4-Bed Dordogne Valley House with Pool & Panoramic Views — Holiday Home in Mouleydier



Aquitaine, Dordogne, Mouleydier, France, Mouleydier (France)
4 Bedrooms · 2 Bathrooms · 210m² Floor area
€377,000
House
Parking
4 Bedrooms
2 Bathrooms
210m²
No garden
Pool
Not furnished
Description
Stand at the back of this house on any given morning and the entire Dordogne Valley opens up below you — river mist dissolving slowly in the early light, walnut trees on the hillside catching the first warmth of the sun, and the kind of silence that reminds you what silence actually is. This is Mouleydier, a proper village with a boulangerie, a butcher, a pharmacy, and neighbors who say hello. Not a tourist postcard. Real rural France, just fifteen minutes east of Bergerac.
The house sits on about 7,000 square metres in total — roughly 4,000 of enclosed garden and another 3,000 of private woodland at the back. That combination of open, cultivated space and wild tree cover gives the property two completely different characters depending on where you wander. The south-facing pool terrace catches sun from mid-morning until the last light of the evening. In July and August, when the Dordogne bakes, that matters enormously.
At 210 square metres, the interior is genuinely generous. The ground floor lives large — reception rooms totalling close to 80 square metres, with original terracotta floor tiles that have survived decades and still carry that warm, earthy tone you can't replicate with new materials. Two rooms connected to the main living space but with their own separate entrance are among the most interesting features in the house. Use them as a fourth bedroom and a home office, or as an art studio, or — with appropriate permissions — as a professional practice space. The flexibility is real and rare. Upstairs there are three further bedrooms, one of which stretches to 25 square metres — that's a proper primary bedroom, not a box with a window. A shower room with WC completes the upper floor.
The double garage deserves a specific mention. It's large enough to store a campervan, which tells you something about the scale. More usefully for buyers thinking about the financial side of ownership, it presents a credible conversion opportunity into a gîte — a self-contained holiday rental. The Dordogne is one of the most consistently popular tourist destinations in France. British, Dutch, and Belgian visitors come in serious numbers from May through September, and demand for well-located rural rentals in the Périgord consistently outpaces supply. A converted garage gîte here wouldn't just be a weekend project — it could actively offset ownership costs year after year.
The property needs updating. That's stated plainly, and it's actually part of what makes the price interesting. At €377,000 for this location, this setting, and this footprint, there's genuine value to unlock for buyers willing to invest in a renovation. The bones are excellent — the proportions, the terracotta, the views, the land. What requires attention is cosmetic and functional updating rather than structural rescue. For the right buyer, this is the kind of project that ends with something truly personal: a house that reflects the effort and taste you put into it, rather than one that was finished to someone else's standard.
Mouleydier itself sits in the Périgord Pourpre, the southwestern stretch of the Dordogne département named for the local vineyards. Bergerac, fifteen minutes west by car, is a proper town — market days on Wednesday and Saturday in the Place de la Madeleine, excellent restaurants along the quais of the Dordogne river, and a lively wine culture built around appellations like Pécharmant and Monbazillac. The sweet white wines of Monbazillac, produced on hillside vineyards just south of Bergerac, are worth knowing: pair a glass with foie gras from any of the local farms and you have the flavour of this region in a single sitting.
The wider Dordogne offers an extraordinary range of things to do across every season. The prehistoric caves at Lascaux (the full-scale Lascaux IV replica at Montignac is about an hour north) draw visitors from across the world. The medieval bastide towns — Issigeac, Eymet, Beaumont-du-Périgord — each have their own Sunday markets and character. Canoe hire on the Dordogne between Argentat and Beynac is one of the great lazy summer activities in France: pack lunch, rent a canoe, drift for four hours past cliff-top châteaux and limestone villages. In autumn, when the crowds have gone and the light turns golden, the countryside around Mouleydier is particularly striking — truffle season begins, walnuts are harvested, and the village restaurants bring out their best menus.
For international buyers, Bergerac Airport is a significant practical advantage. Direct flights operate from London Stansted, Birmingham, Southampton, Bristol, Edinburgh, Dublin, and Rotterdam, meaning this property is accessible without a Paris connection. Drive time from Bergerac Airport to Mouleydier is around twenty minutes. For those travelling from further afield, Bordeaux Airport — about 90 minutes west — opens up intercontinental connections.
France's property purchasing process for non-residents is well-established. Notarial fees of approximately 7-8% apply on older properties. EU and non-EU buyers alike can purchase freely. An SCI (Société Civile Immobilière) ownership structure is worth discussing with a French notaire if you're buying with family members or considering eventual inheritance planning — this is standard practice and well understood locally. Rental income from a gîte is taxable in France but the micro-BIC regime offers a straightforward 50% deduction on gross rental income for furnished tourist lets, making the administration manageable.
Key features at a glance:
- 4 bedrooms including one room of 25m² on the upper floor
- 2 bathrooms (shower room with WC upstairs, facilities on ground floor)
- 210m² of living space across two floors with near-single-level ground floor layout
- Original terracotta floor tiles throughout ground floor reception rooms
- Reception rooms totalling approximately 80m²
- Two flexible ground-floor rooms with independent entrance — bedroom, office, studio or rental possibilities
- Private south-facing pool with panoramic views over the Dordogne Valley
- 4,000m² of enclosed garden plus 3,000m² of private woodland
- Double garage with campervan parking, convertible to holiday gîte (subject to permissions)
- Village location with bakery, butcher, pharmacy, and mini-market on the doorstep
- 15 minutes east of Bergerac with its twice-weekly market and wine appellations
- Bergerac Airport approximately 20 minutes away with direct UK and European routes
- Strong rental tourism demand across the Périgord Pourpre region
- Requires updating — priced to reflect renovation potential
If you've been searching for a second home in the Dordogne that offers something more than a standard renovation project — a property with a distinct setting, a real village community, and the kind of valley views that will stop you mid-sentence every single time — this house in Mouleydier is worth a serious conversation. Contact Homestra today to arrange a viewing or to request the full property details and connect with a bilingual buying specialist who knows this corner of the Périgord well.
Details
- Amount of bedrooms
- 4
- Size
- 210m²
- Price per m²
- €1,795
- Garden size
- 3000m²
- Has Garden
- No
- Has Parking
- Yes
- Has Basement
- No
- Condition
- good
- Amount of Bathrooms
- 2
- Has swimming pool
- Yes
- Property type
- House
- Energy label
Unknown
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