Houses For Sale In Europe (page 3)

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The wood-fired sauna is still warm from last night. Outside, a great tit is doing its two-note call in the oak canopy, and the morning fog off the Baltic is just starting to burn off above the stone wall that borders the garden. This is what a Tuesday looks like at Ljungåsavägen 76 in Torhamn — and it's the kind of ordinary that feels anything but. Torhamn sits at the very tip of the Kristianopel peninsula in eastern Blekinge, Sweden's southernmost province, where the mainland dissolves into a scatter of islands and the sea is everywhere you look. It's not a place that tries to impress you. It doesn't need to. The light here in summer — that long, low Nordic gold that stretches past ten in the evening — has a way of stopping people mid-sentence. First-time visitors often say they didn't plan to stay. They just did. The property itself occupies 5,040 square metres, which sounds large on paper but feels even larger in person. Mature oaks anchor the corners of the plot, their roots lifting the old stone walls that have been here longer than anyone can remember. Classic falurött buildings — that deep Swedish red — catch the afternoon sun. The garden isn't manicured in any stiff way; it's the kind of outdoor space that's been genuinely lived in, with blueberry bushes along the back edge, patches that reliably produce chanterelles in late summer, and flower beds that have been tended long enough to know what they're doing. The main house dates from 1950 and sits at 86 square metres. Two bedrooms, one bathroom, and an open kitchen-living room anchored by a wood-burning stove that earns its place from September through April. The layout is uncomplicated and honest — generous windows pull the garden indoors visually, and the o ... click here to read more

Front view of the main house and garden

Sunday morning in Molières, and the only sound reaching you through the kitchen window is birdsong and the faint creak of the old tobacco barn in a light breeze. No traffic. No neighbors close enough to matter. Just the smell of coffee, a terrace at arm's length, and 4,231 square meters of Dordogne countryside rolling away in every direction. That's the daily reality this property delivers — and once you've felt it, you won't forget it. Set in the deep green countryside of the Périgord Noir, this four-bedroom stone house in Molières is the kind of place that doesn't announce itself. It earns you. Three floors of authentic stonework, thick walls that keep the summer heat at arm's length, and a layout that moves naturally from generous living and dining spaces on the ground floor up to four proper bedrooms above. At 126 square meters of interior space, it's not oversized — it's exactly right. Room enough for a family, friends, and a way of life that slows down on purpose. The ground floor centers around a large, open living, dining, and kitchen area — 41 square meters in the salon alone, confirmed — with direct access to a terrace that looks out over the land. Underfloor heating runs beneath your feet on this level, warm in the cooler months without the visual noise of radiators. The upper floors are served by radiators running off a gas system, and double glazing throughout means this is a home that works year-round, not just in July. Four bedrooms spread across the upper levels give the house a quiet rhythm — mornings up there feel genuinely removed from the world. Then there's what sits outside the main house, and this is where the property earns its character. A vast independent stone barn dominates the land — the k ... click here to read more

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Step off the boat and onto your own dock. The Bothnian Bay stretches out ahead of you, flat and silver in the morning light, and the only sounds are the cry of a common tern and the soft knock of your hull against the jetty. This is Finskören — a small island in the Nyborg archipelago just outside Kalix in northern Sweden — and once you've spent a weekend here, it's genuinely hard to leave. What makes this offering so rare is the scale of it. You're not buying a cabin. You're acquiring two separate houses on a 2,778-square-metre plot with a private marina, multiple outbuildings, and your own freshwater well — all on an island that feels a world away from everything, yet sits within comfortable reach of the E4 motorway and Luleå Airport, roughly 90 kilometres south. The main house, built in 1998, covers 65 square metres and was designed with the view firmly in mind. The open kitchen and living area faces the sea, and the windows are large enough that you track weather systems moving across the bay without stepping outside. Three bedrooms make it workable for a family; the layout is sensible rather than fussy, which is exactly what you want in a place where you'll spend more time outdoors than in. On a clear July evening — and northern Sweden gets a lot of those, with daylight that barely quits between May and August — the light through those windows turns the pine floors the colour of honey. The first guest cottage is 60 square metres and positioned close to the marina. It has a living room, a bedroom, a shower, and a traditional Swedish bastu. That sauna matters more than it might sound. Spending a September afternoon out on the water, then sweating it out in the bastu before a cold plunge off the dock — that's the rh ... click here to read more

Main house and guest cottages with sea view

The wood stove is already crackling when you push open the heavy cabin door, and the smell of pine sap and woodsmoke hits you before you've even pulled off your boots. Outside, the first proper snow of December has settled across the fenced plot, and through the frost-edged windows of the winter garden, you can just make out the start of the groomed ski track that runs through the treeline. This is Mesnali. And this cabin—hand-built in 1928 from squared logs that have had nearly a century to settle into themselves—is exactly what that word means to Norwegians who grew up dreaming about it. Nordmessenvegen 111 sits on a privately owned, fully fenced plot in one of the Inland Norway's most quietly sought-after hytte communities, about 20 kilometres northeast of Lillehammer. Mesnali isn't famous in the way that Hafjell or Sjusjøen are, and that's rather the point. The Joker grocery store down the road is open on Sundays. The neighbors wave. The marked hiking trails start practically at the garden gate—no car required to reach them—and in winter, those same trails become groomed cross-country tracks that link into the vast Sjusjøen network, one of the largest and best-maintained langrenn systems in Norway. On a clear February morning, you ski out before breakfast and come back an hour later with cold cheeks and an appetite that no Oslo café could ever manufacture. The cabin itself is 80 square metres across one practical, unhurried level. Living room, kitchen, dining room, entrance hall, bathroom, storage-turned-bedroom—everything you need, nothing you don't. The log walls in the living room are original, wide and warm-toned, and the round ceiling beams overhead are exactly as the builder left them. The cast-iron wood stov ... click here to read more

Welcome to Nordmessenvegen 111! Photo: Lars Marius Bækkevold

The first thing you notice, stepping onto that 35-square-metre terrace, is the quiet. Not the muffled quiet of triple-glazed windows or noise-cancelling headphones — proper Norwegian coastal quiet, broken only by the lap of seawater against the rocks below and the occasional cry of a guillemot riding the thermals. That's the daily reality of owning this waterfront cabin at Nedre Valdersneset 93 in Sletta, a compact stretch of coastline on Radøy island in Vestland county, where the fjord meets the open sea and the rest of the world feels very, very far away. Sletta sits at the outer edge of Nordhordland, a region that most international visitors drive through on the way to somewhere else. Their loss. The coastline here is raw and honest — exposed skerries, deep-green water, and the kind of light in July that doesn't fully disappear until past midnight. This particular cabin, renovated and upgraded in 2020, occupies a plot of 489 square metres right at the water's edge, roughly 100 metres from the shoreline. It comes with its own boathouse. In Norway, that combination — cabin plus naust — is the classic dream, and it's increasingly hard to find at this price point. Getting here is part of the ritual. You park the car and walk five or six minutes along a path through the heathland, arriving at the cabin already half-decompressed. That short walk is what keeps the spot genuinely private. No road noise. No neighbours materialising unexpectedly. Just you, the cabin, and the view. Inside, the layout is tight but well-considered. The open living room and kitchen takes up 29.5 square metres — the full heart of the cabin — with space for a sofa group facing the sea side and a dining table that seats the whole crew after a day o ... click here to read more

Aktiv Eiendomsmegling v/ Jørn Tage Hereide presents Nedre Valdersneset 93.

The sun drops low over the water at around nine in the evening in July, and from the west-facing terrace here at Bredstäk, that light turns the whole surface of the lake into hammered copper. You are holding a glass of something cold. The apple orchard behind you is humming with bees. This is what a Tuesday evening looks like at this 1909 country house on Lisö, and once you have stood on that terrace even once, the idea of not owning it becomes genuinely difficult to live with. Lisö sits within Nynäshamn Municipality, about 60 kilometres south of Stockholm — close enough to reach by car in under an hour, far enough that the city feels like a different planet. The island sits in the outer Stockholm archipelago, that extraordinary stretch of more than 30,000 islands and skerries that defines the Swedish coastline here. Most visitors to Sweden never get this far south into the archipelago. The ones who do tend to start looking at real estate. The house itself was built in 1909 and it carries that age well. Wooden floors that creak just slightly underfoot. Traditional single-pane windows framed in white that rattle softly in a November wind. A kitchen fireplace that has been warming people through Swedish winters for over a century. None of this has been ripped out and replaced with something generic — the character is intact, and that matters. At 80 square metres across two storeys, the layout is compact but genuinely livable. Downstairs you get the country kitchen — large enough for a proper farmhouse table, with that fireplace as its centrepiece — a living room with a cast-iron wood-burning stove, and a fully tiled bathroom with shower. Upstairs, two bedrooms sit under the eaves with views over the meadows and the water ... click here to read more

Lakefront view of the house

There's a particular kind of silence at the top of Grosetlie on a January morning — the kind you feel in your chest before the day starts. Snow is still falling softly on the terrace, the wood-burning fireplace from the night before has left an amber warmth in the air, and through the floor-to-ceiling windows, the whole of Grøndalen opens up below you like it belongs to no one else. This is what you bought. Not just a cabin. This moment. Built in 2024, this five-bedroom mountain chalet sits at the highest point of Grosetlie 167, in one of Hemsedal's most established and genuinely sought-after cabin areas. At 176 square metres, it holds its own — spacious enough for a full extended-family gathering, designed well enough that nobody's tripping over each other by day three. Wide oak floors run through the main living spaces, picking up light from the oversized windows and giving the interior that particular warmth that no amount of design software can quite replicate until you're standing in it. The heart of the cabin is the open-plan kitchen and living room, where ceilings climb high and a built-in fireplace anchors the social space. The kitchen is an Expo Nova fit-out — properly equipped, with integrated appliances and enough counter and storage space to actually cook a real dinner for eight people, not just survive on pasta. Saturday night fondue, a slow-cooked lamb stew on a stormy Sunday afternoon — this kitchen was made for both. Underfloor heating runs throughout, which matters more than most buyers realise until their first February stay, when getting up at 6am to watch the light change on the mountains is no longer something you dread. Five bedrooms means real flexibility. The master suite has an en-suite bathro ... click here to read more

Welcome to Grosetlie 167 – Cabin with fantastic location high above Grøndalen with amazing views and excellent sun exposure

Step out onto the 93-square-metre terrace on a clear September morning and you can see the entire valley spread below you — the dark water of Tresfjorden catching the early light, the ridgelines of the Romsdal Alps stacked behind it, and absolutely nothing between you and all of it. That's the view from Løviksetra, day one, and it doesn't get old. This three-bedroom mountain chalet sits at roughly 492 metres above sea level on Løviksetervegen, in Vestnes municipality — a part of coastal Norway that most international visitors drive past on their way to Ålesund without realising what they're missing. That's changing, slowly, which is exactly why right now is the time to pay attention. Built in 2007, the cabin is in good condition throughout. Seventy square metres of actual living space, smartly laid out, with a living room that does the heavy lifting: wide windows frame the mountain and fjord panorama like a painting that changes every hour, and a wood-burning stove in the corner means you're comfortable well into November when the first real frosts arrive. On stormy evenings, with the fire going and rain hammering the terrace, there's a particular kind of satisfaction to this place that no amount of square footage in a city apartment can replicate. The kitchen runs on gas — practical, reliable, and honestly freeing once you adjust to the rhythm of off-grid living. No mains electricity, no municipal water supply. The bathroom uses a combustion toilet. For some buyers this is a dealbreaker; for others, it's precisely the point. You're not managing a utility account, you're not dependent on infrastructure, and you're engaging with the mountain environment on its own terms. The cabin's modern construction means insulation ... click here to read more

Welcome to Løviksetra!

Picture this: it's seven in the morning, the Aude valley is still wrapped in low mist, and you're pulling the first espresso of the day behind a solid timber bar while the smell of warm bread drifts in from the kitchen. Outside the café terrace, the ridgeline of the Pyrenees sits sharp against a pale sky. The GR10 long-distance trail runs right past the door. By eight o'clock, your first guests — hiking boots already laced — will be asking what's for breakfast. This is daily life at Auberge les Myrtilles, and it's as real as it gets. Salau d'en Haut sits in the Vallée du Salat, deep in the Ariège département of the French Pyrenees, roughly 25 kilometres from the Spanish border at Port de Salau. It's not a town that made it onto every tourist map, which is precisely why people who find it keep coming back. The kind of guests who end up here are serious walkers, wildlife photographers chasing the last brown bears of Western Europe in the Parc Naturel Régional des Pyrénées Ariégeoises, or cyclists tackling the high cols that the Tour de France made famous. They want honest mountain food, a clean room, and a landlord who knows the terrain. That's the reputation this auberge has spent years building, and it transfers with the keys. The property is actually three buildings working as one operation. The main hotel holds eight en-suite guest rooms, each with its own bathroom — a practical detail that matters enormously in mountain hospitality where guests arrive muddy and need hot water immediately. The rooms are maintained properly: insulated roof, double glazing in wood-effect PVC frames, paintwork that still looks fresh. Nothing is held together with goodwill and optimism. The professional kitchen is fitted with modern appl ... click here to read more

Main view of Salau d'en Haut property

Stand at the edge of the wooded plot on a quiet Tuesday morning and the only sounds are the Auvézère river running somewhere below the village rooftops and a woodpecker working through the oak trees at the far end of your four thousand square metres of land. Ségur-le-Château does not announce itself loudly. It doesn't need to. This compact, deeply old village in the Corrèze département has been quietly ranked among France's most beautiful for good reason — and this three-building stone ensemble sits right inside that living medieval world, priced at just €132,500. The property is a genuinely rare find. Three separate stone structures on a wooded 4,590 m² plot: a traditional one-bedroom house, a barn of roughly 100 m², and a partially renovated bread oven. Each one built from the same warm, grey-gold Corrèze limestone that gives the whole village its unhurried, rooted quality. The main house is move-in ready in the sense that matters most — the bones are solid, the inglenook fireplace is the real thing, and the veranda entrance already sets a tone of rural gentleness before you've stepped inside. The attic, accessed by a wooden staircase from the living room, is the kind of raw space that experienced renovation buyers immediately recognise: open, structurally sound, and waiting to become a second bedroom, a studio, or a reading room that gets the morning light. Yes, there is work to plan. Electricity, heating, plumbing, insulation, and a septic tank installation are all on the list. That transparency matters. This is a project property for someone who wants to put their own mark on something genuinely historic, not a flipped renovation dressed up to hide its history. The purchase price reflects exactly that. For buyers ... click here to read more

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Picture this: it's a Tuesday morning in February and you're lacing up your ski boots at the front door. No shuttle bus. No car park queue. No waiting. The groomed cross-country track runs directly past the cabin at Løyningsåne hyttegrend, and within thirty seconds of stepping outside you're gliding through a snow-white corridor of birch trees with nothing but the sound of your own poles hitting the track and a raven calling somewhere up the ridge. That's the kind of morning this place deals in. Sitting at roughly 740 metres above sea level in Bykle municipality — deep in the Setesdalen valley of southern Norway — this 92-square-metre timber chalet has been doing its job well since it was first built in 1976. An extension in 2005 pushed the footprint outward and brought in three bedrooms with flexible sleeping for up to thirteen people, which is exactly the kind of number you need when the whole family descends for a Norwegian easter skiing holiday. The kitchen was gutted and rebuilt in 2020 with clean white cabinetry and modern appliances, so meal prep for a crowd is no longer a puzzle. The rest of the cabin is in good, honest condition — not flashly, but solid and ready to use from the day you take the keys. The single-level layout is worth mentioning specifically. No staircase to negotiate after a long day on the trails, no split floor plan that splits families into separate zones. The hallway opens into the living room, which is genuinely spacious and bright — large windows face the mountain slope and pull in serious winter light even on grey January days. On a clear afternoon in March, the sun is low enough to paint the whole room gold for an hour before it drops behind the ridge. You notice it. It matters. Step o ... click here to read more

Aerial view of the cabin and surrounding mountains

On a clear morning in Lauzerte, you step outside and the whole of the Quercy Blanc valley rolls out below you in shades of green and gold. The village — one of the most striking medieval villages in southwest France, perched on its ridge like a crown — is a ten-minute walk. Down the hill, the weekly market on the square smells of ripe Chasselas grapes and lavender honey from the Lot. This is what you own when you buy here. Not just walls and land, but a front-row seat to a part of rural France that hasn't been polished into a postcard. The property itself sits on just over 3,000 square metres of flat land — rare in this rolling, hill-crested landscape. The main house covers 80 liveable square metres across two bedrooms, a living room, a kitchen, and a shower room. Stone walls, thick enough to keep the interior cool all the way through August, give the rooms a quietness that modern builds simply can't replicate. The house is in good condition and move-in ready, so your first summer here doesn't have to be spent navigating a building site. But what really makes this place interesting is what comes with it. The 120-square-metre barn — ground floor only — attached at the side is essentially a blank canvas the size of a generous family home. Whether you're thinking of converting it into a gîte to generate income during the high season, creating a self-contained guest annexe for visiting family, or simply expanding the main living space into something grander, the volumes are there. The bones are exceptional. The ceiling heights in a barn like this are the kind architects would charge you a premium to recreate from scratch. Beyond the barn, there's a garage, a cellar — perfect for storing the Cahors wine you'll be buying by ... click here to read more

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On a clear winter morning, you step out through the pool house doors with a coffee and the entire Pyrenees range is right there — snow-capped ridges stretching across the horizon like something from a painting you'd never expect to be real. That view doesn't get old. Not after a weekend, not after a decade. This four-bedroom villa sits on just over 1.2 hectares of private land on the outskirts of Gimont, one of the quieter, less-discovered bastide towns in the Gers department of Midi-Pyrénées. The property itself spans 226 square metres across two levels, with an open layout that makes the most of its south-facing aspect. The cathedral-ceiling living room — 58 square metres with full-height glazing — pulls in so much natural light that you genuinely don't think about switching lamps on until well after dinner. The mezzanine level floats above the main living space and works equally well as a home office or a fifth sleeping area if you've got a full house. Below, a separate 32-square-metre playroom doubles as a second sitting room, with direct sightlines to the pool — useful when you're inside and the kids are out. Four proper bedrooms, a bathroom with a walk-in shower, a separate shower room, two WCs, and a double garage complete the picture. The fitted, open-plan kitchen connects directly to the main living area, keeping whoever's cooking involved in the conversation rather than isolated behind a wall. Outside, the heated pool runs on a solar thermal system, meaning it's genuinely usable from April through October without watching the energy meter. A pool house provides covered shade and houses the barbecue setup. Beyond the immediate terrace, the land opens into a mix of meadow and mature woodland — exactly the kind ... click here to read more

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Sunday morning in Querença sounds like this: the church bell on the main square strikes nine, a neighbor's dog barks twice then gives up, and somewhere below your roof terrace a coffee machine hisses to life in one of the village cafés you can practically reach in your slippers. This is not a resort. It's a real Algarvian village, inland from the tourist strip, and that distinction changes everything about what daily life here actually feels like. Querença sits in the hills of the Loulé municipality, about 18 kilometers north of Faro and a 25-minute drive from the beaches at Quarteira and Vilamoura. It's the kind of place that most visitors to the Algarve never find—which is precisely the point. The village has its own rhythm. The Festa de Nossa Senhora de Querença draws the whole region in January, with the traditional sausage fair (Feira da Linguiça) filling the square with smoke, music, and the kind of unhurried communal eating that's genuinely hard to find anywhere near the coast in high summer. The surrounding countryside, crossed by trails through the Rocha da Pena nature reserve, draws hikers and trail runners year-round. The Fonte da Benémola, a protected riparian landscape just a few kilometers away, is one of those places locals keep quiet about—a shaded river walk where kingfishers move like blue sparks through the willows. The villa itself was built in 1992 and sits within easy walking distance of the village center. It's a detached house on two floors with 187 square meters of internal space, a private garden, and a roof terrace that opens up views across the surrounding hills. The property is in good, move-in ready condition—solid bones, no urgent work required—while leaving real scope for a buyer who wan ... click here to read more

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On a still Tuesday morning in the Charente countryside, you open the French doors off the kitchen and the smell of damp grass and woodsmoke drifts in from the garden. There's coffee on the go, the pool is catching the early light, and your guests are still asleep in the gîte across the courtyard. This is not a fantasy — this is an ordinary morning at this property, five kilometers outside Barbezieux-Saint-Hilaire, on a 4,147-square-meter plot that somehow manages to feel both completely private and reassuringly close to real life. The main house is 225 square meters, approached through gates and along a private driveway that announces clearly: you've left the road behind. The ground floor moves logically from a proper entrance hall into a study — useful if you work remotely or need a quiet corner during longer stays — and then opens into the kitchen and living-dining room. The fireplace and wood burner at the heart of the space are not decorative. On a January evening when the Charente temperatures drop to single figures, they earn their keep completely. French doors push the room outward onto the terraces, where a built-in barbecue waits for the kind of long summer dinners that drift into the dark. Three ground-floor bedrooms handle the family or friends situation comfortably. Two separate toilets mean the morning routine doesn't become a negotiation. The shower room is thoughtfully arranged — private to the master bedroom but also corridor-accessible when needed. Practical in the way that only houses designed for actual living tend to be. Then there's the tower. A stone staircase from the main entrance climbs to a private suite — bedroom and its own shower room — tucked away from everything else. It's the room teena ... click here to read more

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On a still Tuesday morning, you can stand at the kitchen window with a coffee and watch the mist lift off the vines across the valley. No traffic. No noise except a wood pigeon somewhere in the oaks. By ten o'clock, you're pulling a baguette out of the back seat after a drive to the boulangerie in Saint Jean de Blaignac, and the rest of the day is entirely yours. This is the rhythm of life at this 19th-century stone farmhouse in a quiet hamlet near Saint-Sulpice-de-Faleyrens in Gironde — and it's a rhythm that gets under your skin fast. The house itself is substantial. Five bedrooms across two floors, 275 square metres of habitable space, plus additional utility areas that bring the total footprint to 380m². The walls are thick local stone, the kind that keeps rooms cool in August without air conditioning and holds heat from the wood-burning fireplaces deep into winter evenings. It was built in the 1800s and it has that unhurried solidity you simply can't manufacture. The proportions are generous in a way that modern builds rarely achieve — a 36m² dining room that actually fits a proper dinner party, a 32m² sitting room with enough space to have two separate conversations, a kitchen at 24m² where three people can cook without crowding each other. Two of the bedrooms are on the ground floor, each with its own en-suite shower room, which makes this an unusually practical layout for multi-generational families or guests who prefer not to navigate stairs. Upstairs, three further bedrooms share a bathroom and shower room. A dressing room off the main upper bedroom adds a level of everyday comfort that you notice immediately when you're actually living there rather than just visiting. The mezzanine — a tucked-away 9m² space ... click here to read more

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Step outside on a July morning and the only sound is the cicadas going at it full throttle in the garrigue scrubland beyond your garden wall. No traffic. No neighbors peering over fences. Just 33,600 square meters of sun-warmed southern French land, a stone house that's been standing longer than most countries have had borders, and a coffee going cold on the terrace because the view keeps pulling your eyes away from it. This is Saint-Ambroix, a small Gard town that sits in the Cèze Valley at the southern edge of the Cévennes massif — and if you haven't heard of it, that's rather the point. This corner of Languedoc-Roussillon moves at its own pace. The Tuesday market on the Place du Marché fills with local producers selling chèvre, honey from lavender fields, and charcuterie from the Ardèche hill villages just north of here. Come autumn, the chestnut harvest festival draws the whole valley together in a way that hasn't changed much in a century. Life here is not performed for tourists. It simply is. The house itself is the real thing — thick dressed stone walls that hold the heat out in August and hold the warmth in through the short Gard winter. At 129 square meters of interior living space across three floors, it's substantial without being excessive. Ground floor: a sitting room with a wood-burning fireplace built into the original stone chimney breast, a kitchen, a bedroom, a full bathroom, a conservatory that traps afternoon light until about 7pm in summer, and two storage rooms that previous owners have clearly put to serious use. Up to the first floor, and there's another large bedroom plus a second bathroom and a separate WC. Climb one more flight and two further bedrooms sit under the roofline — good-sized room ... click here to read more

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You wake up on a Saturday morning to birdsong and the faint smell of woodsmoke drifting in from somewhere across the valley. The veranda doors are already open — they were open last night too — and from where you're standing in the kitchen with a coffee, you can see the full stretch of the garden, the orchard at the far end heavy with fruit in September, and beyond that, the soft green hills of the Dordogne countryside rolling away in the early light. This is Lalinde. And this stone house is the kind of place that makes people stop looking. Set on 1.1 hectares just outside the riverside market town of Lalinde in the heart of the Périgord, this four-bedroom stone property comes with a separate two-bedroom guest house, a 5x10 metre swimming pool, a 160m² greenhouse, a workshop, multiple garages, and a basement. That list sounds almost absurd for the price point — under €330,000 for the whole lot — but this is the Dordogne, where stone farmhouses with room to breathe are still genuinely affordable by European standards, and where foreign buyers have been quietly building lives for decades. The main house runs to around 124m² of living space across two floors, with a ground-floor layout that just works. You walk in through a proper entrance hall, past a bedroom wing on the left — two bedrooms sharing a bathroom on the ground floor — and then into the kitchen, which opens directly onto the veranda. That veranda deserves its own sentence: 30.5 square metres of covered outdoor space facing the garden, east-west exposed, catching both the morning and the late afternoon sun. In July and August, dinner happens out there every night. In October, it's where you sit with a glass of Bergerac red and watch the light go gold over the ... click here to read more

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Push open the old iron gate in the high stone wall and the world outside disappears completely. That's the first thing you notice—the silence, punctuated only by birdsong and the faint rustle of the linden trees lining the garden path. You're standing in front of a house that has been here since the 1400s, its medieval stone-framed windows still intact, its bread oven still capable of baking a full loaf. This isn't a renovation project dressed up in period details. It's the real thing, sitting on nearly three hectares of private grounds just outside Ansac-sur-Vienne in the heart of the Charente, offered to the market at a price that would barely buy a two-bedroom flat in Paris. The scale of what's here takes a moment to register. A seven-bedroom main residence with double-height ceilings and exposed oak beams. Two self-contained gîtes, both renovated and generating rental income. A 150-square-metre barn. A cottage that still needs work. A 15th-century pigeonry that stops every visitor in their tracks. And over 7.5 acres of walled land, watered by the estate's own spring. For buyers searching for a genuinely viable income-producing holiday property in southwest France, or a private family compound with space for multiple generations, estates with this combination of features simply don't come to market often. Step inside the main house through the arched entrance and you walk into a wide hallway anchored by an oak staircase that climbs to a mezzanine gallery above. The main room below is cathedral-like—double height, flooded with light from three large glass doorways that open directly onto the terrace and walled garden. A log burner sits at one end. On a January morning with frost on the garden and a fire going, this r ... click here to read more

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On a Sunday morning in Saint-Germain-du-Seudre, you open the kitchen window and catch the smell of damp grass in the park below, still cool from the night. The heated pool catches the early light. Somewhere beyond the stone walls and the old bread oven, a church bell marks the hour. This is the pace of life the Charente-Maritime has always kept — unhurried, rooted, quietly extraordinary. This 19th-century residence sits in a wooded, landscaped park between Gémozac and Mortagne-sur-Gironde, right in the green corridor that runs toward the Gironde Estuary. It's a proper estate: a main house of 280m² of living space, a fully independent 150m² guest house, outbuildings with barns and a workshop, a 12x6m heated swimming pool, and a tennis court. Nine bedrooms across the two buildings. A property on this scale, at this price point, in this condition — it doesn't come around often in the Saintonge region. The main house carries its century well. On the ground floor, a grand entrance hall with cloakroom and WC opens onto two generous reception rooms and a private office. The proportions here are old-house proportions — high ceilings, thick stone walls, rooms that feel like rooms rather than corridors with furniture in them. The ground-floor suite runs to 30m² and has its own shower room, toilet, and dressing room, which makes it ideal for guests or for anyone who'd rather keep the stairs optional. The fitted kitchen connects directly to a laundry room and cellar, and opens out onto terraces that look over the park and the pool. In summer, dinner happens out there. That's just how it works. Upstairs, the layout breathes. The master suite exceeds 30m² and has a shower room finished in mahogany and quality ceramics — a detail th ... click here to read more

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Stand at the edge of the limestone plateau on a clear October morning and you can hear absolutely nothing. No traffic, no machinery, no neighbors. Just a kestrel working the thermals above the Causses and the faint whisper of wind through the oak scrub. That kind of silence is not incidental here — it's the whole point. This is Marcilhac-sur-Célé, a village in the Lot department of southwestern France where the river carves through pale cliffs and the pace of life hasn't changed much in a century. And this property — a complete rural estate comprising the majority of an ancient hamlet, two substantial stone houses, two large farm buildings, and 92 unbroken hectares of land — is about as rare as the silence itself. Let's start with the land, because it's what makes everything else possible. The 92 hectares come in one piece, which matters enormously. No fragmented parcels, no tenant farmers, no complicated lease agreements to unpick. Seventeen hectares are meadows and mixed woodland down in the valley; the remaining 75-plus are fully fenced limestone plateau — the wild, scrubby Causses terrain that defines the character of this entire region. Walk it for an afternoon and you'll find old stone cazelles, those dry-stone shepherd's huts that dot the plateau like punctuation marks from another era, plus a small barn still waiting for someone with a vision. The fencing is already in place, which is a significant practical detail: under France's 2023 loi clôture, that enclosure can be maintained for agricultural activities, horse breeding, or hunting dog training grounds, among other permitted uses. The land supports animals, market gardening, rural tourism, or simply the luxury of having a private wilderness on your doorstep. ... click here to read more

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Push open those two heavy barn doors on a Saturday morning and the first thing you notice is the smell — sun-warmed stone, a fig tree doing its thing in the corner, and somewhere beneath it all, the faint sweetness of the olive trees that line the far wall of the garden. This isn't a show home. It's a real place, with real roots, in a quiet village five kilometres outside Mortágua where people still stop to talk in the street and the bread at the local padaria sells out before nine. The house sits in the Beira Alta region of central Portugal — not the Algarve, not the Silver Coast, not any of the places that fill up with package tourists every August. This is the Portugal that Portuguese people actually live in. Rolling hills blanketed with pine and eucalyptus. Reservoir lakes like Aguieira where locals fish and kayak and barely anyone else knows to look. The kind of place where your neighbours will bring you honey from their hives because that's just what you do here. At 130 square metres, the main living space on the first floor is genuinely generous. The open-plan kitchen, dining and sitting room runs to over 50 square metres in a wide L-shape, and three aspects' worth of windows means the light moves through the space all day. In the mornings it comes in low and golden from the east; by late afternoon it's doing something warm and theatrical off the garden wall. The wood-burning stove in the corner is not decorative — Beira Alta winters are crisp and real, and come December you'll be glad it's there. The kitchen is fully fitted with a peninsula island that naturally pulls people around it, which is exactly what happens when you have guests staying and dinner takes longer than planned and no one really minds. Four ... click here to read more

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Picture yourself sipping morning coffee on an east-facing balcony as the first rays of sunlight filter through the pine trees, the scent of sea salt drifting up from the nearby waters of the Stockholm archipelago. This is the daily ritual that awaits at this 64-square-meter retreat in Saltarö, where Swedish coastal living meets practical vacation home ownership on a commanding 2,644-square-meter elevated plot just 40 minutes from Stockholm's city center. Nestled in the sought-after Värmdö archipelago, this property represents an increasingly rare opportunity to own a holiday home with both main residence and guest cottage in one of Sweden's most accessible yet authentically tranquil coastal communities. The main house and separate friggebod create versatile accommodation options for extended family gatherings, rental income potential, or simply hosting friends who inevitably want to visit once they experience your Swedish island retreat. The heart of the main residence is an open-plan living space flooded with natural light from three directions, creating that coveted Scandinavian brightness that transforms even gray winter days into cozy havens. The modern kitchen flows seamlessly into the living area, where glass doors open directly onto a southwest-facing terrace that captures the precious afternoon and evening sun. During Sweden's endless summer evenings, this outdoor space becomes an extension of your living area, perfect for grilling fresh-caught fish or simply watching the light linger until nearly midnight during midsummer weeks. Two comfortable bedrooms provide flexible sleeping arrangements, while the practical bathroom positioned near the entrance serves both daily needs and post-swim cleanups after visits ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the house and garden

Picture yourself standing on your private 46-square-meter terrace, coffee in hand, as morning mist rises from Furusjøen lake just steps away. The crisp mountain air fills your lungs while you plan the day ahead—perhaps casting a line into the pristine waters where your fishing rights grant you exclusive access, or strapping on cross-country skis to glide through snow-laden forests right from your doorstep. This is the reality awaiting you at this mountain retreat in Rennebu, where modern Norwegian comfort meets authentic wilderness living at 605 meters above sea level. This 50-square-meter cabin represents a thoughtfully upgraded vacation home that eliminates the typical compromises of remote mountain properties. Recent investments in essential infrastructure mean you arrive to electricity powering your modern kitchen and heating systems, while a private well provides independent water supply. The transformation from rustic shelter to comfortable second home has been completed with care, preserving the soul of Norwegian cabin culture while adding conveniences that make extended stays genuinely comfortable for international owners seeking their Scandinavian escape. The heart of this property beats in its newly installed 2022 kitchen, where Miele and Siemens appliances meet an extra-wide induction cooktop perfect for preparing post-adventure meals. The open-plan living area flows seamlessly across 29 square meters, anchored by a 2023 Wiking wood stove that transforms winter evenings into cozy gatherings. Floor-to-ceiling windows frame ever-changing mountain vistas, bringing the outside in while maintaining year-round thermal comfort through thoughtful design and quality materials. Two compact bedrooms sleep five guests ... click here to read more

Welcome to Furusjøen 96 - A beautiful cabin with electricity and potential for water supply.

Picture yourself stepping onto the wooden deck of your mountain retreat as the first morning light touches the peaks surrounding Totenåsen. The air carries that distinctive Norwegian crispness—pine-scented and pure at 640 meters elevation. Inside your cabin, coffee brews on the gas stove while family members begin stirring in bedrooms and loft spaces. This is the rhythm of life at Hutjern 4, where fourteen people can gather under one roof without feeling crowded, where 200 kilometers of groomed cross-country ski trails begin literally at your doorstep, and where the Norwegian concept of friluftsliv—open-air living—becomes your daily reality rather than a weekend aspiration. This 2013-built family cabin in Skreia represents something increasingly rare in modern Scandinavia: accessible mountain living just ninety minutes from Oslo, combining genuine wilderness immersion with practical year-round accessibility. For international buyers seeking a Norwegian vacation home that balances remote tranquility with convenience, this property offers an authentic gateway into Nordic mountain culture without the isolation that typically accompanies such settings. The cabin sits in Totenåsen, a nature reserve that Norwegians have cherished for generations as prime territory for hiking, skiing, berry picking, and the kind of unhurried family time that defines Scandinavian quality of life. Your leased 442-square-meter plot provides privacy while connecting you to an extensive network of outdoor enthusiasts who respect the Norwegian tradition of allemannsretten—the right to roam responsibly through nature. The building itself reflects Norwegian cabin architecture's practical evolution: 75 square meters of ground-floor living space flows in ... click here to read more

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Imagine waking to golden morning light dancing across the water, the gentle sound of waves drifting through open windows, and the promise of another perfect day on Norway's sheltered southern coast. This 4-bedroom chalet perched above the Skagerrak coastline in Stathelle offers that rare combination every vacation home buyer seeks: authentic Norwegian coastal living with modern accessibility, positioned between two of the region's most vibrant seaside towns, Kragerø and Langesund. The moment you arrive along Grunnsundveien, following the easy path from your dedicated parking space, you understand why this stretch of the Bamble coast has captured hearts for generations. The 1967 chalet sits on 1,942 square meters of natural terrain in the peaceful Trolldalen-Grunnsund area, its black-painted exterior blending seamlessly with the landscape while floor-to-ceiling windows capture an uninterrupted seascape that stretches to the horizon. This is where urban professionals from Oslo, Copenhagen, and beyond come to reconnect with nature and family, trading hectic weekdays for weekends filled with salt air and freedom. Step inside and the view commands immediate attention. The open-plan living area channels the essence of Norwegian cabin culture—unfussy, functional, and completely oriented toward the outdoors. Large windows frame the sea like living artwork that changes with every passing hour: morning mists lifting to reveal distant islands, afternoon sunshine transforming the water into liquid silver, evening light painting the sky in shades of amber and rose. A wood-burning stove anchors the space, providing cozy warmth during spring and autumn visits when coastal breezes turn crisp and you need nothing more than a good fire, ... click here to read more

Sky and sea

Picture this: you wake to the gentle rush of a mountain river, slip on your skis at your doorstep, and within minutes glide directly onto the slopes of Furedalen Alpinsenter. By afternoon, you're soaking up January sunshine on your expansive terrace, watching your children build snow forts across 3,640 square meters of your own pristine Norwegian wilderness. This is daily life at this 3-bedroom chalet in Kvamskogen, where the adventure begins the moment you step outside. Just 60 minutes from Bergen's international airport, this fully renovated mountain retreat offers the rare combination of accessibility and authentic Norwegian mountain living. Whether you envision exhilarating winter ski holidays, summer hiking expeditions through wildflower meadows, or simply unplugging from urban life beside your private riverside sanctuary, this property delivers a vacation experience most European second-home buyers only dream about. The transformation from city stress to mountain serenity takes just one hour's drive, making weekend escapes and extended holidays effortlessly achievable year-round. This chalet represents Norwegian mountain architecture at its finest, thoughtfully reimagined for modern vacation living. The comprehensive 2017 renovation preserved the property's 1957 heritage while introducing contemporary comfort and energy efficiency. Low-maintenance Møre Royal cladding wraps the exterior, eliminating the endless upkeep that plagues many mountain properties and giving international owners peace of mind during months away. Inside, 91 square meters of intelligently designed living space feels remarkably generous, with an additional loft and separate annexe expanding total usable area to 128 square meters. The open-plan ... click here to read more

Aktiv Eiendomsmegling v/ Lars Waage presents Mødalsvegen 143! Photo: Weststaff Media.

Picture yourself stepping onto an expansive wooden veranda at 785 meters elevation, morning coffee in hand, as the crisp Norwegian mountain air fills your lungs and endless hiking trails unfold before you. This is the daily reality at this 3-bedroom mountain chalet in Lauvlia, where the silence is broken only by birdsong and the distant swish of skis on groomed trails that start practically at your doorstep. This 72-square-meter retreat near Ljøsheim represents something increasingly rare: an affordable gateway to the Norwegian mountain lifestyle that international families can actually attain. The Norwegian mountain cabin tradition runs deep, and this property embodies everything that makes Scandinavian outdoor culture so compelling for vacation home buyers. Located in the Mesnali region of Innlandet County, this area offers the authentic Norwegian fjell experience without the premium price tags of more tourist-heavy destinations. Here, families gather for generations, building traditions around seasonal rhythms that connect them to nature in ways impossible in urban environments. Inside, the cabin's 72 square meters are thoughtfully arranged to maximize both social connection and practical functionality. The heart of the home is the open-plan living area where floor-to-ceiling windows frame mountain vistas that change dramatically with the seasons. A centrally positioned wood-burning stove becomes the gathering point on winter evenings, its radiant warmth reaching every corner while electric heating provides modern convenience. The partially open kitchen design means whoever is preparing meals remains part of the conversation, with solid wood cabinetry providing ample storage for extended stays. The high ceilings cre ... click here to read more

Presented by Bente Holen Bergseng at Eiendomsmegler 1 - Lauvlia 366

Picture yourself standing on a sunlit terrace at 930 meters above sea level, morning coffee in hand, watching the first golden rays illuminate the Hardangervidda plateau stretching endlessly before you. The mountain air is crisp and clean, carrying the scent of pine and wild heather. This is your morning routine at Venåsen 12, a 121-square-meter Norwegian mountain chalet where every day begins with nature's most spectacular theater. This three-bedroom retreat in Seterdalen represents the quintessential Norwegian mountain lifestyle that international buyers dream about. Positioned on a sun-drenched hilltop, the property captures light from dawn until dusk, creating that rare combination of privacy and radiance that defines premium mountain living. The elevation isn't just a number—it's your gateway to four distinct seasons of European outdoor adventure, each offering its own compelling reasons to escape here. The Norwegian Mountain Experience You've Been Seeking Rødberg and the surrounding Numedal valley region offer something increasingly rare in modern Europe: authentic wilderness accessibility combined with modern infrastructure. This isn't a remote fantasy requiring expedition-level preparation. Your chalet sits just 300 meters from professionally groomed cross-country ski trails that connect to a 40-kilometer network threading through pristine forests and open mountain terrain. In winter months, you can literally ski from your door, making this a true ski-in, ski-out vacation home without the premium price tags of Alpine resorts. Spring transforms the landscape into a botanist's paradise. As snow retreats, the hillsides explode with wildflowers, and the cloudberry marshes surrounding the property become active fo ... click here to read more

Welcome to Venåsen 12 - fantastic location at 930 meters above sea level.

Picture yourself sipping morning coffee on your private terrace as the first golden rays illuminate Reineskarvet and Hallingskarvet peaks, the crisp mountain air filling your lungs while cross-country ski trails stretch just 200 meters from your door. This is the daily rhythm awaiting at this 73-square-meter mountain chalet in Holsåsen, where Norwegian alpine living meets year-round accessibility between two of Scandinavia's most celebrated mountain ranges. This property represents something increasingly rare in Norway's mountain regions: a thoughtfully designed new-build chalet on a generous 900-square-meter freehold plot at approximately 1,000 meters elevation, positioned to capture maximum sunlight while offering panoramic views across Hallingdal's iconic landscape. The location places you at the crossroads of winter sports, hiking trails, and authentic Norwegian mountain culture, with Geilo's alpine facilities just minutes away and the vast cross-country network of Hallingdal literally at your doorstep. The chalet accommodates 5-6 guests across 2-3 bedrooms plus a functional loft space, making it ideal for families or groups seeking a Norwegian mountain retreat. The open-plan kitchen and living area creates a social hub where après-ski gatherings flow naturally, with large windows strategically positioned to frame mountain vistas and flood interior spaces with natural light. The bathroom and storage room complete the practical layout, while the covered terrace extends your living space into the outdoors, essential for maximizing enjoyment of Norway's brief but glorious summer months and the crisp winter season. What distinguishes this offering is the turnkey approach combined with customization flexibility. The ba ... click here to read more

Similar cabin as the one projected

Picture yourself on a sun-drenched terrace, coffee in hand, watching morning mist lift from the surrounding forest as birdsong fills the air. The scent of pine drifts through the garden while children play safely on the sprawling lawn, their laughter echoing across 4,500 square meters of private, tree-lined grounds. This is the reality of owning a vacation home in Hässelmara, a coveted corner of the Stockholm archipelago where modern life slows to the rhythm of nature, yet the capital's energy remains just 50 minutes away. This 70-square-meter single-story country home from 1950 embodies the essence of Swedish summer living that international buyers seek when searching for authentic Scandinavian holiday properties. Set at the end of a quiet road in Värmdö, the property combines the independence of island living with practical mainland accessibility, creating the perfect second home for families who crave both adventure and convenience. The Stockholm archipelago, with its 30,000 islands, skerries, and islets, represents one of Europe's most distinctive coastal landscapes, and this property positions you at the gateway to exploring this maritime wonderland. The main residence welcomes you with an open floor plan designed for the communal living that defines Swedish holiday culture. The country kitchen serves as the social hub, where long summer dinners stretch into midnight under the never-setting sun of Nordic June. Large windows frame views of the mature garden, bringing the outdoors in and flooding rooms with natural light during the extended daylight hours of Swedish summers. The connected dining area accommodates gatherings of eight or more, perfect for hosting fellow travelers, local friends, or extended family who ... click here to read more

Front view of the house and garden

Picture yourself stepping out onto a sunlit veranda, coffee in hand, as morning mist rises from the forest valley below and the distant whistle of the Krösatåget train echoes through the pines. This is your morning ritual at Högalund Gård, a secluded Swedish farmstead where 2.6 hectares of productive land meet the timeless rhythms of Scandinavian country living, just five minutes' walk from Rödeby village and twenty minutes from the coastal city of Karlskrona. Here, the Swedish concept of "lantliv" – the country life – becomes your daily reality, offering international buyers a rare opportunity to own a vacation home in Sweden that combines authentic rural character with genuine income potential and multi-generational flexibility. This exceptional country home property comprises two complete residences, a substantial commercial-grade utility building, traditional outbuildings, productive gardens, and forest access, creating a self-contained estate that serves equally well as a holiday home base, rental business operation, or extended family retreat. The main residence, a beautifully preserved 1909 farmhouse painted in classic Falu red, stands as a testament to Swedish architectural heritage, its original details thoughtfully preserved through sensitive renovation. The second home, built in 2017, offers five additional rooms with modern construction standards, while the 2019 utility building provides commercial-kitchen facilities perfect for farm-to-table ventures, artisan workshops, or guest services. This isn't simply a second home in Europe – it's a complete lifestyle platform in one of Scandinavia's most accessible rural regions. The property reveals itself gradually as you drive the kilometer-long private forest ro ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the main house and grounds

Picture yourself waking to the scent of pine forest drifting through open windows, the morning sun filtering through towering Norwegian spruce trees that surround your private 3,075-square-meter retreat. This is life at Kollerøysveien 64 in Nordre Follo, where a rare opportunity awaits to build your custom vacation home exactly as you've imagined it, on freehold land in one of Norway's most sought-after recreational areas just minutes from Oslo. Imagine sipping coffee on a deck you've designed yourself, watching red squirrels dart between ancient trees while your children explore three-quarters of an acre of possibilities at their doorstep. This is where your Norwegian escape story begins, on a blank canvas surrounded by established cabin culture and untouched nature. The property currently holds a 31-square-meter structure ready for demolition, plus a detached garage and outbuilding, giving you complete freedom to design and construct a modern holiday home that reflects your vision for Nordic living. Whether you envision a contemporary minimalist cabin with floor-to-ceiling windows capturing forest views, a traditional Norwegian hytte with red-painted timber and grass roof, or a multi-level family retreat with separate guest quarters, this expansive plot accommodates your architectural dreams without compromise. The freehold ownership provides security and flexibility for your investment, allowing you to take your time planning the perfect design, phasing construction to match your budget, or even subdividing should regulations permit. What makes this location genuinely special for vacation home ownership is the established recreational community surrounding you. You're not pioneering wilderness here; you're joining a t ... click here to read more

Welcome to Kollerøysveien 64, presented by Kjersti Sollied at Eie Follo. Photo: Mats Holst

Imagine waking to the gentle sound of waves lapping against smooth coastal rocks, the scent of pine needles warmed by morning sun drifting through open windows, and the promise of a day spent exploring Norway's island-dotted coastline from your own boat mooring. This is the daily reality at Kjønnøyaveien 15, where Norwegian coastal living reveals itself in its most authentic form, just 60 meters from the Skagerrak waters that have shaped this region's character for centuries. This 51-square-meter cabin occupies a secluded position at the end of a tree-lined gravel track in Trosby, where the density of foliage creates a natural screen between you and the outside world. The 1,904-square-meter plot provides genuine privacy rarely found in coastal properties this close to the water, with enough space for children to build forest hideouts, for vegetable gardens to thrive in the maritime climate, and for outdoor gatherings that stretch from afternoon coffee to evening bonfires. The property's positioning offers something increasingly precious in modern life: the ability to hear silence broken only by birdsong and distant boat engines. The architectural approach here speaks to practical Scandinavian design principles. Built in 2002, the cabin employs traditional wood paneling throughout, creating thermal efficiency while maintaining the aesthetic connection to Norway's cabin heritage. The open-plan living area centers around a working fireplace, essential during the cooler months when coastal winds sweep across the archipelago. Large windows frame views of surrounding woodland and glimpses of the sea beyond, pulling natural light deep into the interior even during winter's shorter days. The kitchen provides serious functional ... click here to read more

Welcome to Kjønnøyaveien 15!

Picture yourself standing on your 43-square-meter terrace, coffee in hand, watching the morning sun paint golden streaks across Trosbyfjorden. Below, your boat gently rocks at its private mooring just 100 meters away, ready for an impromptu island-hopping adventure. This is the daily rhythm awaiting you at this Norwegian coastal retreat on Kjønnøya, where the simple pleasures of seaside living blend seamlessly with modern comfort. This 71-square-meter cabin represents the authentic Norwegian cabin culture that international buyers increasingly seek. Built with heart over decades—the original 1960s living room expanded thoughtfully in 2000—the property tells a story of evolving comfort while maintaining its connection to Norway's coastal heritage. The elevated position on your 911-square-meter freehold plot provides privacy while keeping the fjord constantly in view, a visual reminder of the recreational paradise at your doorstep. The Norwegian concept of "hytte" extends beyond mere vacation ownership. It embodies a lifestyle philosophy centered on nature connection, family togetherness, and seasonal traditions. Your cabin becomes the stage for creating these cherished memories: summer evenings grilling fresh-caught fish on the sea-facing terrace, autumn mornings watching migratory birds traverse the fjord, winter weekends warming by the fire after invigorating coastal walks, spring days witnessing nature's reawakening along the shoreline. Stathelle and the broader Bamble municipality offer the quintessential Norwegian coastal experience without the crowds of more tourist-heavy regions. The area remains authentically Norwegian, where local traditions thrive and the pace of life follows natural rhythms rather than comme ... click here to read more

The cabin is nicely situated in the cabin area, slightly elevated from the sea with a short walking distance down to the water.

Picture yourself stepping onto your private terrace at 626 meters above sea level, morning coffee in hand, as the Norwegian sun illuminates the peaks surrounding Mjølfjell. The crisp mountain air fills your lungs while skis lean ready against the cabin wall—groomed cross-country trails await just steps from your door. This is the rhythm of life at Kleivavegen 46, where every season delivers a different adventure and your three-bedroom mountain retreat serves as the perfect base for exploring one of Norway's most accessible alpine regions. Nestled in the scenic mountain area of Mjølfjell, this 68-square-meter year-round chalet represents the essence of Norwegian cabin culture while offering thoroughly modern comfort. The property sits on a generous 984-square-meter freehold plot where morning sun arrives early and lingers until 8 or 9 PM during summer months, bathing the landscape in that distinctive golden Nordic light that photographers and nature lovers treasure. This is where families gather around the outdoor grill shelter—a traditional Norwegian gapahuk—sharing stories and meals while weather patterns dance across distant peaks. The 2022 renovation transformed this property into a turnkey mountain residence without sacrificing its authentic character. Complete electrical and plumbing system upgrades mean you can focus entirely on mountain pursuits rather than maintenance concerns. The moment you enter, high ceilings and strategically placed windows frame panoramic views that change with the seasons—snow-blanketed forests in winter, wildflower meadows in summer, and the spectacular color transitions of Nordic autumn. A crackling fireplace provides atmospheric warmth while the modern heat pump ensures consistent com ... click here to read more

Welcome to Kleivavegen 46 presented by Thomas Bull Wingaard at EiendomsMegler 1 - Photo by Arvid Berg

Picture this: you wake to crisp mountain air at 693 meters above sea level, sunlight streaming through expansive windows as snow-dusted peaks frame your morning coffee on a 50-square-meter terrace. This is your reality at Skoleveien 16 in Rugldalen, where Norwegian mountain living meets practical accessibility just 19 kilometers from the historic copper mining town of Røros—a UNESCO World Heritage site that transforms every season into an adventure. This 54-square-meter chalet built in 1997 represents the quintessential Norwegian mountain retreat: compact efficiency wrapped in panoramic valley views, where electric heating meets the crackling warmth of a wood-burning stove. The open-plan living area flows seamlessly into a fully-equipped kitchen, creating the social heart where après-ski hot chocolate sessions and summer evening dinners blend into one continuous celebration of mountain life. High ceilings amplify the sense of space, while oversized windows frame ever-changing landscapes—autumn birch forests ablaze in gold, winter wonderlands stretching endlessly white, spring thaws revealing rushing streams, and summer meadows bursting with wildflowers. Two well-proportioned bedrooms (8 and 6 square meters) provide restful sanctuaries after days spent carving fresh powder or hiking forest trails. A clever loft space accessed by retractable ladder adds sleeping capacity for visiting friends or grandchildren, while the 2002-built annex with separate living area and composting toilet expands your hosting possibilities without compromising the main cabin's intimacy. An external 9-square-meter storage room keeps skis, mountain bikes, fishing rods, and firewood organized and accessible. Rugldalen represents Norwegian cabin ... click here to read more

Welcome to Skoleveien 16, presented by Stian Konstad at EiendomsMegler 1! (Photo: Interiørfoto, Haukdal)

Picture yourself stepping onto a sun-warmed terrace at midnight in June, the Arctic sun casting golden light across the fjord waters that lap gently at your private dock just steps away. This is life at Storsandnes in Talvik, where your 144-square-meter waterfront retreat sits on over half a hectare of pristine Norwegian coastline, offering an extraordinary escape into one of Europe's most dramatic and unspoiled landscapes. This three-bedroom house with traditional sauna and glass-enclosed winter garden provides the perfect base for experiencing Arctic Norway's extraordinary natural phenomena – from endless summer days to the dancing Northern Lights that illuminate winter skies directly above your terrace. Talvik, located in Norway's Finnmark region just outside Alta, represents a rare opportunity for international buyers seeking authentic Scandinavian living combined with remarkable natural access. Your property sits mere meters from the Altafjord, Norway's fourth-longest fjord system, where deep waters meet dramatic mountain landscapes that have remained virtually unchanged for millennia. The 1950-built house has evolved thoughtfully over seven decades, maintaining its character while incorporating modern comforts that make year-round enjoyment entirely feasible. The property's 5,579-square-meter plot provides both privacy and endless outdoor possibilities, from morning swims in crystalline fjord waters to evening gatherings around your dedicated grill house fire pit. The heart of this home is its relationship with light and landscape. Floor-to-ceiling windows throughout the main living areas frame ever-changing views of mountains that shift from snow-capped white in winter to midnight-sun purple in summer. The winte ... click here to read more

DNB Eiendom welcomes you to Talvik and the property at Langfjordveien 280!

Picture yourself stepping onto a sun-drenched veranda 822 meters above sea level, morning coffee in hand, as the golden light illuminates the snow-capped peaks surrounding Dalen Valley. The crisp mountain air fills your lungs while you plan the day ahead—perhaps first tracks on the alpine slopes just 300 meters away, or a tranquil cross-country ski along groomed trails that wind through ancient pine forests. This is the daily reality awaiting owners of this well-appointed mountain chalet in one of Norway's most reliable snow destinations. Nestled between the historic villages of Dalen and Valle in Telemark County, this 66-square-meter retreat occupies an enviable position in an established cabin community where Norwegian families have gathered for generations. The location strikes that perfect balance outdoor enthusiasts dream about: genuinely remote mountain character with practical year-round road access and modern conveniences. Your 1,104-square-meter natural plot provides unobstructed views across the high country while maintaining comfortable distances from neighboring properties, ensuring privacy without isolation. The Dalen Valley region represents authentic Norwegian mountain culture, far removed from overcrowded alpine resorts. Winter here means guaranteed snow conditions from November through April, with the nearest alpine facility literally a three-minute walk from your door. Cross-country skiers find themselves spoiled with kilometers of meticulously groomed trails suitable for both classic and skate techniques. The area's elevation and inland position create dry, powdery snow that locals treasure—none of the heavy, wet coastal conditions that plague lower elevations. Spring transforms the landscape as wil ... click here to read more

The plot is about 1.1 decares and consists of a natural lot with open space around the building and views of the surrounding terrain.

Picture yourself waking to crisp mountain air at 600 meters above sea level, sunlight filtering through pine forests, the scent of wood smoke from your soapstone stove mingling with fresh Norwegian morning. Just 161 meters from your door, groomed cross-country ski trails beckon, while Trysil Alpine Resort awaits minutes away. This is Fjellverden Øst 81, a 2-bedroom log cabin with separate annex where authentic Norwegian mountain living becomes your daily reality. Nestled in the heart of Trysil's renowned outdoor playground, this 72-square-meter timber cabin embodies everything international buyers seek in a Norwegian vacation home. The main cabin and accompanying annex create a flexible mountain sanctuary where families gather after days on the slopes, where summer hikers return to crackling fires, where the rhythms of Scandinavian seasons replace the stress of urban life. The natural 1,018-square-meter plot surrounds you with indigenous vegetation, offering privacy and that essential connection to Nordic wilderness that draws so many to Norway's mountains. The traditional log construction immediately transports you to classic Norwegian cabin culture. Step through the newly heated entrance—underfloor warming installed in 2025 ensures comfort from your first moment inside—into an open-plan living area where the soapstone wood-burning stove becomes the heart of winter evenings. This isn't just heating; it's theatre, ritual, the mesmerizing dance of flames that defines cabin life. The stove's thermal mass radiates warmth long after the fire settles, creating that cocoon of comfort essential after days exploring Trysil's winter wonderland. The open kitchen and living configuration encourages the social gatherings that mak ... click here to read more

Welcome to Fjellverden Øst 81! Photo: Johan Anderson for Efkt