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)

Close your eyes for a moment and picture this: it's a Saturday morning in July, the Swedish summer sun already warming the old wooden floorboards by 7am, and the only sound reaching you through the open kitchen window is birdsong and the faint rustle of birch leaves. That's not a fantasy. That's a typical morning at Högaholma 2279. This 1909 torp — the classic Swedish word for a small country cottage — sits on a quiet country lane just outside Markaryd in Kronoberg County, about 1.7 kilometres from the shores of Bröna Lake. It's the kind of place where the pace of life adjusts itself naturally, almost without you noticing. You arrive on a Friday afternoon still carrying the tension of city schedules, and by Sunday you genuinely can't remember what you were so stressed about. The main house covers 80 square metres, and it's used every centimetre wisely. Original wooden floors run throughout — the kind that creak slightly underfoot, warm with more than a century of family life. A wood-burning stove anchors the living room, and in October when Småland's forests turn every shade of copper and amber, you'll understand exactly why that stove is the heart of the house. The kitchen is a practical pleasure: custom-built painted cabinetry that feels rooted in the cottage's heritage without being fussy or impractical. Large windows pull the outside in, so the garden's changing moods become part of the interior atmosphere in every season. Then there's the guest house. A more recently built addition, it has two rooms, a WC, and a compact kitchenette — enough that visiting family or friends get genuine privacy rather than being squeezed onto a pull-out sofa. This is the detail that changes everything about how you can use the prope ... click here to read more

Front view of the summer cottage

The coffee tastes better on this terrace. Something about the birch trees filtering the early morning light, the faint smell of salt air drifting up from Herräng's rocky shore just around the corner, the silence that isn't really silence at all — it's wood pigeons, rustling leaves, the occasional distant outboard motor. You're 350 meters from the sea. It feels like another world entirely. Råvikskroken 1 sits on a generous 2,156-square-meter plot in one of the most quietly coveted pockets of the Stockholm Archipelago. Herräng is not one of those over-photographed Swedish villages that ends up on every travel blog. It's known among those who know — jazz musicians, archipelago regulars, Stockholm families who discovered it decades ago and have been coming back every June since. The Herräng Dance Camp, one of the world's most famous swing jazz festivals, has called this village home for over 40 years. In summer, the sound of live brass carries on the wind and the village takes on a warm, international energy before settling back into its natural quiet. If you want the untouched archipelago without the weekend crowds of Vaxholm or Grisslehamn, Herräng is exactly where you end up. The house itself was built in 1978 and has been kept in good condition — this isn't a renovation project, it's a property you can start enjoying immediately. At 78 square meters across two bedrooms and one bathroom, the layout is compact but genuinely livable, the kind of floor plan that feels right rather than just adequate. The living and dining area opens up around a fireplace that earns its keep every single autumn weekend, when the evenings drop fast and the archipelago turns copper and rust. Large windows pull in the garden and the surroundin ... click here to read more

Front view of the holiday home

The first thing you notice on a summer evening at Hysängsvägen 36 is the light. It comes low and golden off the Furusundsleden strait, cuts through the pine trees, and lands across the west-facing deck in a way that makes you want to pour something cold and simply sit. That's the rhythm of life on Yxlan — unhurried, quiet in the best possible sense, and astonishingly close to Stockholm. Yxlan is one of the outermost accessible islands in the Norrtälje archipelago, connected to the mainland by a free car ferry that runs year-round. It's not the kind of place that ends up on tourist lists. Swedes who know the archipelago well tend to keep it to themselves. The island sits where the inner skerries give way to open Baltic water, and on clear mornings you can smell the sea before you even step outside. The property on Hysängsvägen sits in the Hysängen area, a pocket of the island where the plots are generous and the neighbors are close enough to wave to but far enough that you can't hear their conversations. The main house is 72 square meters — not large, but used well. The open-plan living room and kitchen share a single bright space with big windows on the western side, which means afternoon light fills the room naturally without any effort on your part. Direct from the living room, a large wooden deck stretches out to meet the garden. The deck is where you'll spend most of your time in June, July, and August — eating, reading, watching the light change. It faces west, which in the Swedish archipelago summer means you're outside until ten at night without a jacket. Two bedrooms in the main house keep things practical. They're quiet rooms, good for sleeping deeply after a day on the water or a long hike through the island ... click here to read more

Front view of the main house and garden

The first thing you notice at Stenholmen 12 is the silence — or rather, the specific kind of sound that passes for silence out here: water moving against granite, a cormorant somewhere off the rocks, the creak of a wooden pier in the morning swell. You're standing on the southwestern tip of Stenholmen, coffee in hand, watching the light come up over Dalarö Ström, and already the thought of going back to the city feels faintly absurd. This is a house that has been doing this to people since the 1890s. Built during the era when Stockholm's upper classes first discovered the southern archipelago and began erecting their beloved sommarvillor along these shores, the main house has been carefully maintained through more than a century without losing the bones that make it special. The 65-square-metre layout across three rooms is modest by modern standards — two bedrooms, a living room, one bathroom — but out here, you don't live inside. The large windows frame the sea on multiple sides, and the sun-drenched timber terrace jutting off the house faces the water directly. Evening sun hits that terrace well past nine in July. You'll eat most of your meals there. The plot itself is genuinely unusual. At 5,154 square metres total, of which 2,186 square metres is classified water area, the property reaches directly into the sea. Rocky outcrops drop into a protected bay that's deep enough to moor several sailboats at the private piers. The terrain rises and folds across the lot, giving you different private corners — a flat spot for a deck chair in the afternoon, a high point that opens up a long view toward Dalarö Skans fortress to the south. No two spots on this property feel the same. The sauna building by the water is where th ... click here to read more

Seaside house with terrace and sea view

The first thing you notice on a July morning at Mistralvägen 4 is the light. It comes sideways through the pines, catches the wooden floors, and lands on the kitchen table in a way that makes you want to sit down and stay forever. Then the smell hits — salt air and warm timber and something faintly floral from the plot outside. You haven't even made coffee yet. This 1958 holiday home in Gotlands Tofta is one of those rare finds: a proper old Swedish sommarhus on a genuine plot of 2,449 square meters, priced honestly, and sitting within easy reach of Tofta Beach — one of the longest and most loved stretches of sand on the entire island of Gotland. It's 61 square meters of authentic character distributed over one and a half floors, and every square meter earns its keep. Step inside and the living room does what good rooms do — it draws you in. Exposed ceiling beams, wide wooden floorboards, a fireplace insert that crackles to life in late September when the tourists have gone and the island belongs to you. The large windows look out toward the sea — not a full panorama, but a real, honest glimpse that reminds you exactly where you are. On clear evenings, the light off the water turns everything amber. The kitchen sits next to the living room, functional and unhurried, with enough bench space to put together a proper meal. Gotland is serious about its food: local lamb from the heathland, saffron pancakes from the Saturday market in Visby, chanterelles picked from the woods just down the road in August. A kitchen like this — practical, with room for a dining table — is where those ingredients come to life. A walkthrough room with built-in wardrobes handles the coats and kayak gear and everything else that accumulates duri ... click here to read more

Front view of the house and garden

On a still morning in late June, the lilac hedge at the front of Citadellvägen 37 fills the air with something that stops you mid-step. You stand there a moment, coffee in hand, listening to the sound of a neighbor's trowel working the soil two plots over, a distant church bell somewhere toward the center of Landskrona, and underneath it all — almost nothing. Just wind in the birch leaves. This is what daily life looks like at one of Sweden's most storied colony communities, and it's considerably more addictive than it sounds on paper. Citadellet's allotment colony is genuinely old. Built in 1929 and rooted in Sweden's deep tradition of trädgårdskoloni living, the area around Citadellvägen feels lifted out of another era — in the best possible way. The winding footpaths between plots are narrow and unhurried. The cottages are small and individual. The gardens are lavish, seriously tended, and strikingly varied: one plot is a riot of dahlias, the next a productive kitchen garden with tidy rows of runner beans and dill. Nobody is rushing anywhere. The cottage at number 37 sits on approximately 500 square meters of garden and comes in at 37 square meters of interior space — compact, honest, and designed around what actually matters. Step inside and you're met with a living area that does double duty as a sleeping space, a double bed tucked into the room in a way that feels intentional rather than improvised. Light comes in well. The mood is calm. A few steps down — the floor level drops, which gives the kitchen its own distinct character — you find a room lined with warm wooden paneling and wooden floors that have clearly been looked after. It smells faintly of pine. The kitchen is small but genuinely functional, the kind ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the garden cottage

Picture this: it's a Saturday morning in late June, and the light in Södermanland at 6am is already golden and warm. You step out through the old wooden door of a 1909 torp, coffee in hand, and the only sounds are birdsong and a light wind moving through the birch trees at the edge of your land. The barn across the gravel road still has bunting from last night's midsommar party. That's the kind of morning this property delivers—not occasionally, but every time you show up. Mellösa-Näs Björktorp is a rare find in the Swedish countryside south of Flen, a genuine piece of rural Södermanland with soul intact. The main house is a classic Swedish torp dating from 1909, and it's been looked after the right way. Not ripped apart and modernized into something soulless—kept. Original pine floors, vintage hand-printed wallpapers, a tiled kakelugn in the sitting room, and a wood-burning stove that makes winter evenings here genuinely cozy rather than performatively rustic. Five rooms across 65 square metres: tight, yes, but Swedes have been doing a lot with compact spaces for centuries, and this layout is thoughtful. What sets this property apart from every other Swedish cottage listing, though, is the barn. Fully renovated, insulated, with solid flooring and oil radiators that make it usable in October just as comfortably as in July. The interior has been fitted with a proper dance floor and guest sleeping quarters—finished to a real standard, not a rough-and-ready conversion. Swedes who grow up in the countryside understand what this space means: it's where the crayfish parties run late into the August night, where a cousin's wedding happens under paper lanterns, where the neighbours come on a Friday in December for glögg and pi ... click here to read more

Front view of the cottage and garden

Early morning in Yxtaholm, the air smells like pine resin and cold lake water. You pull on a sweater, step off the wooden porch, and walk three minutes through a birch-lined path to Mellösasjön. Nobody else is there. The water is dark and clear. This is what you came for. Set on Kvarnmovägen in the well-loved recreational enclave of Yxtaholm, this 1970s Swedish sommarstuga sits on a generous 1,698 square metre plot in the heart of Södermanland — a region of glittering lakes, quiet forests, and red-painted farmhouses that feels like it exists slightly outside of time. At 109,500 SEK, this is a genuinely accessible entry point into the classic Swedish summer cottage lifestyle, the kind that Swedes have guarded jealously for generations. The cottage itself was built in 1975 and spans 48 square metres. That's not a limitation — it's a design philosophy. Swedish summer homes are meant to push you outside, and this one does exactly that. Inside, the layout is efficient and warm: a combined living room and kitchen that catches morning light through large windows overlooking the garden, one quiet bedroom tucked away from the main space, and a bathroom with shower. The kitchen has what you need to cook a proper meal — a crayfish dinner in August, a pot of soup on a rainy September afternoon — without the excess of a city apartment. A small guest cottage sits alongside the main house. Solid enough for a friend to sleep in, or useful as a tool store and overflow space for the kayak paddles and fishing rods that will inevitably accumulate. Practical Swedish pragmatism in a small wooden structure. The garden is the real story here. Nearly 1,700 square metres of it, mature trees throwing long shadows across mown grass in the late ... click here to read more

Front view of the holiday home

Step outside on a Tuesday morning in early July, coffee in hand, and the Baltic is right there — glinting through the pine trunks, less than fifty meters from your front door. The air smells of salt and warm resin. A boat is heading out from the marina. Yours is tied up in your own private berth, waiting. This is what a morning at Havsvägen 32 looks like. Furuvik sits on a slender tongue of land along the Gävle coast, about 12 kilometers south of Gävle city center — far enough that the summer crowds haven't taken over, close enough that you're never truly cut off. It's the kind of spot that Swedes pass down through families rather than advertise. A quiet residential road, a handful of houses, and then the sea. Havsvägen is exactly what the name says: the sea road. The property itself occupies a remarkable 3,786 square meters of coastal land. That's not a typo. On this stretch of the Swedish coast, a plot this size with direct water proximity doesn't surface often. The main holiday house dates from 1950, built in the solid, unpretentious style of Swedish sommarstugor from that era — roughly 79 square meters across five rooms, sitting back from the lane with mature trees wrapping around it on three sides. It's in good condition, functional, and completely livable right now. But the real story here is what the land makes possible. Several smaller guest cottages dot the lot, handy for the extended family visits that inevitably happen the moment you own a place like this. Cousins from Gothenburg, friends from abroad — Swedish summer hospitality runs deep, and having a spare cabin means you never have to choose between hosting and having your own space. The whole compound has a slightly rambling, unhurried quality that feel ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the house and lot

Picture this: it's a Saturday morning in late June, and the smell of ripe cherries drifts in through the kitchen window at Tredje Gatan 5. The garden is already warm. You step outside in bare feet, pick a handful of fruit straight off the tree, and walk down toward Lake Båven with a thermos of coffee before most of the village has stirred. This is what owning a second home in Sparreholm actually feels like—unhurried, real, rooted in the Swedish countryside in a way that no city apartment can replicate. The house itself sits on Tredje Gatan, a quiet residential street in the heart of this small Södermanland community, about 100 kilometres southwest of Stockholm. It's a single-storey home with a basement, 71 square metres of living space, and a 760-square-metre plot that wraps around it with the kind of gentle, lived-in character that takes years to cultivate. Apple, cherry, plum, and pear trees dot the garden—not as ornamental decoration, but as working trees that produce real fruit through the summer and into autumn. Summer water supply runs from May through October for irrigation, so keeping the garden going doesn't demand heroic effort. Recent years have seen solid investment in the fabric of the building. A new air-to-water heat pump was installed, the electrical system was rewired, and interior surfaces were freshly painted and updated. These aren't cosmetic upgrades—they're the kind of infrastructure work that makes a home genuinely comfortable through a Swedish winter and energy-efficient year-round. The indoor climate is stable. You're not walking into a project; you're walking into somewhere that works. The layout is simple and honest. The main floor carries the living room, kitchen, dining area, two bedrooms, ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the house and garden

On a still July morning, you pull on your sandals and walk 250 meters down a quiet gravel path through the birch trees. The lake is glassy. You're the first one in. This is Yxtasjön, and it's essentially your front yard. That's the kind of daily rhythm Hägerbovägen 6 makes possible. A solid, well-kept 1965 house on a 3,680 square meter plot in Yxtaholm, one of the more quietly coveted pockets of Flen municipality in Södermanland — about 120 kilometers southwest of Stockholm along the E20. Three bedrooms, 104 square meters of living space, a wood-burning stove crackling in the corner come October, and more outdoor room than most people know what to do with. Swedes have been quietly holding onto places like this for generations. And they're not wrong to. The house itself is genuinely move-in ready. The interior has been freshly painted throughout — white walls that bounce light around the rooms rather than absorbing it. Large windows face the greenery, and on a summer afternoon the effect is something close to living inside a forest. The main living room is generous, anchored by a newer air-source heat pump that handles both heating and cooling efficiently across all four seasons, and the wood stove supplements it beautifully when January temperatures drop into the minus digits and you want actual warmth, not just circulated air. The kitchen has enough counter space to be functional, modern appliances, and real storage — not the kind of Swedish summer cottage kitchen where you're fighting over drawer space every morning. Three bedrooms sleep family and guests comfortably, and the bathroom covers everything you'd need for extended stays. Out back, the 3,680 square meter plot is the real conversation. Mature trees — mostl ... click here to read more

Front view of the house and garden

Step outside on a February morning and the cross-country ski trail is literally at the edge of the garden. No bus, no car park, no queue. Just fresh tracks across the marsh and the kind of cold air that makes your lungs feel alive. That's the daily reality at Kremlavägen 5 in Lindvallen — one of the most practical, genuinely versatile mountain properties to come onto the market in Sälen's prime ski zone in years. Sälen doesn't get the international attention it deserves. Swedes know it well — this is where the Vasaloppet ski race ends its 90-kilometer journey from Sälen to Mora every March, drawing 15,000 skiers and creating an atmosphere unlike anything else in Scandinavia. But beyond that iconic event, the wider Lindvallen area operates at full pace from November through April, with downhill slopes, lit cross-country tracks, and the ski-and-swim bus running circuits that connect the valley's resorts. In summer, the same roads and trails flip their purpose entirely: mountain bikers take over, hikers tackle the marked routes up towards Städjan and Nipfjället, and the long Nordic evenings stretch past 10pm. The property itself sits in the Gubbmyren part of Lindvallen, which matters because this pocket of the valley has managed to hold onto its natural character. The marsh that runs alongside the garden isn't just scenery — it's where the cross-country groomed track passes directly, making ski-out access a literal fact rather than a marketing stretch. On still mornings you hear reindeer moving through the birch trees on the far side. In peak autumn, the marsh turns rust and amber, and the smell of cold peat drifts in through the kitchen window. The house is split across two connected residential units totalling 111 squa ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the house in winter

The first thing you notice on a summer morning at Skyttsveden 39A is the light. It comes in low through the big windows, catches the surface of Lake Väsman about 150 meters down the slope, and turns the whole room the color of warm honey. By eight o'clock you're already pulling on your shoes for the walk to the water. That's just life here — quiet, unhurried, and genuinely good. Sunnansjö sits in Dalarna, the province that Swedes themselves treat as the country's emotional heartland. Midsommar is taken seriously here. Maypoles go up in the meadows, fiddle music drifts across the water, and the smell of wild strawberries and woodsmoke is so thick you could bottle it. This isn't a region performing its identity for tourists — it's just how things are. Owning a holiday home in this part of Sweden means buying into a way of life that most people only read about. The house itself was built in 1983, single-storey and solid, and it's been looked after with obvious care. Freshly renovated, it has solid wooden floors throughout, pale walls that stay cool even in July heat, and a layout that makes the most of every one of its 54 square metres. Two bedrooms sit on the entrance level — one easily doubles as a study or reading room — and above the main living space there's a sleeping loft that kids immediately claim as their own. The loft isn't counted in the official floor area, which means the actual usable space feels noticeably larger than the figures suggest. The living room is the heart of things. The windows face the lake and on grey November afternoons, when the birch trees have dropped their leaves and frost is forming on the grass, the approved fireplace in the corner earns its keep completely. There's a new air-to-air h ... click here to read more

Front view of the house with garden and lake in the background

Step out onto the south-facing terrace at seven in the morning, coffee in hand, and the entire Härjedalen mountain range spreads out in front of you — ridge after ridge catching the first light, valley floor still in shadow. That's the view from Högåsvägen 43, every single day. Built in 2021 on one of Kilberget's most elevated plots, this 145-square-metre country home sits high enough that direct sun tracks across the terrace from breakfast until dusk, winter or summer. Vemdalen doesn't get talked about as much as Åre or Sälen, which is precisely the point. It's a real village — with a Coop, a school, restaurants, and year-round residents — sitting in the gap between two ski resorts. Vemdalsskalet is 15 minutes by car. Björnrike is just as close in the other direction. Most owners here pick one or the other resort on a given day depending on snow conditions and mood. In between ski days, the lit cross-country tracks that run right through the village are the kind of low-key local perk that doesn't make it onto resort maps but gets used constantly. Winter here runs long and reliable. Snow typically settles by November and holds through April. On groomed morning runs at Vemdalsskalet, the first lift often has only a handful of people — a far cry from the queues at Sälen on a February Saturday. Come back to this house, hang your kit in the garage (which has ski boot warmers and an EV charger installed), light the stone-clad fireplace that anchors the living room, and the afternoon takes care of itself. That fireplace is worth dwelling on. It's floor-to-ceiling, clad in rough stone, and it pulls the whole open-plan ground floor into focus. The ceiling climbs to the roof ridge — the kind of volume that would feel extravaga ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the house and terrace

The first thing you notice on a Friday evening arrival is the silence. Not the uncomfortable kind—the kind that has depth to it, layered with the creak of pine, the distant pull of the Lagan river, and maybe a woodpecker going at a birch somewhere in the 5,000-square-meter plot that's entirely yours. You cut the engine, step onto the gravel, and already the week behind you starts to dissolve. Skogsstugan—"the forest cottage"—at Putsered 64 outside Knäred is the kind of second home that Swedes have quietly kept to themselves for generations. A proper year-round house, not a draughty summer shack. Built in 1974 and significantly extended in 1996, the 77-square-meter main home has been maintained with real care: quality Traryd insulated windows, a bathroom that was fully renovated in 2011, a heat pump installed for modern efficiency, and a Vissenbjerg wood-burning stove that makes winter weekends here genuinely cozy rather than just survivable. The wooden floors, paneled ceilings with wainscoting, and wallpapered walls give the interior a Scandinavian warmth that you don't get from places renovated to look like an IKEA showroom. This is a home with character that's earned rather than staged. The open-plan living room, dining area, and kitchen form the social heart of the house. Large panoramic windows and double patio doors—new ones, high quality—open directly onto a stone-paved terrace laid in Öland limestone. On summer mornings, that terrace catches the light early. The covered section, roughly 12 square meters, has an outdoor kitchen, which means you're frying fish straight from the Lagan regardless of what the weather's doing overhead. The Kvik kitchen inside, fitted during the 1996 extension, comes with wooden counte ... click here to read more

Front view of Skogsstugan Putsered 64

Stand at the kitchen window on a October morning and watch the mist lift off the birch trees at the edge of your nearly nine-thousand square metre lot. The wood stove in the corner is already ticking with warmth. The coffee is on. Beyond the treeline, Lake Summeln sits about a three-minute walk away, still and grey-green, waiting. This is the particular kind of quiet that people from Stockholm or Amsterdam or Hamburg spend years trying to find—and here it already comes with the house. Rud Byggningen is a 1909 farmstead-style home on the outskirts of Säffle in Värmland, Sweden's great inland lake county. The building has the solid, unhurried bones of Swedish rural construction from that era: thick walls, steep roof, a floor plan that was designed around actual living rather than architectural showmanship. Over the decades it's been updated carefully rather than gutted—the 2022 bathroom renovation brought in clean, contemporary fittings without turning the place into something soulless, and a newer air-source heat pump keeps running costs sensible year-round. The original wood-burning stove in the hallway, though? That stays. There's no good reason to remove the one thing that makes January feel like a pleasure rather than an endurance test. The house runs to 108 square metres of main living space across four rooms plus kitchen, with an additional 48 square metres of secondary space—utility rooms, storage, the kind of square footage that quietly absorbs the overflow of family life. Three bedrooms sit at the upper level, each genuinely private, each with the countryside view that you stopped noticing after a while when you first moved in but that visitors always comment on immediately. The attic is unfinished, which sound ... click here to read more

Exterior view of Rud Byggningen

Picture this: a midsummer Saturday, and you're sitting on a wide southwest-facing wooden deck with a cup of coffee that's gone slightly cold because you kept getting distracted by the light. It does something particular here in Strömstad — bounces off the open landscape behind the house, turns everything amber by late afternoon, and just refuses to let you go inside. That's the daily reality of owning this 1930s house at Stora Ytten Karlslund, and it's the kind of thing you can't fully appreciate until you've experienced it yourself. Built in the 1930s and kept in genuinely good condition, this is a two-bedroom wooden house with 90 square meters of living space sitting on a 975-square-meter plot. Not a renovation project. Not a compromise. A proper Swedish house with original wooden floors, period architectural details, and the kind of proportions that newer builds just don't replicate — rooms that feel considered rather than squeezed. The large windows weren't put there for the listing photos. They're there because someone who built this place understood that Scandinavian light is precious, and you catch every last beam of it when you can. The layout is practical without being rigid. Two bedrooms handle the sleeping comfortably, and the third room flexes well — home office one weekend, guest room the next, quiet reading corner the one after that. The kitchen opens directly onto the garden deck, which matters more than you'd think. Breakfast outside in August, herb pots on the railing, someone grilling something that smells good from next door — that's the rhythm of this place in summer. The bathroom has been updated with modern fixtures while the rest of the house keeps its older bones intact, which is exactly the bal ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the house and garden

Picture this: it's a Tuesday morning in July, and you're sitting on a sun-warmed deck with a cup of coffee, watching a cormorant dry its wings on a rock twenty metres offshore. No road noise. No neighbours cutting their grass. Just the faint slap of water against the jetty below and the smell of pine warming up in the morning sun. That's what owning Risö 58 actually feels like. Getting here is part of the ritual. You drive down to Maltbacken — about fifteen minutes from Nyköping's centre — pull into your own reserved parking spot, hook up the car to the electric charger, and then step into the boat. A short crossing through the inner archipelago and you're tying up at your own dock. Every time. It never gets old. The property is made up of three separate structures arranged around a large south-facing deck that acts as the social hub of the whole place. The main cottage anchors everything — compact, efficient, with big windows on nearly every wall that track the light from morning to evening. A wood-burning stove sits in the living room and earns its keep from late August onwards, when the evenings start to cool and the archipelago takes on that particular golden-hour quality that photographers chase. The kitchen opens directly onto the deck, so whoever's cooking doesn't miss a thing — the conversation, the sunset, the kids jumping off the rocks below. Sleep eight to twelve people comfortably across the main cottage (which has a sleeping loft) and the two standalone guest cabins. The cabins are positioned with real thought — enough distance from the main building that guests get genuine privacy, and both are fitted with air-source heat pumps for heating and cooling. Light colours, simple finishes, and waking up to wat ... click here to read more

Main house and deck with sea view

Six o'clock on a July morning. You slide open the terrace door and the air hits you—cool, pine-scented, with that particular stillness that only comes from being a few steps from open water. Lake Mälaren stretches out in front of you, flat and silver, and somewhere down the path you can already hear the first swimmers of the day. That is the daily reality of waking up at Braxvägen 28 on Märsön island. This is a 55-square-metre holiday home on a 1,489-square-metre plot that punches well above its size. Built in 1972 and kept in genuinely good condition across the decades, it sits at an elevated position on the island's southern face—which means both the sun and the lake are almost always in your line of sight. The orientation is not an accident. Whoever chose this spot knew what they were doing. Inside, the living room is the centre of gravity. It's a proper gathering space, not a cramped afterthought, and it flows directly into a conservatory that acts as a kind of weather-proof buffer between indoors and the lake terrace beyond. On cooler evenings—and Swedish September evenings can be genuinely chilly—the wood-burning stove earns its place fast. The crackle of birch logs, a glass of something warm, the last of the light on the water. You'll understand quickly why Swedes take their fritidshus so seriously. The kitchen is compact but fully equipped: stove, fridge-freezer, and just enough room for a small table by the window where breakfast becomes a slow, deliberate event rather than a rushed ritual. Light walls and considered wallpaper keep the interiors feeling open despite the modest footprint. One bedroom, one bathroom with a shower and composting toilet—simple, functional, and exactly right for two people who came ... click here to read more

Main house and terrace with lake view

Picture this: it's seven in the morning, the air smells of pine resin and salt, and you're walking barefoot across sun-warmed granite toward the water with a coffee in hand. That's not a fantasy — that's a Tuesday in July at Bastuvägen 20. Resö is one of those places that Swedes quietly keep to themselves. A small island off the Bohuslän coast in Tanum municipality, connected to the mainland by a bridge, it sits right alongside Kosterhavet — Sweden's first and only marine national park. The water here is some of the clearest on the entire west coast. Local fishermen still pull langoustines and prawns from the Skagerrak, and you can buy them straight off the boat at the harbor before lunch. That kind of detail tells you everything about what life on this island actually feels like. The cottage at Bastuvägen 20 was built in 1970 and covers 64 square meters across a layout that makes sensible use of every room. Three bedrooms, a living room, a proper kitchen, and one bathroom — nothing wasted, nothing missing. Large windows and glass doors pull the outside in. On a clear summer morning, light floods through the glass and hits the timber walls in a way that makes the place feel twice as big as it is. The traditional Swedish timber construction keeps things cool in summer and surprisingly snug when autumn rolls in off the water. The plot itself is 1,114 square meters — generous by any measure, and particularly so for an island property of this caliber. There are multiple seating areas scattered around the garden, each catching the sun at a different hour of the day. It's the sort of layout you discover slowly: one corner for morning coffee, another for evening wine when the light goes golden over the treetops. Children hav ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the house and garden

On a still July morning, you step out onto the west-facing terrace with a mug of coffee and hear almost nothing. A wood pigeon somewhere in the birches. The faint lap of water from Hällebosjön, ten minutes down the track. That's it. This is what brought you here, and it's exactly what you'll find every single time you return. Hällebo 907 sits in a quietly coveted pocket of Örebro County, outside the village of Pålsboda in Hallsbergs kommun. It's a genuine Swedish countryside retreat — 49 square metres of well-kept living space on a 1,100 square metre plot, updated steadily over recent years without losing any of its honest, unpretentious character. This is not a property tarted up for a quick sale. The roof was replaced in 2020. The facade and windows were repainted in 2024. The bathroom was fully renovated in 2024. The kitchen got quality IKEA fittings in 2022. Whoever owned this looked after it, and it shows. Walk inside and the layout makes immediate sense. The living room anchors itself around an open fireplace — not a decorative one, but the kind that genuinely heats the room on a grey October afternoon when the leaves outside have gone amber and the temperature drops before you expect it. The kitchen has enough workspace to properly cook, not just reheat things, and looks out toward the garden where, come August, the raspberry canes will be heavy enough to slow you down on the way to the woodpile. Two bedrooms handle family visits or a spare room for the one friend who always stays longer than planned. One bedroom was freshly painted in early 2025 and feels clean and light. The bathroom renovation in 2024 is worth mentioning twice. It's properly done — shower cabin, modern composting toilet (a Separett unit, com ... click here to read more

Front view of Hällebo 907 country home

The alarm doesn't go off here. You wake up because the light does — that pale, golden Swedish summer light that slips through the curtains sometime around five in the morning and makes it impossible to stay in bed. So you pull on a sweater, step outside into the dewy garden, and walk the two-minute path down to Lake Toften before anyone else is up. The water is still. The pines are reflected perfectly on the surface. You dive in anyway. That's the daily reality of owning Östra Toften 216, a classic red-painted cottage sitting on a 1,000 square meter leased plot in a close-knit community of about forty similar summer homes just outside Östervåla in Uppsala County. It's compact — 34 square meters of living space — but Swedish summer cottage culture has never been about square footage. It's about being outside. The cottage is where you sleep, eat breakfast, and come in from the rain. The rest of your life here unfolds on the lake, in the forest, and around a fire in the garden. Built in 1968, the cottage has that honest simplicity that makes older Scandinavian summer homes so appealing. The living room is bright, with windows that pull in the tree light and make the small space feel larger than it is. It connects directly to the bedroom — a straightforward layout that works exactly as it should for a one or two-person getaway. The kitchen is practical and compact, built for the kind of cooking that actually happens at a summer cottage: coffee before the swim, pasta after the hike, maybe a proper crayfish spread in August with candles on the garden table. There's a storage shed on the plot for bikes, fishing gear, kayak paddles, and all the other paraphernalia that accumulates when you spend your summers outdoors properly. ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the red summer cottage

Early on a Saturday morning in late June, the light here does something unusual. It arrives soft and low through the birch trees, lands on the kitchen table, and just stays there. The canal is maybe six hundred meters down the road. You can hear it if the wind is right — not the sea itself, but the particular quiet that water brings to a place. That's what Måsvägen 16 feels like from the moment you walk onto the plot. Not a resort. Not a staged showroom. Just a genuinely good piece of Swedish archipelago land, with a solid little house on it, waiting for someone to decide what comes next. Strömma sits in the middle of Värmdö municipality, which stretches east from Stockholm into the Baltic archipelago along the E18 corridor. This is one of the most sought-after second-home areas in Sweden for a reason that locals rarely need to explain — you're thirty-odd kilometers from Sergels Torg, yet you're watching ospreys circle above the treeline. That contrast never gets old. The commuter boat from nearby Stavsnäs or the direct bus connections via Gustavsberg mean Stockholm isn't a schlep, it's just a decision. Most weekends, that decision gets delayed until Sunday evening. The property itself sits on 2,611 square meters of mostly natural plot — mature spruce, birch, and low-growing juniper framing a grassy open center that catches afternoon sun until well past eight in summer. The main house, built in 1959 and winterized for year-round use, covers around 50 square meters across four rooms. It's functional and honest. No grand renovation has been forced upon it, which means the bones are intact and the choices about what comes next are entirely yours. The guest house tucked on the plot adds flexibility immediately — use it for ... click here to read more

Front view of the house and garden

Step outside on a Saturday morning in October, the air sharp with the smell of pine resin and leaf smoke drifting from a neighbor's garden two fields over. The Lagan River catches the low autumn light about a ten-minute walk from your front door. You're at the end of a road — there is literally no through traffic — and the only sound is the occasional creak of the old apple trees along the garden edge. This is what 200 square meters of well-kept Swedish countryside living actually feels like at Grönö 3551. Built in the 1930s when Swedish rural construction was about permanence rather than speed, the house has the kind of bones that later decades couldn't replicate — solid framing, generous room proportions, and a relationship with natural light that feels genuinely considered. The large windows don't just let daylight in; they frame views of open countryside that change week by week through the seasons. Snowfall turns the 2,401-square-meter plot into something from a Carl Larsson painting in January. By June it's all long grass, wild strawberries along the fence line, and evenings that don't get properly dark until almost midnight. The owners have made the practical investments that really count. A modern air-to-water heat pump handles the heavy lifting on heating, backed by solar panels with battery storage that meaningfully cut running costs year-round. Two fireplaces — one in the main living area, one elsewhere in the house — mean you're never dependent on a single heat source, and they bring a particular kind of warmth that thermostats simply can't replicate on a February evening when the temperature outside drops to minus ten. The roof is recently replaced, which matters enormously in a Swedish climate where freez ... click here to read more

Exterior view of Grönö 3551

Early July mornings at this place have a particular quality. The mist sits low over Lake Nömmen, the water is glassy and completely still, and the only sound from inside the glazed conservatory is the occasional knock of a woodpecker somewhere deep in the birch trees behind the garden. You pour your coffee. You're not going anywhere in a hurry. That feeling — that specific, unhurried Swedish summer morning feeling — is what this cottage in Kristinelunds stugområde has been quietly delivering to its owners for decades. Sitting on a generous 770-square-meter plot in one of Vetlanda municipality's most established holiday home communities, this 60-square-meter house was built in 1960 and has been kept in genuinely good condition. It's not a project. You won't be calling contractors the week you arrive. Move in, open the windows, and start living the life you bought it for. The lake is 100 meters from the front door. Lake Nömmen is one of Småland's cleaner freshwater lakes — the kind where you can actually see the sandy bottom at the swimming spot, and where perch and pike fishing is taken seriously by the locals who've been doing it for generations. The private boat dock that comes with this property is the detail that changes everything. You don't have to share a communal slip, queue for access, or drag a kayak down a muddy bank. Your boat is there when you want it, full stop. Inside, the layout is honest and practical. The kitchen is well-equipped with real storage — enough bench space to actually cook a proper meal, not just heat something up. It opens into a living room where large windows frame the lake view and drag light deep into the room even on grey autumn afternoons. Two bedrooms handle a small family or a cou ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the holiday home

The first thing you notice on a still morning at Paradistorg 23 is the silence. Not the absence-of-something silence of a city apartment at 3am, but a full, living quiet — birdsong threading through birch trees, the distant creak of a wooden gate, the smell of damp grass after a night of Swedish rain. This is what people mean when they talk about getting away from it all, except here, you actually mean it. Built in 1909 and standing on a generous 4,480 square metres of garden in the small village of Finnerödja, this two-bedroom house has the kind of unhurried solidity that only comes with age. The walls have held warmth through more than a century of Värmland winters. The kitchen's wood-burning stove — still in daily use — has fed generations. You get the sense that the house has already been through everything and come out just fine. Inside, 100 square metres of living space is thoughtfully arranged across four rooms. The bedrooms are proper-sized, not architectural afterthoughts. The recently renovated bathroom brings in clean, modern fittings without erasing the house's original personality. And the living room, anchored by a pellet stove that clicks on with a low hum and fills the room with radiant heat within minutes, is exactly the kind of place where you abandon plans to go out and end up reading until midnight instead. Large windows face the garden on multiple sides, and in the long golden stretch of a Swedish summer evening, the light through those windows does something extraordinary — the whole interior turns amber, and time slows down noticeably. The garden is the real story here. Nearly half a hectare of lawn, mature trees, and open sky. Space enough for a kitchen garden, a fire pit, a trampoline, a green ... click here to read more

Front view of the house and garden

Picture this: it's a Saturday morning in late June, and the Baltic light is already streaming through the west-facing windows by seven. You pull open the terrace door, coffee in hand, and the smell of pine and cut grass drifts in from a garden that stretches out across 1,462 square meters of your own land. The neighbor's kids are already on their bikes. Somewhere down the road, toward the water, a motorboat engine turns over. This is Enviken life — and once you've tasted it, it's hard to let go. Himlajordsbacken 14 sits on an elevated plot in the Enviken area of Norrtälje municipality, about 550 meters from the shoreline of the Stockholm Archipelago's southern reaches. Norrtälje itself is one of the most sought-after second-home corridors in Sweden — a fact that has kept property values here consistently strong while the area has held onto its genuine, unpolished character. This isn't a resort development. It's a real community with working families, local traditions, and a landscape that changes dramatically with the seasons. The house was built in 1975 and covers 56 square meters of interior space — a compact but intelligently laid out footprint that doesn't waste a centimeter. Living room, open kitchen, two bedrooms, one bathroom. The layout is honest and functional. Large windows pull in light from morning to dusk, and the open connection between the kitchen and living area means the space lives larger than the numbers suggest. The west-facing terrace off the main room is the kind of outdoor space that justifies everything: dinner outside on long summer evenings, a glass of wine as the light softens over the garden, a spot for the kids to leave their boots after a muddy afternoon in the woods. Critically, this is ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the house and garden

Picture this: you cut the engine, the boat drifts the last few meters to the jetty, and the only sound left is water slapping softly against the granite. No neighbors. No traffic. Just the smell of sun-warmed pine resin and the faint call of a common tern somewhere out over Skrävlafjärden. The entire island is yours. Every rock, every handful of sand, every inch of shoreline — yours. This is what owning a private island in the Stockholm archipelago actually feels like. Not a fantasy. A real, registered, freehold property sitting on 1,825 square meters of your own land surrounded by the water of Värmdö's inner archipelago, roughly 35 kilometers east of Stockholm's city center. The island itself does a lot of the heavy lifting. Sandy beaches to the north and south — proper sand, not the pebbly disappointment you get elsewhere — give way to wide slabs of smooth granite that hold the afternoon sun long after five o'clock. Swedish summers are short and fiercely lived, and this island is set up for exactly that: the west-facing jetty deck is big enough for a proper outdoor dining table, a couple of sun loungers, and still leaves room to move. Sunsets here hit the water directly. Every evening in June and July, when the sky goes amber and the reflections stretch across the fjord, you'll understand why people pay any price for this view. Getting here is easier than it sounds. Evlinge on the mainland is the departure point — a short, uncomplicated boat trip even if you're new to navigating these waters. Multiple jetties wrap around the island, so docking is never a scramble regardless of wind direction. Day trippers and experienced sailors have both managed it first try. Stockholm's Slussen takes around 40 minutes by car to re ... click here to read more

Main cottage and jetty deck

Step outside on a February morning in Björnrike and the silence hits you first. Not the absence of sound, but a full, weighted quiet that only comes when a meter of fresh snow has settled overnight over spruce forest and open fell. The ski slopes of Vemdalen are warming up three kilometers away. You can smell the cold. This is what you came for. Sitting on Duvstigen 6, this 112-square-meter country home has been a proper Swedish mountain retreat since it went up in 1977. It's solid, well-kept, and honest about what it is — a place built for people who actually use mountains rather than just look at them. The 2,133-square-meter plot gives you room to breathe in every season, surrounded by birch and pine that turn the light gold in late summer and hold a blue shadow through the short winter afternoons. Come in from a morning on the slopes and the wood-burning stove in the living area will be the first thing on your mind. This house has both — a wood burner and an open fireplace — and if you've ever spent a Swedish January properly, you'll understand why that matters. The open-plan kitchen and living room keep everyone together without crowding anyone, the large windows pulling the mountain view right into the room. Afternoon light in early March, when the sun finally climbs high enough to pour through those windows and hit the timber floors, is something you will not forget quickly. Then there's the sauna. In Sweden this isn't a luxury add-on; it's infrastructure. After a long day on the cross-country trails through Härjedalen's Sonfjället National Park or a full afternoon of downhill at the Vemdalen ski system — which links Björnrike, Klövsjö, and Storhogna into one of the largest ski areas in Sweden — the private saun ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the holiday home

Step outside on a September morning, coffee in hand, and the air carries the faint sweetness of fallen plums from the old orchard. Nothing moves except a pair of cranes crossing low over the meadow. No traffic. No sirens. Just the slow exhale of the Swedish countryside doing its thing. That's what you get at the end of Nordankil Annelund — a gravel track that the rest of the world simply forgot to follow. This three-bedroom house in Möklinta, Sala kommun, sits on a full 5,000 square meters of mixed garden, paddock, and open lawn, with forest pressing quietly at the edges. Built in 1909 and in good condition throughout, it carries that particular solidity you find in old Swedish rural homes — thick walls, purposeful rooms, windows sized to frame the landscape rather than just admit light. At 80 square meters, the interior is compact but not cramped. Everything is where it needs to be. Heating here is a combination that makes sense for this latitude: a modern air-source heat pump takes the heavy lifting, a wood-burning stove in the living room handles the mood-setting, and direct electric heating fills in wherever needed. Sit by that stove on a January evening when the thermometer dips to minus fifteen and the birches outside are glazed with frost, and you'll understand why Swedes have perfected the art of being indoors. The kitchen is functional and generous — proper counter space, room to move — and it faces out toward the garden where those apple and plum trees have been producing for longer than anyone can remember. High-speed fiber internet is already installed, which matters if you plan to work remotely or split your time between here and an urban base. The three bedrooms are quiet in the way that only genuinely r ... click here to read more

Front view of the house and garden

Step outside on a July morning and the air smells of pine resin warming in the sun. Värmdö's bedrock — smooth, grey, and ancient — catches the light just beyond the kitchen window. The archipelago is literally down the road, 350 metres away across the grass, and Torsbyfjärden glitters through the treeline like something you'd only expect to find in a travel magazine. This is Södernäsvägen 22. And it's as real as it gets. The plot alone stops people in their tracks. Three thousand, one hundred and thirteen square metres of natural Swedish landscape — exposed rock shelves, flat grassy clearings, birch and pine threading the edges. It shares a boundary with a public green area, which means the land to one side can never be built on. Rare. The elevated ground catches sun from morning through late afternoon, and in Swedish summer, that matters enormously — you're talking about evenings that stretch past 10pm with enough warmth to sit outside with a glass of something cold and still feel the day on your skin. The timber house itself was built in 1972 and has been kept in good condition over the decades. There's a warmth to these older Swedish summer houses that newer builds rarely replicate — the wood has settled, the proportions feel human-scale, and the open fireplace in the living room is the kind of feature you don't realise you need until you're sitting in front of it on a grey October weekend with rain tapping on the roof. The living room flows into the kitchen-dining area, practical and unpretentious, and the bedroom is generously sized for a house of 55 square metres. One bathroom. Everything you actually need, nothing you don't. What makes this property genuinely versatile is the outbuilding. Currently split betwee ... click here to read more

Front view of the timber house and natural plot

Early July in Kvarnfors and the sun barely dips below the horizon. By ten in the evening, the light outside is still this warm amber gold, and you're sitting on the grass with a coffee, listening to absolutely nothing except a woodpecker somewhere in the birch trees behind the shed. That's the kind of quiet that takes a few days to get used to — the kind you start craving the moment you leave. Kvarnfors 117 sits along the quiet rural road of Kvarnfors-Gravmark, about 30 kilometres southwest of Umeå in Västerbotten county. The address means very little to most people outside northern Sweden, and honestly, that's part of the appeal. This isn't a property on a tourist circuit. It's a proper Swedish countryside retreat — the kind of place Swedish families have been returning to summer after summer for generations — and it's now available to international buyers looking for something real. The house itself was built in 1975 and covers 59 square metres across a sensible, uncluttered layout: a living room, a functional kitchen, two bedrooms, and a bathroom. Nothing excessive. That's deliberate. Swedish summer houses at this price point aren't about square footage — they're about the 1,996 square metres of land around them, the trees at the border of the plot, the water 550 metres down the track. The house is the base camp. Life happens outside. Inside, large windows pull the greenery in. The living room catches afternoon light well, and in midsummer, the brightness lasts so long you keep forgetting what time it is. The kitchen is practical — set up for real cooking, not just reheating — and after a day picking wild blueberries or paddling on Kvarnforssjön, the ability to cook a proper meal matters. Both bedrooms sleep adults ... click here to read more

Front view of the house and garden

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

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 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

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 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 stepping out of a steaming hot tub, wrapped in the crisp Swedish mountain air as snowflakes drift down around you, the pine-forested slopes of Hundfjället glowing under winter moonlight. This is the vacation home experience waiting at Salbäcksvägen 18 in Sälen, where Scandinavia's premier ski destination meets year-round alpine adventure. Here, your Swedish mountain retreat combines 130 square meters of thoughtfully designed living space with immediate access to world-class skiing, Nordic trails, and the pristine wilderness of Dalarna County. Sälen stands as Sweden's most celebrated mountain resort village, attracting families and outdoor enthusiasts from across Europe seeking authentic Scandinavian alpine experiences. Located in Malung-Sälen municipality, this area transforms dramatically with the seasons: from December through April, it becomes a winter sports paradise with over 100 ski runs across multiple resort areas, while summer unveils endless hiking trails, mountain biking routes, and crystal-clear fishing lakes. The Hundfjället area specifically offers a peaceful mountain setting slightly removed from the main village buzz, providing that coveted balance between tranquil retreat and convenient access to all amenities. This single-story country home with loft was built in 2008, embodying that perfect Swedish approach to mountain architecture where modern comfort meets natural surroundings. Large windows throughout capture the changing mountain light, creating bright interiors even during shorter winter days. The open-plan kitchen and living area forms the social heart of the home, where families naturally gather after days spent on the slopes or exploring forest trails. The kitchen features wh ... click here to read more

Exterior view of Salbäcksvägen 18, Share I

Picture yourself stepping onto your wooden terrace at dawn, steam rising from your coffee mug as the first golden rays illuminate the mountain peaks framing your private forest plot. The crisp Swedish mountain air fills your lungs, pine-scented and impossibly pure, while the distant sound of a stream reminds you that this 3-bedroom log cabin in Vemdalsskalet is now your gateway to authentic Scandinavian alpine living. Just 650 meters from ski slopes yet cocooned by mature trees, this 84-square-meter retreat offers something increasingly rare: immediate access to world-class mountain recreation without sacrificing the peaceful seclusion that defines the Nordic vacation home experience. This is where your Swedish adventure begins, whether you're seeking a family holiday home, a rental investment property, or a year-round escape from urban life. The cabin's 865-square-meter plot creates a natural sanctuary where children can explore safely, summer barbecues extend into long Nordic twilight evenings, and winter mornings begin with views of snow-laden branches against impossibly blue skies. This isn't just property ownership; it's securing your place in one of Scandinavia's most celebrated mountain communities, where generations of families return season after season to reconnect with nature and each other. The thoughtful four-room layout accommodates diverse needs: one ground-floor bedroom ideal for guests or reduced mobility, two upstairs bedrooms providing family privacy, and a spacious entrance hall that functions as mudroom, gear storage, and transition space between mountain adventures and cabin comfort. The open-plan kitchen and living area forms the heart of this vacation home, where wooden paneling wraps walls and ce ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the log cabin