceptional hub for continental adventures. Maaseik sits along the banks of the Meuse River, where centuries-old trading routes created a prosperous merchant city that still celebrates its golden age through cobblestone streets and Renaissance architecture. The historic center, just minutes from this residence, hosts weekly markets where local farmers sell Limburg cheeses and Belgian chocolates, while café terraces overflow with residents enjoying Trappist beers brewed in nearby abbeys. This is Belgium's countryside at its most authentic, where cycling culture dominates, nature reserves stretch for kilometers, and the pace of life slows to a rhythm perfected over generations. For vacation home buyers seeking genuine European character without tourist crowds, Maaseik delivers accessibility with tranquility. Built in 1991 and maintained in move-in ready condition, this detached villa occupies a prime position in a residential neighborhood where privacy meets practicality. The home's architecture follows traditional Belgian villa design, with substantial construction, generous proportions, and thoughtful orientation to maximize natural l ... click here to read more

Photo 1 of Derde Straat 13

Picture yourself sipping morning coffee on your terrace as golden sunlight spills across the open fields of Belgium's Kempen region, birdsong filling the air while mist slowly lifts from the countryside. This is the daily rhythm awaiting you at this completely renovated family home in Pelt, where modern sustainability meets the timeless tranquility of rural Flemish life. Positioned on over 1,100 square meters of private land with panoramic views across working farmland, this property offers international buyers a rare opportunity to own a move-in ready vacation home that combines Belgian architectural tradition with 2025 energy standards and the freedom to add your personal finishing touches. Nestled in the peaceful Kempen landscape where Belgium meets the Netherlands, this 206-square-meter residence has been transformed from foundation to roofline in 2025, creating a blank canvas that's structurally complete yet waiting for your design vision. The sellers have intentionally left flooring selections, wall treatments, and portions of the kitchen layout open for buyer customization, meaning you can create a vacation retreat that reflects your personal aesthetic without enduring lengthy renovations. It's a unique position rarely found in the European second home market: the infrastructure and energy systems of a new-build property with the charm of an established neighborhood and the creative freedom typically reserved for major renovation projects. The Kempen region of northern Belgium remains one of Europe's most accessible yet underappreciated destinations for second home ownership. Located just 90 minutes from Brussels Airport and 45 minutes from Eindhoven Airport in the Netherlands, Pelt offers international owners e ... click here to read more

Front view of de Vrundenweg 1

Picture yourself sipping morning coffee on a sun-drenched terrace, surrounded by mature trees and the gentle hum of Belgian countryside life, yet just minutes from vibrant Dutch cities. This substantial family villa in Meer offers an extraordinary opportunity for those seeking a vacation home or second residence that bridges two countries, two cultures, and endless lifestyle possibilities. Here, where Belgium's warm hospitality meets the Netherlands' dynamic energy, you'll discover a property that transforms weekend getaways into cherished family traditions and holiday gatherings into unforgettable celebrations. Nestled in the charming village of Meer, this 341-square-meter villa represents the ideal European second home for international families who value space, privacy, and strategic location. The cross-border positioning delivers remarkable versatility—you're equidistant from Breda's cosmopolitan attractions and Hoogstraten's historic Belgian character, creating a vacation base that offers two distinct cultural experiences within a fifteen-minute drive. For those establishing a European foothold, this location provides practical advantages: Schiphol Airport sits just 90 minutes north, Brussels Airport lies 75 minutes south, and the high-speed rail connections from both Dutch and Belgian stations open direct routes to Paris, London, and beyond. The property's generous 1,489-square-meter grounds immediately distinguish it from typical European vacation homes. Mature landscaping creates natural privacy screens, while multiple terrace areas allow you to follow the sun throughout the day or host gatherings of varying sizes. The garden layout thoughtfully separates active entertainment zones from tranquil retreat spaces— ... click here to read more

Front view of John Lijsenstraat 12a

Picture yourself stepping onto your private terrace on a warm summer evening, the scent of freshly cut hay drifting across endless meadows as you sink into your outdoor jacuzzi with a glass of Belgian Trappist beer. This is the rhythm of life at your vacation home in Essen-Horendonk, where the gentle countryside of Belgium's Kempen region meets modern comfort in a fully renovated 313-square-meter villa that welcomes you with six spacious bedrooms and panoramic rural views that change with every season. This property represents more than a second home—it's your gateway to the tranquil beauty of the Belgian-Dutch borderlands, where cycling paths wind through pine forests and historic villages invite leisurely exploration. Nestled at Postbaan 47 in one of Belgium's most peaceful residential areas, this detached villa sits on a fully fenced 858-square-meter plot that wraps you in privacy and natural beauty. The location offers something increasingly rare in modern Europe: unobstructed countryside views from multiple angles, yet with every essential amenity within walking or cycling distance. The village of Essen-Horendonk combines rural authenticity with surprising convenience—your local bakery for morning croissants sits 900 meters away, while the Dutch border and town of Roosendaal lie just minutes beyond, opening access to both Belgian charm and Dutch efficiency. This villa underwent comprehensive renovation within the past five years, transforming it into a move-in ready vacation home that requires nothing but your arrival. The energy-efficient design achieves an impressive EPC rating of 183 kWh per square meter annually, earning a B-label that translates to lower utility costs during your stays and enhanced appeal to ... click here to read more

Front view of Postbaan 47

Picture yourself sipping morning coffee on your private terrace as sunlight filters through the trees, the tranquil sounds of Smeermaas waking gently around you. Just minutes from the cultural richness of Maastricht yet cocooned in Belgian countryside serenity, this five-bedroom residence offers something rare: a vacation home where family memories unfold naturally, where every season brings new reasons to return, and where the pace of life simply feels better. This is your gateway to experiencing the best of the Benelux region, a property that welcomes you home whether you visit for weekend escapes, extended summer holidays, or choose to embrace it as your European second home base. Nestled on Nijverheidslaan in Smeermaas, this 161-square-meter house represents the ideal intersection of Belgian residential quality and vacation property potential. The moment you step inside, floor-to-ceiling windows flood the living spaces with natural light, creating an immediate connection to the garden that becomes your outdoor living room from spring through autumn. The thoughtful layout ensures that families of all sizes find their rhythm here – children claim bedrooms for their Belgian adventures, couples enjoy quiet morning routines in separate spaces, and everyone gathers in the expansive living area where indoor and outdoor worlds merge seamlessly. The property's energy-conscious design makes it practical for vacation home ownership. Solar panels grace the roof, reducing your operational costs whether you're present for three weeks or three months annually. The C-label EPC rating of 288 kWh per square meter means no immediate renovation pressures, allowing you to focus on enjoying your investment rather than managing construct ... click here to read more

Front view of Nijverheidslaan 113

Picture yourself stepping onto your south-facing terrace on a crisp spring morning, coffee in hand, as golden light spills across 3,150 square meters of private Belgian countryside. The scent of blooming garden flowers mingles with fresh air drifting from the nearby Kempen nature reserves. This is the everyday reality awaiting you at this versatile country house in Retie, where modern energy efficiency meets adaptable family living just 30 minutes from Antwerp's international connections. Nestled in Belgium's tranquil Kempen region, this 273-square-meter residence represents a rare opportunity for international buyers seeking a European vacation home that adapts to changing family needs. The property's south-facing plot captures maximum sunlight throughout the year, creating an outdoor sanctuary that becomes an extension of your living space from April through October. Belgian summers here are gentle and temperate, with average temperatures reaching 22-25°C, perfect for long afternoons in the garden without the oppressive heat found further south in Europe. The architecture speaks to practical Belgian design philosophy where form follows function without sacrificing comfort. Four generously proportioned bedrooms anchor the first floor, including a master suite with private bathroom that provides a peaceful retreat after days exploring the region. The second bathroom serves the household with both bathtub and separate shower, reflecting the Belgian appreciation for quality fixtures and thoughtful layouts. Underfloor heating throughout the ground level ensures consistent warmth during cooler months, while double glazing and full insulation maintain the property's impressive B energy rating, translating to manageable util ... click here to read more

Front view of Obroek 1

Picture yourself pedaling along the Maas River on a crisp autumn morning, the scent of woodsmoke drifting from village chimneys as you return to your own retreat in Uikhoven. This three-bedroom country home on Ruiterstraat sits where Belgian tranquility meets Dutch accessibility, offering 197 square meters of flexible living space on a secure 623-square-meter plot. For families seeking a second home that balances rural peace with modern connectivity, this property delivers year-round comfort just minutes from cross-border adventures and natural landscapes that change dramatically with each season. The Belgian Limburg region offers vacation homeowners a rare combination: the slower pace of countryside living without sacrificing urban conveniences. Maasmechelen and neighboring Uikhoven occupy a unique geographic position along the Maas River, forming part of the tri-border area where Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany converge. This location transforms your second home into a strategic base for exploring three countries, with Maastricht fifteen minutes north, the German city of Aachen forty minutes east, and Brussels reachable in ninety minutes when you crave metropolitan energy. The property itself tells the story of thoughtful renovation meeting practical family design. Built in 1979 and comprehensively updated in 2001, the home received fresh aluminum windows in 2023 and now features three air conditioning units that maintain comfort during Belgium's increasingly warm summers and provide supplemental heating during winter months. The pellet stove in the main living area creates focal-point warmth on cold evenings, while natural gas central heating ensures reliable temperature control throughout. This multi-system a ... click here to read more

Front view of Ruiterstraat 4, Maasmechelen

Picture yourself on a sun-drenched terrace in the tranquil Essen-Heikant neighborhood, coffee in hand, watching the morning light filter through mature trees that border your 1,153-square-meter private garden. This is the daily reality at this spacious 400-square-meter villa on Nolsebaan, where recently renovated interiors meet the unhurried pace of Belgian border living, just minutes from Dutch cities and European transport corridors. For families seeking a versatile vacation home or international professionals needing a second residence between Belgium and the Netherlands, this property delivers rare flexibility: seven bedrooms, dedicated workspace, fitness facilities, and entertainment areas that adapt to however you choose to spend your European getaway. The Essen-Heikant area represents one of Belgium's most appealing locations for second home buyers who value both peaceful residential character and strategic positioning. Situated mere kilometers from the Dutch border, this villa places you within easy driving distance of Antwerp's cultural treasures (30 minutes), Breda's historic city center (20 minutes), and Rotterdam's international airport (60 minutes). The cross-border location means you can explore two countries from a single base: cycle through Dutch polders on Sunday morning, attend Antwerp's renowned summer festivals by afternoon, and return to your private sanctuary by evening. The neighborhood itself embodies the best of Flemish suburban living, with tree-lined streets, well-maintained homes, and a genuine sense of community that welcomes international residents. Approaching through the automatic gate, the villa's detached architecture and mature landscaping immediately signal the privacy that defines y ... click here to read more

Front view of Nolsebaan 2 villa

Picture yourself sipping morning coffee on a sun-drenched covered terrace, overlooking 1,636 square meters of manicured garden while solar panels silently generate power above you. Beyond your automated security gate, cyclists pedal past on their way to the Achelse Kluis forest trails, and somewhere in the distance, church bells drift across from the Dutch border just two kilometers away. This is the rhythm of life at this 240-square-meter detached villa in Hamont-Achel, where Belgian tranquility meets Dutch accessibility, and where your vacation home becomes a basecamp for exploring two countries from one exceptional property. Imagine the weekend morning when you open the sliding glass doors from your veranda, letting fresh Limburg air sweep through the 32-square-meter living room where a fireplace crackles softly. Your teenagers emerge from their air-conditioned bedrooms upstairs, drawn by the scent of fresh stroopwafels from the bakery you discovered in Valkenswaard last week. Your partner is already in the open-plan kitchen, the morning sun reflecting off granite countertops while they prepare breakfast at the central island. Through the kitchen windows, you watch finches darting between the automatic irrigation system sprinklers, keeping your garden lush without effort. This is the lifestyle this five-bedroom villa enables across four seasons of cross-border European living. The property sits in a tranquil residential pocket of Hamont-Achel, positioned perfectly for families who want the best of Belgian village life with instant access to Dutch urban amenities. Your automated entrance gate opens to reveal a front garden that creates natural distance from Sint Odilialaan, transforming street sounds into barely audibl ... click here to read more

Front view of Sint Odilialaan 22, Hamont-Achel

Step through the iron gates of Villa Saporis and enter a world where 1907 architectural grandeur meets contemporary Belgian comfort. Morning light filters through original Art Nouveau stained glass, casting colored patterns across marble floors as you descend the monumental exterior staircase. The scent of coffee drifts from the industrial kitchen while the heated swimming pond steams gently in the private garden behind this 760-square-meter masterpiece, impossibly nestled just 500 meters from Hasselt's bustling Grote Markt. This exceptional 10-bedroom villa represents a rare convergence of location, scale, and versatility in Belgium's capital of taste. Currently operating as a boutique hotel, the property offers international buyers an immediate income-generating asset while providing the flexibility to transform spaces into a grand family residence, professional offices, or a hybrid live-work environment that maximizes this prime city-center position. The presence of 10 private parking spaces solves one of urban Belgium's greatest challenges, adding substantial value in a district where most residents navigate narrow streets searching for spots. Hasselt reveals itself as Flanders' hidden gem for vacation property investment. As the provincial capital of Limburg, this city of 80,000 combines sophisticated urban amenities with surprising tranquility, offering international owners a central Belgian base without Brussels' intensity or Bruges' tourist crowds. The city earned its reputation as the genever capital of the world, with the National Jenever Museum just minutes away showcasing Belgium's juniper-flavored heritage. Each autumn, the Hasselt Jenever Festival transforms the historic center into a celebration of local ... click here to read more

Front view of Villa Saporis

Picture yourself stepping onto your private covered terrace, morning coffee in hand, as the first golfers of the day tee off on the emerald fairways below. The Ardennes mist rises slowly from the wooded hills surrounding Golf de Durbuy, and the only sounds are birdsong and the gentle thwack of clubs meeting balls. This is your everyday reality in this 70m² apartment in Barvaux, where the peaceful rhythm of Belgian countryside living meets the refined pleasure of year-round golf access. Nestled within the heart of Belgium's Ardennes region, this 2-bedroom apartment occupies a unique position as the only unit in its building with direct garden access through a private side entrance. The property sits steps from the first hole, driving range, and putting green of Golf de Durbuy, with the prestigious Five Nations golf course also within easy reach. For international buyers seeking a vacation home that combines outdoor recreation with authentic Belgian character, this location delivers an unmatched lifestyle opportunity. The apartment's thoughtfully designed layout maximizes both space and natural light. The open-plan living and dining area forms the heart of the home, with floor-to-ceiling windows framing views of the surrounding greenery. What truly sets this space apart is the seamless transition to the 16m² covered terrace, a rare feature that effectively doubles your living area during Belgium's pleasant spring, summer, and autumn months. This outdoor sanctuary becomes your breakfast nook in May, your al fresco dining room in July, and your contemplative reading retreat in October as the leaves turn golden. Inside, a wood-burning inset cassette stove creates a focal point that transforms the living space into a cozy r ... click here to read more

Photo 1 of Rue des Renoncules 216