Houses For Sale In Sweden (page 2)

Houses for sale in sweden - 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 still July morning in Nibbla, the air smells of cut grass and lake water. You step out onto the south-facing deck with your coffee, the sun already warming the wooden planks underfoot, and there's not a sound except birdsong and a distant rowing boat cutting across Lake Mälaren. This is what 450 meters from the water actually feels like — and it's right here on Violvägen 3. Ekerö is one of those places Stockholmers guard like a secret. A string of islands connected by bridge to the Swedish capital, roughly 20 kilometers west of the city center, it sits inside the vast archipelago of Lake Mälaren — Sweden's third largest lake and, by most measures, one of the most quietly beautiful. The landscape here rolls between open fields, birch forest, and water. Red wooden cottages dot the hillsides. In summer, the light lasts until nearly midnight and locals make full use of every hour. This particular cottage, built in 1955 and carefully updated over the past decade, sits on 424 square meters of garden in the Nibbla area — a pocket of Ekerö that still feels genuinely rural while sitting comfortably close to the mainland. The lot is generous for a property of this size, and whoever tended this garden took it seriously. Mature fruit trees shade the eastern end of the plot. Flower beds run along the fence lines. The lawn has multiple south-facing spots that catch sun from mid-morning through to the long Nordic evening. It's the kind of garden you actually use, not just admire. Inside, the 38 square meters are planned tightly and well. Large windows pull light into the open living and dining space, and the views through them — green garden, open sky — make the rooms feel considerably larger than the floor plan suggests. The n ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the cottage and garden

On a still Tuesday morning in late August, the light through the west-facing terrace at Vikavägen 6 lands differently than anywhere else. It's that particular Nordic gold—low, long, almost amber—that turns an ordinary cup of coffee into something you want to remember. The lilacs have finished blooming, the garden smells of warm grass, and somewhere about a kilometer down the road, the morning boat to Arholma is leaving Simpnäs harbor with a low churn of engine and the cry of a few opportunistic gulls. This is Björkö. And once you've spent a summer here, it becomes very hard to spend one anywhere else. Vikavägen 6 is a year-round holiday home on the island of Björkö in Norrtälje municipality, sitting in the outer reach of the Stockholm archipelago where the Åland Sea opens up and the islands thin out into something wilder and less visited than the tourist-heavy inner archipelago. The property dates to 1909, and you can feel that history in the weight of the walls and the way the three buildings frame a courtyard garden that has clearly been lived in and loved across many generations. At the same time, this is not a restoration project. The main house is in good condition, with a kitchen renovated in 2019, a modern shower room, and proper water and sewage connections that make year-round use genuinely comfortable rather than just technically possible. The main house is single-story, 84 square meters, and the layout makes intelligent use of every one of them. The kitchen has kept its rustic character after the renovation—there's a wood-burning stove in there that does double duty, heating the space and making the room smell like every Swedish winter weekend you've ever imagined. It opens into a dining room that functions ... click here to read more

Main house and garden

Saturday morning. You pull open the heavy wooden door of the sauna house, and the birch-scented steam rolls out across the rocky knoll while the Stockholm archipelago sits quiet and silver through the trees. The wood-fired hot tub is still warm from the night before. Nobody else is awake yet. This is Vätö — and once you've had a morning like that, it's almost impossible to go back to ordinary weekends. Krokusstigen 10 sits on the island of Vätö in Norrtälje municipality, about 90 kilometres north of Stockholm, connected to the mainland by a bridge that makes this feel accessible without ever feeling crowded. The property is a classic Swedish sommarstuga in spirit — built in 1956, with all the soul that comes from a house that has absorbed decades of long evenings and midsummer celebrations — but the practical side has been kept firmly in the present. This is not a project. It's move-in ready and waiting. The main house runs to 60 square metres, which sounds compact until you step out onto the large wooden terraces and realise the living space effectively doubles in summer. Swedes know how to design for the outdoors, and this house is proof. The terraces wrap around the property in a way that catches light at different hours of the day — morning coffee on one side, evening wine on the other as the sun drops low over the pines. Inside, the living room is anchored by a masonry open fireplace with a Roslag insert, the kind of cast-iron fitting that's been keeping archipelago families warm for generations. Light a fire in September, crack a window, and listen to the first autumn wind move through the birch trees outside. That fireplace earns its keep from August through to May. The layout is honest and well-proportioned. A ... click here to read more

Front view of the holiday home

The first thing you notice on a summer morning at Litsnäset 130 is the sound of the Indalsälven moving past the garden — a low, steady current that replaces whatever city noise you carried here. The boathouse is twenty steps from the kitchen door. The fishing rod is already rigged. Coffee's on. This compact one-bedroom holiday home in Lit, Jämtland sits on a 1,150-square-metre riverside plot in the small community of Litsnäset, roughly ten minutes by car from the town of Lit and about forty minutes from Östersund. At 20 square metres, it's deliberately simple. That's not a limitation — it's the point. This kind of cabin demands very little of you. You spend your time outside. The main house pulls off something that bigger properties often fail at: everything is in its right place. A wood-burning stove anchors the living area, which doubles as a sleeping space with a sofa corner and bunk bed. When you light the fire on an October evening and the river mist rolls across the plot, the whole room feels genuinely warm rather than just heated. The kitchen is compact but practical, with its own separate entrance opening directly onto the garden — meaning you can carry plates straight to the terrace table without threading through the living space. Small detail. Big difference in daily use. The partly covered terrace is where most of the daylight hours happen in summer. It faces the water. The sun in Jämtland in July doesn't set until past ten, and from the terrace you watch the light go gold on the Indalsälven for what feels like hours. The property's own stretch of riverfront is directly accessible — you walk across your garden and you're at the water's edge. Swimming, fishing from the bank, pushing a kayak in. No shared ac ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the holiday home and garden

The first morning you wake up at Norrberg 18, before you've even put the coffee on, you'll hear it — absolute silence, broken only by the low call of a wood pigeon somewhere in the birch trees out back. No traffic. No sirens. Just Hälsingland doing what it does best. This two-bedroom country home sits on a generous 8,520 square metres of land in the rural reaches of Ljusdals kommun, and it comes with the kind of breathing room that's almost impossible to find anywhere near a city at this price. The plot is big enough to disappear into — part open meadow, part woodland fringe — and the outbuildings alone are worth the trip up here to see in person. Let's talk about the house itself. Around 120 square metres spread across two floors, which gives you more flexibility than you might expect from a two-bedroom layout. Downstairs, a wide entrance hall opens into a kitchen that's actually sized for cooking — the sort of room where you can have four people chopping and nobody's in anyone's way. Off the kitchen, two additional rooms adapt easily: reading room one week, extra guest space the next, home office the week after that. The ground floor bathroom has a shower and toilet, and everything works. Upstairs, a furnished landing functions as a secondary sitting area — the kind of spot that fills up with books and card games by August — and two proper bedrooms look out over the fields and treeline. It's a quiet, uncomplicated layout that actually suits the way people use a summer house. The sale includes all furnishings and loose items currently in the property. You drive up, you put your bags down, you open the windows. That's it. No waiting on furniture deliveries from the mainland. Now, the outbuildings. There's a tradition ... click here to read more

Front view of the house and garden

Step off the gravel track at Lilla Pjäkebo on a September morning and the first thing you notice is the silence. Not the uncomfortable, something-is-wrong kind — the deep, earned quiet of forest edge countryside in Småland, broken only by the knock of a woodpecker somewhere up in the pines. The air smells of damp moss and, faintly, of woodsmoke drifting from a neighbor you can't even see. This is the Sweden that Swedes themselves escape to on weekends, and this 1909 cottage — solid, well-cared-for, sitting on over 5,300 square meters of land — is the real thing. The house is small in the way that forces you to live well. Seventy-eight square meters across three rooms, arranged with the practical logic of old Swedish torp design: nothing wasted, nothing unnecessary. The wooden floors are original, worn to a warm honey color from over a century of use. Large windows pull the meadow and treeline right into the living room, so even on grey November days the space feels connected to something bigger than itself. The kitchen does what a good country kitchen should — gives you room to make proper food, to leave a pot of elk stew on the stove without bumping into anyone, to look out at the garden while you wash up. Both bedrooms are quiet. Genuinely quiet. The kind of quiet where you actually sleep differently. The updated bathroom is modern without being clinical — new fixtures, clean lines, and none of the awkward compromise that often comes when someone tries to modernize an old country house. Then there's the magasin. A classic Swedish barn outbuilding that the current owners have made genuinely useful rather than just atmospheric. The ground floor functions as a guest house — real accommodation for friends or family, not ... click here to read more

Front view of Lilla Pjäkebo cottage

Step outside on a January morning and the world is completely white and completely silent, except for the creak of fresh snow underfoot and the distant hum of the first chairlift starting up at Vemdalsskalet. The air bites at your cheeks. Inside, the fireplace is still throwing heat from last night, and the smell of coffee fills the open kitchen. This is what owning a vacation home in the Swedish mountains actually feels like — and Järvslingan 22 puts you right in the middle of it. Built in 2020, this substantial semi-detached house sits on Järvslingan in the Vemdalsskalet area of Vemdalen, Härjedalens kommun, one of the most consistently popular ski and outdoor destinations in Sweden. The property spans 192 square meters of indoor living space across two full apartments — each with four bedrooms — on a generous 1,192-square-meter lot. It's a rare find: large enough for extended families or investment purposes, modern enough to require almost no work, and positioned well enough that you're never far from anything that makes this corner of Jämtland and Härjedalen so compelling. The two apartments share the building but function entirely independently. Each has its own open-plan kitchen, dining, and living area anchored by a fireplace, plus four bedrooms and its own outdoor access. Large windows face the mountain birch landscape, and when the snow is heavy on the branches in February, the view is the kind you don't stop noticing. The terraces — generous, south-leaning — are where you'll sit in March when the sun finally starts to win the argument with the cold, a cold beer in hand while your skis dry against the railing. The cross-country trail network and snowmobile routes are accessible directly from the property, mea ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the house with mountain backdrop

Step outside on a Tuesday morning in late August and the fields at Söderhenninge are gold-green and dead quiet, except for the crows working the far edge of the meadow and the faint clatter of a tractor somewhere over the ridge toward Edsbro. That's the sound of this place. Not silence exactly, but the particular hush of countryside that hasn't been touched up for anyone. This is a genuine Swedish farmstead — two residential houses, a cluster of solid outbuildings, and 6.3 hectares of mostly arable land sitting in Norrtälje municipality, about 90 minutes north of Stockholm by car. It's the kind of property that people in the city talk about wanting for years and rarely find at a price that makes actual sense. At 450,000 SEK for the full estate, the numbers are hard to argue with. The main house was built in 1936 and covers 99 square meters, with four rooms arranged in the unhurried way that rural Swedish builders favored — a real kitchen with room to cook properly, a living room that gets afternoon light, and bedrooms that feel like bedrooms rather than closets with aspirations. The windows are large, which matters here because what you're looking at through them changes week by week: snow-dusted fields in January, wildflowers pushing up along the fence lines in May, the low copper light of a Swedish autumn stretching across the paddocks in October. There's an additional 50 square meters of secondary living space in the main structure too, which gives you genuine flexibility for a home office, a mudroom setup, or just extra storage without crowding the main living areas. The second residential building is a real asset that most comparable properties don't offer. It functions independently, which means extended family ... click here to read more

Main house and outbuildings, Söderhenninge 5 och 3

The coffee is already brewing when you step out onto the covered terrace at Hjortronvägen 26. It's half past seven on a Tuesday in July, the birch trees are dead still, and somewhere behind the treeline you can hear the Baltic. That particular hush — the one you only get in the Swedish archipelago fringe on a windless summer morning — settles over the yellow clapboard walls of this cottage like it was built just for this moment. It kind of was. This sun-yellow summer house in Kaggebo has been doing its job since 1976, and it does it well. Three bedrooms, 61 square metres of thoughtfully used interior space, a separate guest cottage, and a plot that stretches to 2,002 square metres of lawn and native woodland. At 149,500 SEK, it sits comfortably within reach for international buyers looking for a genuine Swedish holiday home without the price tag that comes with the more famous archipelago addresses further north. Step inside and the open-plan living room and kitchen greet you with soft Scandinavian tones and freshly laid pine flooring that still carries that faint warm resin smell on sunny afternoons. Large windows pull the garden light into every corner. The layout is honest — no wasted corridors, no awkward half-rooms — just a bright, functional space designed around the rhythm of summer living: come in from the water, dry off, cook something simple, eat outside. One of the three bedrooms comfortably fits a double bed, the other two work well for children or guests, and the whole thing flows with an ease that properties twice the size often fail to achieve. The covered terrace off the living area is where you'll spend most of your time. Sheltered, private, and positioned to catch the evening light, it handles everyt ... click here to read more

Front view of the summer cottage

Step onto the sheltered deck on an August morning and the air already smells of pine resin and salt. The Gulf of Bothnia is less than a ten-minute walk through the trees. Somewhere behind the house, a woodpecker is working its way up a spruce. This is Söråker — quiet in the very best sense, and closer to everything than you'd expect. Söråker sits in Timrå municipality, roughly 40 kilometres north of Sundsvall along Sweden's High Coast corridor. This stretch of the Norrland coastline doesn't get the same international noise as Gotland or Dalarna, but Swedes who know it guard it fiercely. The summers here are genuinely warm, the light stretches well past ten in the evening, and the sea at Klingerfjärden is calm enough for children but cold enough to make you feel alive. In the winters — quiet, snowbound, birch trees turned to white sculpture — the same roads that carry cyclists in July carry cross-country skiers in January. The rhythm shifts completely between seasons, and that's half the appeal. The house itself was built in 1980 and sits on a 1,620-square-metre lot that backs directly onto forest. Forty-six square metres of interior space sounds modest until you're inside and realize the layout wastes nothing. Two bedrooms, a living room anchored by a wood-burning stove, and a kitchen with a proper dining area. The stove is the kind of detail that matters in October, when the evenings drop fast and you want something that heats a room the old-fashioned way — not just a thermostat click, but actual fire behind glass, the smell of birch logs, a reason to stay inside a little longer. The kitchen is set up for real cooking, not just reheating, with enough storage to stock for a week without the place feeling cluttered. Ou ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the holiday home

Picture this: a quiet Tuesday morning in July, the sun already climbing over the treeline east of Bergbyslingan, hitting your south-facing terrace at an angle that makes the coffee steam glow gold. The lake glints through the open kitchen window. Somewhere down the path, a kayak scrapes against a dock. This is not a weekend fantasy — this is just the ordinary Tuesday you get when you own a place like this. The cottage sits in Bergby, a small community about ten minutes by car from central Hallstavik and roughly an hour north of Stockholm along the E18. It's the kind of area that regulars have kept quiet about for years — Lake Mälaren-adjacent archipelago country, where the forests run thick with birch and pine and the light in late June barely dims before midnight. Norrtälje municipality, which governs this stretch of Uppland coast, has long attracted Stockholmers looking for a foothold outside the city without the traffic chaos of the west coast. Word is getting out. The cottage itself is compact and deliberate — 43 square meters on a private plot of roughly 295 square meters, sold as a cooperative unit (bostadsrätt). That ownership structure is worth understanding upfront. For international buyers, bostadsrätt means you own shares in the housing association that gives you full, exclusive right to the property, including the terrace and the plot. It's a standard and well-regulated form of ownership in Sweden, and it typically means the association handles exterior maintenance, insurance on the building shell, and communal grounds — six thousand square meters of jointly managed green space surrounding the cluster of properties here. Practically speaking, it reduces the burden of ownership significantly, especially if y ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the cottage and terrace

Step off the gravel path on a July morning and the first thing you notice is silence — not the absence of sound, but the right kind of quiet. Birdsong from the treeline. The distant slap of water from the lake just down the road. A neighbor's dog, briefly. That's Edsbro. And once you've spent a single summer here, you understand why Stockholm families have been coming back to this pocket of Norrtälje municipality for generations. Stockkärrsvägen 108 sits on a flat, sun-drenched plot of 1,764 square meters in a relaxed residential lane where most homes are owned by people who don't want to be anywhere else in July. The main house — 71 square meters built in 1978, well maintained and move-in ready — punches above its floor plan thanks to a vaulted ceiling in the living room that makes the space feel open and unenclosed. Large windows face the rear garden, so even from the sofa you're watching light move through the trees outside. There's a fireplace insert for the cooler shoulder months, and a covered outdoor patio off the living room where you'll end up eating most of your meals from Midsommar through late August. Four bedrooms. One bathroom with shower, toilet, and a genuine Finnish-style sauna built into the house. That sauna is not a luxury add-on — in this part of Sweden it's how you finish a day. You swim in the lake, you walk back through the forest, you sit in the sauna, you eat dinner late on the patio. That's the rhythm of a summer here, and this house is built around it. The kitchen and dining area open into the living room, which keeps the social current flowing when you have people over. Cooking doesn't separate you from the conversation. The layout is practical in the way that Scandinavian design tends to ... click here to read more

Front view of the holiday home

Early on a September morning at Norregård, the only sounds are the soft thud of hooves crossing damp grass and the distant call of geese over Strömmasjön lake, just 800 meters through the tree line. The mist sits low over the pastures. The kitchen in the 1909 main house smells of coffee and old timber, and the light coming through the east-facing windows turns everything gold. This is what you actually buy when you acquire this estate — not just 12.8 hectares and a collection of well-built structures, but a particular quality of morning. Norregård sits in Halland County, outside Halmstad on Sweden's west coast, and the setting is quietly extraordinary. The land rolls between open meadow and mixed forest, fenced pastures stretch toward the wood line, and the whole place has the kind of unhurried atmosphere that takes decades to develop — not something you can manufacture. The main residence was built in 1909 and carries that era's proportions well: high ceilings, thick walls that hold warmth through January, and a floor plan that makes 279 square meters feel like a natural progression from room to room rather than a maze of additions. Six rooms. Two bathrooms. A living room large enough for a proper gathering. A kitchen that was updated without losing the character of the original house. The equestrian infrastructure here is serious. There's a full riding arena, maintained stables, and a lösdrift — a loose housing system — that gives horses freedom of movement while keeping them sheltered through the Swedish winter. The pastures are fenced for year-round grazing. The meadow areas produce hay, which you can either use or lease out; both options contribute to the roughly 150,000 SEK annual income the estate currently gene ... click here to read more

Front view of Norregård estate

Stand on the wooden deck at dusk and watch the last light drain out of the sky behind Omberg's ridge. The ridge goes dark slowly, in stages, and below it the fields settle into a deep green quiet. That's the view from this 1909 cottage at Skedagatan 215 — not a painted backdrop, but a living landscape that changes with every season, every hour, every weather system rolling in off Lake Vättern. It's the kind of place that becomes genuinely hard to leave. Borghamn sits on the eastern shore of Lake Vättern in Östergötland, tucked between the ancient Alvastra plateau and Sweden's second-largest lake. This isn't a tourist-polished village. It's a real rural community with a grocery store, a well-regarded waterfront restaurant, and a harbor where locals actually keep their boats. The pace here is deliberate and unhurried in a way that feels intentional rather than left behind. The cottage itself was built in 1909 and sits on a fenced, generously planted plot that includes established fruit trees — apple and plum, heavy with fruit by late August — along with perennial borders that someone clearly spent years coaxing into maturity. The robotic lawnmower handles the grass without any involvement from you, which matters more than it sounds when you're here for a long weekend and don't want to spend it behind a push mower. Inside, the 68 square metres are arranged with the kind of logic that older Swedish homes often get right instinctively. The living room anchors the interior: a classic kakelugn tiled stove in the corner, an air-to-air heat pump for the seasons when the tiled stove feels like overkill, and enough natural light through the original-proportion windows to keep it from ever feeling tight. The dining area flows dir ... click here to read more

Front view of the house and garden

Early morning at Grycken 680, the lake is so still it mirrors the pine trees perfectly. You walk down to the private jetty, coffee still warm in your hand, and there is nothing between you and the water except birdsong and the faint creak of old timber. No road noise. No notifications. Just this. That is what owning a piece of Lake Grycken actually feels like. This is a genuine off-grid log cabin on its own peninsula in Lake Grycken, deep in Ovanåkers municipality in Gävleborg County, Sweden. The plot extends to 2,500 square metres and sits at the very tip of a narrow tongue of land where the water wraps around you on all sides. You are, for all practical purposes, on an island. The sense of seclusion is absolute. The cabin itself is a former logger's hut, measuring 5 by 5 metres — compact, solid, and full of the kind of character that takes a century to acquire. The logs are thick and darkened with age. Inside, the wood-burning stove is the centrepiece, and on an October evening with rain tapping the roof and a fire running hot, it is genuinely one of the most restorative places you could be in Sweden. The interior is simple and intentionally so. There is no electricity and no running water piped in — drinking water comes from a natural spring close to the lakeshore, cold and clean. This is not a property for someone who needs Wi-Fi. It is a property for someone who actively wants to leave all of that behind. A small tool shed and a traditional outhouse complete the structures on site. The garden area has been left largely wild, with forest floor giving way to the rocky lakeshore in that characteristically Swedish way that feels effortless and right. Sunlight reaches the plot throughout the day, and the aspect across ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the log cabin on Grycken 680

Saturday morning on Linneuspromenaden and the neighborhood is just waking up. Someone's brewing coffee two gardens over, you can smell it. The fruit trees in your 410-square-meter plot are doing their thing—dappled light on the wooden deck, a blackbird working through the lawn—and you've got nowhere to be. That's the particular pleasure of owning a place like this in Elinelund, a quietly residential pocket of Malmö that most visitors never find but locals never leave. The house itself is compact and honest. Forty square meters of main living space, built in 1960 and kept in genuinely good condition over the decades—not frozen in amber, but updated where it matters. Large windows in the living room pull the garden right into the interior, so even on grey Swedish autumn days the space doesn't feel closed in. The kitchen is functional and properly equipped, the kind where you can actually cook rather than just heat things up. Two bedrooms handle a couple or a small family without drama. One bathroom. Everything you need, nothing you don't. What lifts this property well above comparable holiday homes at this price point is the guest house completed in 2021. Fifteen square meters, finished to a high standard, giving visiting friends or family genuine privacy rather than an air mattress in the living room. It works as a creative studio, a work-from-anywhere office during shoulder season, or simply overflow space when the cousins arrive in July. Having a self-contained outbuilding on a plot this size in Malmö is not something you find every day. The conservatory earns its keep across every season. In June it's where you eat breakfast before the day heats up. In October it's where you watch the garden turn colour with a glass ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the house and garden

Step outside on a January morning and the silence hits you first. Not the silence of an empty room — the deep, pressurized quiet of a landscape buried in snow, with Borgahällan mountain rising sharp and white against a sky that hasn't decided yet between pink and blue. The wood stove in the kitchen is already ticking with warmth. The coffee is on. This is the daily reality of owning a cabin on Näslunds väg. Borgafjäll sits in the southern reaches of Swedish Lapland, in Dorotea municipality, and it's the kind of place that takes a deliberate effort to find. That's the point. There's no motorway exit sign, no chain hotels, no tour groups spilling off coaches. What there is: a compact, genuine mountain community that has somehow stayed exactly as it should be — a ski center with slopes for everyone from cautious seven-year-olds to serious off-piste skiers, a hotel with a proper spa, a local grocery, and a pub where people actually know each other's names. The après-ski here isn't performative. It's just locals and guests sharing a table after a hard day on the mountain. This particular cabin has a story that most properties can't claim. It was originally constructed at Borgahällan — a site known locally as Luspen — and later carefully dismantled, transported, and rebuilt on its current plot. The traditional log construction survived that journey intact. Built in 1968, the bones of this house carry the weight of a specific era of Swedish mountain building: practical, solid, unpretentious. Over the decades it's been maintained with real care, which you can see in the way the wood has aged rather than deteriorated. At 40 square meters, the interior is compact by design, and every part of it earns its space. The kitchen and ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the mountain cabin

On a warm June morning in Galjevången, the lilacs are so heavy with bloom they droop over the garden path. You're sitting on the patio with a cup of coffee, listening to bees work through the roses, and somewhere two plots over someone is running a watering can. The city of Lund—its cathedral, its university courtyards, its Saturday market on Stortorget—is less than ten minutes away by bike. But right now it feels like it's on another planet entirely. That's the particular magic of this allotment cottage at Östra Fäladsvägen 36, plot 64, inside the Öster 1 colony—the oldest allotment community in Lund. These things don't come up often. When they do, they go fast. The plot itself is 150 square metres, and the previous owner clearly put in years of patient, knowing work. Two apple trees anchor the back of the garden—one early, one late variety, so you're picking fruit from August well into October. There's a plum tree too, and once you've had homegrown Swedish plums in a crumble on a September evening, shop-bought ones are a different category of thing. Raspberries and blackberries grow along the border, and if you get there before the birds do, there are wild strawberries tucked into the ground cover. Rhubarb, herbs, perennials that come back every spring without asking anything of you. Bulb plants push through the soil in April before you've even thought about the growing season. The garden does a lot of the work itself. The cottage is 10 square metres—compact by any measure, but that's exactly the point. A single room, large windows that pull in the afternoon light, space enough for a daybed and a small table. It's a place to sleep after an evening out in the garden, to take shelter from a sudden August downpour, to ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the cottage and garden

Picture this: it's a Tuesday morning in February, the thermometer reads minus eight, and through the frost-edged window above the kitchen sink you can see fresh snow sitting heavy on the pine branches. The wood-burning stove has already been going for an hour, the sauna is warming up, and the ski runs at Tandådalen are a short drive away. This is what five weeks a year at Salbäcksvägen 16 actually feels like. The property sits in Salbäcksheden, a quiet residential pocket of the greater Sälen area in Dalarna, Sweden's most serious mountain destination. Sälen isn't some weekend novelty — it's home to Scandinavia's largest ski resort system, the interconnected SkiStar network that links Tandådalen, Hundfjället, Lindvallen, and Högfjället across dozens of pistes and hundreds of kilometers of groomed cross-country trails. The nearest resort entrances are just minutes from the front door. Built in 2004 and kept in genuinely good shape, this 120-square-meter house is sold as Share C in a ten-owner co-ownership structure. Each owner gets five weeks of guaranteed annual use, decided at a meeting every September. For 2026, the allocated weeks are 5, 8, 25, 26, and 42 — that's two prime winter weeks in the heart of ski season, a summer slot when the valley is green and warm, an early autumn week when the birch trees turn copper, and a late winter booking that often catches the tail of good snow conditions. The annual running cost sits at around 13,000 SEK, which keeps the whole arrangement genuinely affordable compared to outright ownership of a comparable property in the region. Step inside through the hallway and the layout immediately makes sense for a mountain house. The open living space puts the wood stove at the center of ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the vacation home

Picture this: it's a Saturday morning in late July, and you're standing at the kitchen window of a Finnish timber house in rural Skåne, watching mist lift slowly off the surface of Svenstorpssjön about 300 metres away. The smell of pine is everywhere — in the walls, in the air outside, in the sauna you fired up last night. Coffee's on. There's nowhere you have to be. That's what Klangens väg 3 actually feels like. And it's not a fantasy you have to work hard to justify — at this price point, it's one of the most accessible genuine escapes you'll find in southern Sweden. The house itself is a Honka, which matters. Honka is a Finnish manufacturer with a serious reputation for precision-cut log construction — the kind where the timber does the structural and thermal work simultaneously, meaning the walls breathe, the temperature stays remarkably even year-round, and the whole thing just gets better looking as it ages. This one was built in 1995 and has been kept in good condition. Walk inside and the first thing you notice is how warm it feels — not just physically, but in tone. Raw wood on every surface, a Finnish soapstone fireplace anchoring the main room, and a layout that's open but not cavernous. The kitchen and living area share the ground floor in a way that makes the 50 square metres feel much more generous than it sounds on paper. The soapstone fireplace is genuinely worth dwelling on. Soapstone holds heat for hours after the fire dies down — it's not decorative, it's functional in a deeply satisfying way. Light it on a crisp October evening and the stone radiates warmth well past midnight. That's the kind of detail that separates a proper Scandinavian timber house from an imitation. Upstairs, an open loft run ... click here to read more

Front view of the timber house

Early on a September morning, the mist sits low over the fields stretching out beyond the kitchen window, and the only sound is birdsong. The coffee is brewing, the greenhouse needs checking, and today's only real decision is whether to cycle down toward Sjöbo or take the car out to the Österlen coast. That is the kind of morning this property deals in, every single day. Set on an elevated plot along Lilla Röddevägen in Blentarp, this is a proper Swedish landsted — a 350-square-metre country home built in 1989 that has been kept in genuine good condition, with enough space to accommodate an extended family, a rotating cast of friends, and still find a quiet corner to yourself. Two residential units, nine rooms in total, five bedrooms, two bathrooms, a double garage, and 4,821 square metres of land that includes a greenhouse, manicured hedges, open lawns, and unbroken views across rolling Skåne farmland. It is the kind of property that rarely appears on the market in this part of southern Sweden, and when it does, it doesn't stay there long. Inside, the bones of the house are what you notice first. Exposed wooden beams overhead, wide plank floors underfoot, white plastered walls that catch afternoon light in a way that painted drywall simply never does. The open fireplace in the living area — fitted with built-in log storage — is not decorative. It works, it draws well, and by November you will understand exactly why the previous owners installed it. The living room and kitchen flow into each other naturally, the large windows doing the work of framing whatever the season is showing off outside: bright green barley in June, frost-dusted fields in February, the strange amber light of a Skåne October that painters have be ... click here to read more

Front view of the estate

Early June morning in Tived: the forest is completely silent except for a woodpecker somewhere back in the pines, and the air carries that particular smell — cold water, moss, and something faintly resinous — that you only get this deep into Swedish wilderness. You step outside with your coffee, barefoot on the grass, and realize you're about three minutes from one of the most raw and untouched stretches of nature in Scandinavia. That's the daily reality at Göte Hellmans väg 5. This compact one-bedroom house sits in the quiet cottage community of Tived, in Laxå municipality — a part of Sweden that most international visitors never find, which is precisely what makes it so good. The property spans 44 square meters of interior space on a generous 963-square-meter plot, giving you far more garden than house, in the best possible way. Built in 1966 and currently in good condition, it's a classic Swedish holiday cottage with honest bones and serious potential. Let's talk about what surrounds it first, because the location is genuinely the headline here. A short walk takes you down to Sannerud and the shores of Lake Unden, one of Värmland's larger lakes, where the water runs clear and cold and the small marina sees more rowboats than speedboats. There's a local beach for swimming through July and August, a boat ramp along the tourist road for a small fee if you want to launch your own vessel, and fishing that draws regulars back season after season — pike and perch mostly, if you ask around. The pace is unhurried. Nobody is in a rush. That's the point. Tiveden National Park is roughly 10 kilometers away. If you haven't been, it's worth knowing that Tiveden is unlike the manicured Scandinavian nature reserves you might expec ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the house and garden

Picture this: a slow Sunday morning, coffee in hand, south-facing deck soaking up the kind of Scandinavian summer light that seems to last forever. The fields behind the garden are dead quiet except for a distant tractor and the occasional gust off the Öresund. That's the rhythm of life at Ängagårdsvägen 33 in Beddingestrand — unhurried, grounded, and exactly what a second home in southern Sweden should feel like. Built in 1945 and thoughtfully extended over the decades, this 62-square-metre cottage carries the kind of character that only comes with time. It's not overworked or over-renovated. The bones are solid, the layout is smart, and the result is a home that feels genuinely lived-in — in the best possible sense. Two bedrooms, one bathroom, a kitchen with a proper dining nook, and a living room with large windows that pull in the surrounding greenery like a living painting. For a coastal holiday home in Skåne, this is a sweet spot: compact enough to lock up and leave without stress, spacious enough to host a small group of friends or spend a full summer season with family. The deck is where this property really delivers. South and west-facing, it stretches wide enough for a proper outdoor table, a few loungers, and the kind of lazy afternoon that stretches past dinner. In late June and July, the sun doesn't quit until well after 9pm here, and you'll feel every minute of it out on that wooden platform. The garden itself — 400 square metres — borders open farmland on one side and a small woodland grove on the other. Maintenance is genuinely low. No elaborate landscaping to manage from afar, just grass, air, and a natural screen that keeps things private. Beddingestrand sits along the southwestern tip of Skåne, the ... click here to read more

Front view of the summer cottage

There's a specific kind of quiet that settles over Eklundsfältet on a Tuesday morning in July. No traffic. Just birdsong, the distant lapping of Lake Måsnaren, and the smell of sun-warmed wood drifting through an open window. You put the coffee on, step onto the patio in your slippers, and the day belongs entirely to you. That's the reality of life at Gurkstigen 37 — a compact, well-kept summer cottage sitting in one of Södertälje's most sought-after allotment communities, just 50 metres from the water's edge. Eklundsfältet is the kind of place that takes ten minutes to fall in love with. It's a proper Swedish allotment area — organised, leafy, with neighbours who actually know each other's names. The association house, Aklejan, sits just a short walk from the cottage and gives you access to shared showers and laundry facilities, which means longer stays are genuinely comfortable rather than a compromise. There's a real community spirit here. Midsommar gets celebrated properly. People share seeds, tools, gardening tips, and occasionally a cold beer over the fence on hot afternoons. The cottage itself covers 30 square metres — and yes, that sounds modest, but the layout makes every centimetre work. Large windows pull in the daylight and give the interior a sense of airiness that belies the footprint. The living space is warm and considered, with nothing wasted. What sets this cottage apart from many others in the area is the indoor toilet — genuinely rarer than you'd expect at this price point and in this type of property — and a wood-burning stove in the kitchen that doubles as both cooking surface and the fastest way to take the edge off a cool May evening. Light it up, pour a glass of something, and the whole space ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the cottage and garden

Step off the porch on a September morning and the air smells of pine resin and wet moss. A pair of cranes are calling somewhere over Lake Nedingen—just 200 meters down the track. The coffee is on, the wood stove is ticking quietly in the corner, and the conservatory glass is steaming up at the edges. This is what a Tuesday feels like at Kantarellvägen 57. Not a weekend. A Tuesday. That's the thing about this property in Fornbo, a small lakeside community tucked inside Flens municipality about 120 kilometers southwest of Stockholm. It was built to be lived in across all four seasons, and it genuinely delivers on that promise. The 1990 house sits on a 1,890 square meter plot with mature birch and rowan trees framing a series of open lawns—the kind of garden that gives you options. Hammock between trees in July. Firewood stacked along the southern shed wall come October. Snowdrops pushing through frozen soil in late March, right when you start craving proof that winter actually ends. The 80 square meters inside are laid out with more intelligence than you'd expect from the footprint. The living room anchors everything, centered around a wood-burning stove that throws real heat—not the decorative kind. On evenings in November, when the lake freezes at the edges and the light drops at three in the afternoon, that stove earns its place. The dining area seats six comfortably, which matters when you're hosting the extended family for a Swedish midsommar dinner that spills from afternoon into midnight. The kitchen is practical and well-equipped, with enough counter space to actually cook rather than just reheat. The glazed conservatory—what Swedes call an uterum—might be the room that sells this house. It runs along the garden ... click here to read more

Front view of the house and garden

Stand at the kitchen window on a July morning and watch mist lift off the river in slow, unhurried curls. That's the kind of quiet this place offers — not the performed quiet of a spa, but the real, deep stillness of northern Sweden, where the only soundtrack is birdsong, moving water, and the occasional rustle of a reindeer picking through the treeline. This one-bedroom country cottage in Korsträsk, set on a generous 4,037-square-metre plot along the river's edge, is the kind of find that doesn't come along often in Norrbotten County. Korsträsk itself is a small, unhurried village about 20 kilometres from the town of Älvsbyn, sitting in a landscape shaped by glaciers, pine forests, and the kind of light that photographers chase from across Europe. In midsummer, the sun barely sets. By late August, the skies turn theatrical — deep violet streaks giving way to the first hints of aurora. In February, you can cross-country ski straight from the property boundary and follow forest tracks for hours without crossing a road. This is that kind of place. The cottage sits right beside the river, and roughly 350 metres separates you from the shores of Stor-Korsträsket, one of the larger lakes in the municipality. Walk down in the evening with a rod and you're pulling perch and pike from water that feels like it belongs to you alone. In summer, the lake is warm enough to swim — Swedes are not precious about cold water, and after a few days here, neither will you be. Canoe hire is easy to arrange in Älvsbyn, and paddling the connected waterways for an afternoon gives you a view of this landscape that no road can match. The house itself is 75 square metres, solid in structure, and honest about what it is: an older Swedish cottage w ... click here to read more

Korsträsk 330 - Exterior view

You wake up to the sound of birdsong drifting through the window, the smell of pine and lake water on the morning air. Through the kitchen glass, the garden stretches out in a wash of green — old fruit trees, a flat lawn still wet with dew, and somewhere beyond the tree line, Bodatorpsträsket glinting in the early light. This is a Tuesday in July at Bodatorpsvägen 14. And it's yours. This three-bedroom summer house in Djurhamn, on the island of Djurö in Värmdö municipality, sits on a generous 2,793 square metre plot in the Bodatorp area — one of the most sought-after pockets of the Stockholm archipelago for Swedish families and international buyers alike. The property is in good condition, ready to use from day one, and carries that rare quality of feeling genuinely lived-in rather than staged. Every corner has a story: the covered terrace where evenings tend to stretch long, the wood-burning stove that makes October here not just bearable but actually cosy, the great room that somehow fits everyone when the whole family descends in August. The main house is 55 square metres of practical, warm living space — compact enough to run easily, large enough for real comfort. There's a kitchen with a proper dining area where long lunches happen naturally, a bedroom tucked away for quiet, a separate toilet with an incineration toilet, and a shower room with a shower cabin. The wood stove in the great room is not decorative; it's the heart of the space, doing real work on those shoulder-season weekends when midsummer has passed but nobody wants to stop coming up. The covered terrace off the main house is where the day tends to begin and end — coffee in the morning light, wine as the sun drops behind the spruce trees. But the ma ... click here to read more

Main house and garden

On a still February morning at Matsbo 7, the only sounds are the creak of snow settling on the roof and, somewhere below the garden, the Ljusnan river threading quietly through the valley. You pull on your boots, step outside into minus-eight air that bites your cheeks in the best possible way, and you're at the trailhead in four minutes flat. This is Bruksvallarna — and once you've spent a winter here, you'll understand why Swedes return year after year with the kind of quiet loyalty that doesn't need explaining. Matsbo 7 sits on a 2,296 square metre plot on a calm residential street in the centre of the village. It's not a remote cabin requiring a four-wheel drive and three hours of mountain road — it's genuinely walkable to the ICA Stigmyrs grocery store, the village brasserie, a weaving studio, and the local hotel. That proximity matters more than it sounds. On a dark January afternoon when the temperature drops hard, being able to grab provisions on foot rather than scraping ice off a car is its own small luxury. The property is built in two connected sections, each with its own entrance, and this dual layout is the detail that makes it genuinely interesting for buyers. The newer wing, comprehensively updated in 2015, has the kind of open-plan arrangement that works for large family gatherings — a wide living room, a white kitchen with real storage space, a dining area that seats a crowd, and a bathroom with contemporary fittings. Two bunk beds and a double mean six people sleep here comfortably without anyone feeling crammed. The older section is a different mood entirely. Panel-clad walls, a proper open fireplace, and a sitting room that feels like it was built for long evenings with aquavit and card games. One ... click here to read more

Exterior view of Matsbo 7 in Bruksvallarna

On a still July morning, the smell of salt air drifts through the kitchen window before you've even made coffee. The Swedish west coast does that — pulls you outside before you're ready. From Gustav Bäcks väg, it's a ten-minute walk down to Eriksbergs beach, where the water is clear enough to see your feet and the only sound is the occasional creak of a sailboat. This is what you bought it for. Built in 2023, this compact year-round house in Bokenäs sits on 631 square metres of manageable garden, a short drive from the Bohuslän coastline that artists and writers have been quietly obsessing over for a century. At 45 square metres, it's not trying to be something it isn't — it's a proper escape, designed to be easy. One bedroom, one bathroom, an open-plan living and kitchen area that catches the afternoon light, and a loft upstairs that fits a double bed with room to spare. The layout means two people can genuinely live here without stepping on each other, and a third or fourth can sleep comfortably when you want company. The patio deserves a mention early, because you'll spend a lot of your time there. Long Swedish summer evenings — and they are genuinely long, light until eleven or later — make outdoor dining less of a nice-to-have and more of a daily ritual. The garden itself is low on demands. Mow it, water the odd plant, done. If you've had a holiday home in France or Italy and spent half the visit managing the grounds, you'll appreciate this. Bokenäs is one of those places that regulars are slightly reluctant to talk about too loudly. The peninsula sits between the Gullmarn fjord to the north and the open coastline further south, and the result is a patchwork of inlets, rocky outcrops, sea pines, and small boat ha ... click here to read more

Front view of the house and garden

You wake up to the smell of pine resin warming in the morning sun, and the only sound is a woodpecker somewhere deep in the birch forest behind the cottage. No traffic. No sirens. Just the occasional clink of a coffee cup and the creak of an old wooden floor underfoot. This is Gottröra—a pocket of rural Uppland that most people drive straight past on their way to the coast, which is precisely why the people who find it never want to leave. Set along Vängsjöbergsvägen in the quiet community of Gottröra, about 20 kilometers inland from Norrtälje, this 1968-built country home sits high on its own plot—elevated enough to catch the light early, private enough that you'll forget neighbors exist. The 3,026-square-meter grounds unfold around a sheltered courtyard framed by the main house, a guest cottage, a sauna building, and several outbuildings. From above, it looks like a small Swedish farm that got quietly left behind by the twentieth century, and that's exactly the appeal. The main house is 64 square meters of honest, unfussy living space. Two bedrooms, a kitchen with a wood-burning stove big enough to heat the whole room in February, and a sitting room anchored by a proper fireplace. The layout was designed for people who actually use their homes—not for show. On a grey November afternoon, with a pot of elk stew on the stovetop and snow pressing against the single-pane kitchen window, this house delivers exactly what it promises: warmth, quiet, and the particular contentment that comes from being genuinely off the grid from city life. Summers here are something else entirely. Viksjön lake is a 550-meter walk down through the trees—a clean, cold Swedish lake where the swimming is good and the fishing is better. Pike and ... click here to read more

Front view of the country home

At six in the morning, the water off Södra Finnö sits completely still. You walk the fifty metres from your front door down to the private jetty, coffee in hand, and the only sound is a common eider calling somewhere out toward Fyrudden. This is what people mean when they talk about the Swedish summer — and this two-bedroom country home in the heart of the Sankt Anna archipelago puts you right inside it. Sankt Anna is one of those places that Swedes have quietly kept to themselves. Spread across more than six thousand islands and skerries east of Söderköping in Östergötland, the archipelago doesn't have the tourist crowds of Stockholm's outer islands or the Bohuslän coast. What it has instead is genuinely wild coastline, sheltered bays where the water warms up fast in July, and that particular quality of light in late afternoon that turns the granite pink. The nearest mainland town, Söderköping, is one of Sweden's most intact medieval towns — Saturday mornings there mean wandering the Storgatan, picking up fresh bread from the bakery, and stopping for a coffee before the short drive back through pine forest to the island. The house itself was built in 1987 and sits on just over 2,000 square metres of land. Sixty-seven square metres inside, which sounds compact until you're actually in it — the open layout connecting the living room, dining area, and kitchen makes the space work hard, and the large windows along the sea-facing side mean the water is always present, even when you're cooking. On autumn evenings, when the temperature drops and the archipelago empties out, the wood-burning fireplace becomes the centre of gravity for the whole house. The geothermal heating system (bergvärme) backs it up, meaning this isn't j ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the main house and garden

Step inside on a cool June morning and you'll hear it before you see it: the low creak of hand-hewn timber walls adjusting to the day's warmth, the faint scent of linseed oil paint that has soaked into every surface for over a century. Outside, the birch trees lining Skärklacken's lane are in full leaf, and somewhere down the track, a neighbour's cowbell carries across the meadow. This is not a renovated-to-within-an-inch-of-its-life weekend escape. This is the real thing. Skärklacken has been documented since 1664, when it operated as a traditional Swedish fäbod — a seasonal mountain pasture where farming families would move their livestock each summer. By the early 1900s, 22 farms clustered here and some 250 cows grazed the surrounding meadows. When the railway pushed through the Dalälven valley, the settlement transformed quietly into a small workers' community, complete with its own shop. The timber cottages that housed those railway families are still standing. This is one of them. The building itself is a two-storey log structure, and whoever has cared for it over the decades understood the difference between maintenance and interference. The walls carry their age well. Original doors, frames, and mouldings remain in place — not as a design affectation, but because they were simply never replaced. Ceilings, walls, and woodwork have been treated with traditional linseed oil paint in the old Dalarna manner, which gives the interior that warm, slightly matte glow you see in the open-air museum at Zorngården in nearby Mora. The ground floor living area has been fitted with new Floda pine flooring, and it sits comfortably alongside the older elements without trying to upstage them. Heat comes from two tiled stoves an ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the timbered cottage

The alarm doesn't go off here. You wake up because sunlight is coming through the timber walls in long yellow strips, and somewhere outside a woodpecker is hammering away at a birch tree. That's the morning at Vibyhyttevägen 3 — unhurried, cool, and exactly why you bought a Swedish country retreat in the first place. This is a genuine 18th-century log cabin in Vidbyhyttan, a quiet hamlet within Hofors municipality in Gävleborg County, sitting on just over 5,400 square meters of private land. Forty square meters inside, but don't let that fool you — the layout is tight in the best Scandinavian sense of the word. Every corner does something useful. The living room anchors the space with an open fireplace that, come October, becomes the entire reason you're still here past the summer. It radiates more than heat. It radiates that particular Swedish cabin feeling — the one people drive hours from Stockholm to find and rarely do, because most cabins this old and this authentic simply aren't for sale anymore. The galley kitchen is compact and honest. No granite countertop fantasies here — just a well-organized workspace that makes you realize how little you actually need when you're cooking with ingredients you just picked from the garden. And there is a garden worth picking from: apple trees, heavy with fruit by late August, and raspberry bushes that genuinely threaten to take over the lawn if you give them a good summer. The grassy plot stretches out generously around the cabin, backed by mature trees that screen the property on all sides and keep the whole place feeling like your own private clearing in the forest. Sleeping arrangements are cleverly stacked. The main bedroom fits two custom-built beds, and a loft above op ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the log cabin

The engine cuts out. The boat drifts the last few meters to the berth, and suddenly the only sounds are the cry of a gull overhead and the soft knock of hull against wood. You're fifty meters from the front door of your own house on Edesön, and the whole of Jungfrufjärden is laid out ahead of you in a sweep of silver-blue water. This is how life on this island begins — not with a commute or a queue, but with a ten-minute crossing from the mainland that feels, every single time, like crossing into somewhere else entirely. Edesön sits in the inner Stockholm Archipelago, accessible by boat from the car and boat parking at Skärkarlsedet on the Dalarö peninsula in Haninge municipality. That crossing is part of the property's identity. It's the reason the island feels genuinely private. No drive-by traffic, no strangers wandering past the garden. Just the island's own rhythm, the smell of pine resin warming in the afternoon sun, and the particular quiet that only comes when you're surrounded by water. The house itself — a classic Swedish röd stuga with white corner trim — sits elevated on a natural plot of 1,120 square meters where bedrock, soft grass, and mature Scots pines coexist as they've always done here. The 50-square-meter main house was built with one clear priority: the view. Floor-to-ceiling windows on three sides of the open-plan living and dining area make Jungfrufjärden a constant presence, a living painting that changes with the light, the season, and the weather. On a clear winter morning, with the masonry fireplace crackling behind you and frost glittering on the rocks outside, it's the kind of view that ruins ordinary living rooms forever. That fireplace anchors the entire interior. It's not decorative — i ... click here to read more

Main house and sea view

On a quiet morning in early June, you step outside your back door at Björnmossevägen 60 with a coffee in hand. The garden stretches out ahead of you — a full 2,560 square meters of it — and somewhere beyond the treeline, maybe 300 meters off, you can hear the faint splash of a swimmer at one of the nearby lakes. The air smells of pine resin and wet grass. Stockholm feels like a world away, even though it's only about 35 kilometers north. That's Brottby. That's what draws people here. Tucked into the Garns-Ekskogen forest landscape within Vallentuna municipality, this two-bedroom house sits on a generous private plot that gives you something increasingly rare around the Swedish capital: genuine space, genuine quiet, and genuine proximity to nature that isn't manicured or managed into blandness. Built in 2018, the house covers 82 square meters with a clean, light-filled interior that needs nothing done to it. Move in, hang your coat, and start living. The layout makes sense for the way people actually use a second home or holiday base. The main living area runs open between the lounge and dining space, with oversized windows pulling in the kind of northern light that makes everything look slightly better than it is. The kitchen is modern and properly equipped — not the hollow showroom kind, but the kind where you can actually cook a Sunday elk stew after a long autumn hike. Two bedrooms give you flexibility: one for sleeping, one for a bunk room for kids, or a proper home office if you're splitting time between Stockholm work and forest-life weekends. The bathroom is contemporary, finished well, and does exactly what it needs to. Outside is where this property earns its price tag. The 2,560-square-meter plot is the rea ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the house and garden

Pull up to Gunnarvattnet 5018 on a Friday evening in February, step out of the car, and the silence hits you first. Not the uncomfortable urban kind—proper, deep Nordic silence, broken only by the creak of snow-weighted pine branches and the distant buzz of a snowmobile fading somewhere toward the Norwegian border. The thermometer reads minus twelve. The cabin's heat pump has been running since you switched it on remotely from the motorway, and when you push open the door, it's warm and smells faintly of pine and the wool blankets folded on the bunk. This is why you bought the place. Valsjöbyn sits in Jämtland's far northwestern corner, in Krokoms kommun, about as far into the Swedish mountain wilderness as you can get while still reaching an ICA store within a reasonable drive. The village is small and unassuming—a cluster of red houses, a few hundred year-round residents, and a collective understanding that the real point of being here is what lies outside the front door. Gunnarvattnet, the lake that gives the address its name, is a short walk from the cabin. It's a proper fishing lake, too. Arctic char, brown trout, whitefish—the kind of stocks that take decades of clear, cold water to build. Come July, you can walk down before breakfast with a rod, and on a good morning you'll be back in time to fry something in the pan by eight. The cabin itself covers 52 square metres, which sounds compact until you're inside. The layout is honest and functional in the way that Swedish mountain cabins have always been: nothing wasted, nothing missing. The kitchen was recently renovated and is genuinely well-equipped—this isn't a weekend getaway where you're hunting for a working tin opener. You can cook a proper meal here. The li ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the holiday home

The smell hits you first. Pine resin warming in the morning sun, damp earth from the night's dew, and somewhere just beyond the treeline, the faint mineral coolness of the lake. You haven't even stepped off the veranda yet, and already the week ahead feels completely different from the one you just left behind. This is Vallsänge 6468 — a freshly built A-frame tucked into a 1,532-square-metre woodland plot in Kilafors, a quiet corner of Gävleborg County in central Sweden. The house went up in 2024. Everything inside is untouched, unscuffed, built for a first owner who wants to walk in and simply live, not renovate. Bergviken lake is a hundred metres away. That's not marketing shorthand for a distant glimmer on the horizon — it's genuinely a two-minute walk through the pines. On summer mornings you can be in the water before your coffee has cooled. The lake is calm and clean, the kind that turns gold-pink around nine in the evening when the Swedish summer light does that thing it does, low and endless, making everything look slightly unreal. The A-frame form isn't just a style choice. The steep-pitched roof handles heavy snow loads without a second thought, and the tall triangular windows that define the front facade pull light deep into the living space throughout the year — not just in July, when Sweden barely gets dark, but also in February, when every photon counts. The open-plan kitchen and living area feel larger than 40 square metres should allow. Good spatial planning does that. There's an additional 7 square metres of secondary space — useful for gear, a sleeping nook, or the kind of overflow storage that a holiday home always eventually needs. Outside, the stone fireplace is the centrepiece of the plot's soci ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the A-frame house

Step onto the terrace on a Saturday morning in July and you'll hear it before you see it — the faint splash and laughter carrying over from the Fasalt pool area, just a short walk through the trees. The coffee in your hand is still steaming. The forest at the edge of the garden is absolutely still. This is what a Swedish summer actually feels like, and Ljungeldsvägen 18 puts you right in the middle of it. This three-bedroom cottage sits on a 790-square-metre natural plot in Fasalt, a quiet pocket of northwestern Skåne that most international buyers haven't yet discovered. At 65 square metres, the house is compact by design — every room has a purpose, nothing feels wasted, and the layout draws you naturally from inside to outside rather than keeping you anchored to a sofa. That's rare, and it matters when you're here to actually live, not just stay. The interior was fully renovated over roughly eight years, finishing in recent times, and the work was done with a clear eye for what made the original 1970s bones worth preserving. The kitchen is the first thing that catches you — classic checkered floor tiles in black and white, cabinetry that nods to the era without tipping into kitsch, and enough counter space to actually cook a proper meal after a day on the trails. Swedes take their outdoor kitchens and harvest tables seriously, and this kitchen has the spirit of both. The wood-burning stove in the open-plan living and dining area is the kind of fixture that changes how you use a space. On a grey October evening when the birches outside have gone amber and the temperature drops sharply, you'll light it and not think twice about spending the whole night indoors. The large windows facing the terrace pull double duty: th ... click here to read more

Front view of the cottage

On a quiet July morning at Gnejsvägen 9, you step out onto the enclosed balcony with a mug of coffee and the garden is already alive — bees working the raspberry canes, light cutting through the birch canopy, a woodpecker hammering somewhere behind the guest house. This is the version of Sweden that Swedes themselves keep to themselves. Mariefred is one of those small towns that gets everything right without trying too hard. Cobblestone streets, a waterfront that hasn't been over-developed, and the unmistakable silhouette of Gripsholm Castle rising above Lake Mälaren — one of the oldest Renaissance fortresses in Scandinavia and the unlikely backdrop to your afternoon walk. The town sits about 65 kilometres west of Stockholm, just over an hour by car, or you can take the steamboat Mariefred from Klara Mälarstrand in the capital — a genuinely beautiful two-and-a-half-hour crossing across the lake that makes every arrival feel like an event rather than a commute. The property itself carries the name 'Skogsgläntan' — Forest Glade — which tells you exactly what the current owners experienced here over the years. The plot is flat, deeply private, and ringed with mature trees that do the work of any fence. From the street you'd barely know the house was there. Inside, the layout makes immediate sense: three generous bedrooms, a living room with enough space to actually live in rather than just admire, a period-style kitchen that still has its original character intact, and a renovated bathroom that handles the modern comforts without erasing the soul of the place. The carport is new. The heating system has been updated. These are the upgrades that matter — not cosmetic, but structural and practical, the kind that mean you mov ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the house and garden

Wake up to nothing but birdsong. No traffic hum, no neighbor's lawnmower, no phone buzzing on the nightstand — because there's no signal to carry one. At Uvahult 303 in Alsterbro, Småland, mornings arrive the way they must have for centuries: through pine-filtered light, the smell of cool forest air, and the particular quiet that only truly secluded woodland can produce. This is what you came for. This single-bedroom Swedish torp — the word for the small, self-sufficient farmsteads that dot southern Sweden's countryside — sits on 1,370 square meters of private land deep in the forests of Nybro kommun. Forty square meters of living space. Two rooms. Wooden floors and tongue-and-groove walls that have absorbed generations of long summers and crackling-fire winters. It is completely off-grid: no mains electricity, no running water, no sewage connection. That's not a compromise. For the right buyer, it's the entire point. The layout is honest and practical. The living area centers on a wood-burning stove — the social and thermal heart of the cottage — around which evenings genuinely slow down. Board games, paperbacks, the low conversation of people who've had nowhere pressing to be all day. The kitchen corner handles the essentials without ceremony. The bedroom fits a double bed and storage without feeling cramped, and the second room flexes as a reading space, a guest sleeping area, or an art studio depending on the season and who's visiting. Large windows on both sides pull the forest inside, framing whatever wildlife wanders close enough to notice. Store Hindsjön is a short walk through the trees. The lake is cold, clear, and largely unfished by anyone other than locals who know it's there. Come July and August, Swedis ... click here to read more

Front view of Uvahult 303 cottage