3-Bed Coastal Chalet in Lindesnes with Boat Slip, Boathouse & Sea Views – Holiday Home Norway



Oddeheia 18, 4520 Lindesnes, Norway, Lindesnes (Norway)
3 Bedrooms · 1 Bathrooms · 103m² Floor area
€425,000
Chalet
No parking
3 Bedrooms
1 Bathrooms
103m²
Garden
No pool
Not furnished
Description
Picture this: it's seven in the morning, the light over Kåfjord is doing something extraordinary, that low Nordic gold that bounces off the water and fills the whole cabin before you've even made coffee. You open the terrace door from the main bedroom, and the sound that greets you is mostly silence — a gull somewhere, the soft knock of a hull against a dock below, the faint exhale of the sea. This is what mornings look like at Oddeheia 18.
Sitting on a private 1,124-square-meter plot on the coast of Lindesnes, southern Norway's southernmost municipality, this three-bedroom chalet is the kind of property that makes you recalibrate what a holiday home should feel like. Built in 2006 and kept in genuinely good condition — not "estate agent good condition," but the kind where things actually work and nothing needs immediate attention — it sits above the water with unobstructed views across the archipelago toward the island of Hille. The orientation is southwest-facing, which in Norway is not a small thing. It means the terraces catch sun from mid-morning until the long summer evenings stretch past ten o'clock, and the surrounding topography buffers the coastal winds that would otherwise chase you indoors.
The cabin measures 103 square metres of indoor living space, and it's used well. The open-plan kitchen and living area sits at the heart of the home, with windows framing the sea on multiple sides. Natural light moves through the space differently throughout the day — sharp and bright in the mornings, warm and horizontal by early evening. From the kitchen there's a direct step out to one of several terraces, which matters more than it sounds when you're carrying a plate of grilled fish and someone's already poured the wine. The main bedroom has its own terrace access too, which, once you've woken up to that view a couple of times, becomes genuinely hard to give up.
Three bedrooms handle the sleeping arrangements for most families comfortably, and then there's the loft — a proper hems with enough headroom and floor space to add meaningful extra capacity for guests. Summer gatherings at Norwegian cabins rarely involve fewer people than expected, and this layout understands that. The bathroom is tiled and modern, with underfloor heating that earns its keep well into autumn when the evenings get sharp. A separate technical room and laundry space keep the practical realities of extended stays out of sight.
The maritime infrastructure here is the detail that sets this property apart from most coastal cabins at this price point. There's a dedicated boat slip in the shared marina below the property — equipped with communal water and electricity — plus a boathouse and separate boat storage area. If you already own a vessel, this is a ready setup. If you don't, you'll want one within a season. The coastline around Lindesnes is remarkable for small-boat exploration: sheltered inlets, uninhabited skerries, and summer fishing grounds for mackerel, coalfish, and sea trout. Direct access to both seawater and a freshwater source on the property rounds out the picture for anyone who takes their swimming or fishing seriously.
Lindesnes itself is worth understanding properly before writing it off as "remote." Norway's southernmost point, marked by the iconic Lindesnes Fyr lighthouse built originally in 1655, is less than 20 kilometres away — a windswept, dramatic headland that draws visitors year-round and gives the whole region a geographic significance that locals are quietly proud of. The nearby town of Mandal, roughly 30 kilometres northeast, is one of the most attractive small towns on the Norwegian coast: white wooden houses lining the Mandalselva river, a long sandy beach at Sjøsanden that genuinely surprises first-time visitors, and a handful of good restaurants serving the kind of seafood that doesn't need much done to it. The drive takes about 35 minutes on a relaxed day.
Seasonally, this part of Norway earns its reputation. Summer here — June through August — delivers long warm days, rarely the brutal heat of continental Europe, but consistently pleasant enough to live outside. The sea temperature in the Kåfjord area regularly reaches swimming comfort by July. Autumn brings a different kind of beauty: fewer people, extraordinary light, and the hunting and fishing seasons in full swing. Winter use is absolutely viable — the cabin's infrastructure supports it, and the Lindesnes coast in January, stripped of its summer visitors, has a spare, cinematic quality that certain people find more compelling than the busy months. Broadband internet is connected, which makes the property workable as a remote-work base for the kind of extended stays that have become increasingly common for second-home owners.
Parking is plentiful across the plot — room for several cars without any awkwardness, useful when family visits coincide. The grounds are well-maintained and genuinely child-friendly, with open grassed areas and multiple zones for sitting, playing, and doing very little at all. Traffic in the area is minimal, which parents with young children will register immediately.
For international buyers considering this as a second home in Norway, the practicalities are straightforward by Scandinavian standards. EU and EEA citizens face no restrictions on property ownership. Non-EEA buyers should take local legal advice on concession requirements, though leisure properties in this category are generally accessible. Norway's property market in coastal leisure segments has shown consistent resilience, and properties with private marina access at this price — €425,000 — represent solid value relative to comparable coastal leisure properties in Denmark or Sweden. Rental income potential exists through the established Norwegian cabin holiday market, particularly June through August, though many owners in this category prefer the flexibility of personal use with selective short-term letting.
Key features at a glance:
- 3 bedrooms plus large sleeping loft, sleeping 6-8 comfortably
- 103 sq m interior on a private 1,124 sq m coastal plot
- Southwest-facing with all-day sun and natural wind protection
- Multiple terraces and outdoor seating areas wrapping the cabin
- Private boat slip in shared marina with water and electricity
- Dedicated boathouse and separate boat storage
- Direct sea access for swimming, fishing, and boating
- Open-plan kitchen and living area with panoramic sea views
- Modern tiled bathroom with underfloor heating
- Separate technical room and laundry area
- Broadband internet and all mains utilities connected
- Ample parking for multiple vehicles
- Child-friendly landscaped grounds
- Built 2006, well-maintained and move-in ready
- 30 minutes from Mandal town, close to Lindesnes Fyr lighthouse
This is a property that rewards the buyer who wants to actually use it — weekends in May before the crowds arrive, long July weeks with the boat out every other day, a quiet October trip when the light on the water is something you'd struggle to describe to someone who hasn't seen it. Reach out through Homestra to arrange a viewing and see the Kåfjord from those terraces yourself. Some things are easier to understand in person.
Details
- Amount of bedrooms
- 3
- Size
- 103m²
- Price per m²
- €4,126
- Garden size
- 1124m²
- Has Garden
- Yes
- Has Parking
- No
- Has Basement
- No
- Condition
- good
- Amount of Bathrooms
- 1
- Has swimming pool
- No
- Property type
- Chalet
- Energy label
Unknown
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