Step outside on a October morning and the only sound is pine needles shifting in the wind. Below the terrace, a thin mist sits over the Colfiorito plateau — the same wetland that earned its place on the international Ramsar Convention list back in 1976, one of central Italy's most ecologically significant protected landscapes. This is not a sanitized agriturismo experience. This is the real Umbria: quiet, unhurried, and genuinely rare at this price point.
The property itself is a three-storey detached villa of 215 square metres, built in 1970 and maintained in good condition throughout. What sets it apart immediately — apart from the private pine forest of roughly two hectares surrounding it — is the structural independence between its living spaces. Two entirely separate entrances mean the house works equally well as a generous single-family retreat and as a property with a self-contained guest annexe. Families who want their own floors, friends travelling together who value privacy, or owners considering short-term rental income: the layout serves all of these scenarios without requiring a single wall moved.
Three fireplaces — one on each floor — tell you everything you need to know about how this house was built to be lived in year-round. Light the one in the ground-floor kitchen on a January evening, pull red potatoes from Colfiorito's own farms from the market at Foligno, and roast them in the wood-burning oven that sits in the same open-plan space. The first floor carries the main living configuration: a large sitting room with its own fireplace, a separate kitchen, three bedrooms, a bathroom, and a private external entrance onto a terrace that faces the mountains. On clear days that view stretches deep into the ... click here to read more