3-Bed Seaside Chalet in Farsund, 100m from the Water | Holiday Home Norway



Bjørnevågsveien 268, 4550 Farsund, Farsund (Norway)
3 Bedrooms · 1 Bathrooms · 69m² Floor area
€208,000
Chalet
No parking
3 Bedrooms
1 Bathrooms
69m²
Garden
No pool
Not furnished
Description
Step out onto the south-facing terrace at seven in the morning, coffee in hand, and the Spind peninsula spreads out in front of you — still water, pine-covered islands, and a sky that turns pink and gold over the Lista flatlands before the rest of Norway wakes up. This is what 100 meters from the sea actually feels like. Not a marketing line. A daily reality.
Bjørnevågsveien 268 sits in Spind, one of the quieter corners of Farsund municipality on Norway's southwest coast — an area locals call Sørlandet, the sun coast. And the name earns it. This stretch of coastline logs more sunshine hours than almost anywhere else in the country, and the chalet's orientation captures nearly all of them. The 115 square meters of wraparound terrace isn't a design afterthought; it's the main event from May through September, when you're eating grilled mackerel outside at nine in the evening under a sky that refuses to go dark.
Built in 1986 and kept in genuinely good condition, the chalet covers 69 square meters across a smart, practical layout. Three bedrooms sleep the family or a group of friends without anyone feeling like they drew the short straw. The living room is anchored by a wood-burning stove that earns its keep the moment October arrives — there's something about the smell of birch smoke drifting through an open window on a grey autumn afternoon that makes you understand why Norwegians refuse to give up their hytter even as the temperature drops. Large windows pull the landscape inside, framing the water and the green hills beyond. Electric heating backs up the stove through the shoulder months, so this isn't a place you abandon after the summer crowds thin out.
The kitchen is open to the living and dining area, which matters more than it sounds. Cooking here doesn't separate you from the people you came to spend time with. There's room to work, decent storage, and the kind of layout that makes feeding six people feel manageable rather than chaotic. The bathroom is clean and contemporary, fitted with a Jets vacuum toilet system, shower, and easy-maintenance panel walls — practical choices that hold up well against coastal humidity and heavy use.
Then there's the 1,566 square meter plot. In a country where good waterside land is genuinely finite, that's significant. The garden is flat enough for kids to run around in, the ground is kept, and the storage room handles all the kayaks, fishing rods, crab pots, and wet wetsuits that accumulate when you actually use a place like this. The hot tub on the terrace rounds out the outdoor setup — not a luxury flourish so much as a logical addition when you're pulling yourself out of 18-degree fjord water in late August and want to warm back up without going inside.
Farsund itself is a small coastal town with an outsized sense of place. The main street runs along the waterfront, and Thursday evening markets in summer draw the whole community out for local produce, fresh catch, and the particular Norwegian ease that comes with long daylight hours. The Lista lighthouse — one of the most photographed landmarks on the southwest coast — is a straightforward 20-minute drive. Hikers have access to the coastal path network that threads through Lista Nature Reserve, where migratory birds stop over in staggering numbers every spring and autumn. The beaches at Sjøsanden and Borhaug are broad, sandy, and genuinely swimmable from June through August — rare for Norway, and one of the reasons this coastline draws visitors from across Scandinavia.
Farsund is connected to Kristiansand — the regional capital — by about an hour on the E39. Kristiansand Airport handles domestic connections and some international routes, and the ferry from Hirtshals in Denmark docks at Kristiansand regularly, making this accessible from continental Europe without a single flight. For international buyers, Norway's property ownership rules are straightforward: foreigners can purchase freely, and the transaction process is transparent and well-regulated through the Norwegian land registry system.
The borehole water supply and independent septic system mean this property functions entirely off the municipal grid — genuinely useful for a second home where you want low ongoing running costs and no dependency on infrastructure that varies by season. It also means the running costs stay predictable year after year.
As a vacation home investment, properties along the Farsund and Lista coastline have held value steadily, supported by limited supply of waterside plots and consistent domestic and Scandinavian demand. Short-term rental through Norwegian platforms performs well in summer, with the area's sunshine reputation and proximity to the water driving bookings — something worth factoring in if the chalet sits empty for stretches of the year.
Key features at a glance:
- 3 bedrooms, 1 bathroom across 69 sqm of well-maintained living space
- 1,566 sqm plot, 100 meters from the water's edge
- 115 sqm of south-facing terrace space
- Hot tub included
- Wood-burning stove plus electric heating for year-round use
- Open-plan kitchen and living area with large landscape-facing windows
- Jets vacuum toilet system, panel bathroom with shower
- Borehole water supply and independent septic system
- 4 sqm storage room for outdoor equipment
- Direct road access with ample parking
- 3-minute walk to public transport
- 10-minute drive to grocery stores and shopping in Farsund town
- Listed at €208,000 — strong entry point for the Norwegian coastal market
- Accessible from Kristiansand Airport and Hirtshals ferry terminal
- Located in Spind, Farsund — one of Norway's sunniest coastal areas
If you've been thinking about a holiday home in Norway — somewhere that works for a full family summer, handles a long autumn weekend, and holds its value in a market with real scarcity — this is the kind of property worth moving quickly on. Reach out through Homestra to arrange a viewing, and see what 100 meters from the Norwegian coast actually looks like on a clear summer morning.
Details
- Amount of bedrooms
- 3
- Size
- 69m²
- Price per m²
- €3,014
- Garden size
- 1566m²
- 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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