4 bedroom house for sale in Poitou-Charentes, Charente, St-Amant, France

Listed on
New
https://media.rightmove.co.uk/property-photo/168266a64/89642055/168266a64d3fedbdc59622bf11d19f9a.jpeg

Poitou-Charentes, Charente, St-Amant, France, Montmoreau (France)

4 Bedrooms · 2 Bathrooms · 130Floor area

€191,500

House

Parking

4 Bedrooms

2 Bathrooms

130m²

Garden

Pool

Not furnished

Description

Just a short walk from Montmoreau, a lively village with shops, school, restaurants and a train station, this charming house offers peace and convenience in equal measure.
Inside, you?ll find three bedrooms, two bathrooms, and a spacious music room that can easily serve as a fourth bedroom or flexible living space. The house is connected to the public sewage system.
The 2,500 m² garden is fully fenced and low-maintenance, featuring an electric gate, a large above-ground pool, and a magnificent centuries-old lime tree. A private well provides water for the garden.
With a garage, workshop and generous parking space, this property is perfect for a young family or anyone seeking comfort, quiet, and proximity to amenities.

Details

Amount of bedrooms
4
Size
130
Price per m²
€1,473
Garden size
2500
Has Garden
Yes
Has Parking
Yes
Has Basement
No
Condition
good
Amount of Bathrooms
2
Has swimming pool
Yes
Property type
House
Energy label

Unknown

Sign up to access location details

Similar properties

Saturday morning, and the only sounds reaching the terrace are birdsong, the distant clang of the Saint-Saud-Lacoussière church bell, and the faint creak of oak branches in the breeze. Your coffee goes cold because you keep forgetting to drink it. That's what this corner of the Dordogne does to you. This three-bedroom house sits on just over an acre of land outside one of the Périgord Vert's quieter, more genuine villages — not a tourist honeypot, but a real French community with a weekly market, a pharmacy, a couple of decent cafés, and the kind of neighbours who still wave from across the lane. The property spans 125 square metres of living space, is in good condition, and has the bones — plus a 60-square-metre open barn and an attached garage — to become something genuinely personal with a modest refresh. Walk through the front door and you're straight into the heart of the house: a 45-square-metre living room with terracotta tiles underfoot, a proper fireplace fitted with a wood burner, and double doors that push open onto the terrace and garden beyond. It's the kind of room that earns its keep in every season. In July, those doors stay open from breakfast to midnight. In January, the wood burner makes the room impossible to leave. The fitted kitchen connects naturally to this central space, and the whole ground floor flows well — two double bedrooms with warm wooden floors, a family bathroom, and a WC all sit within easy reach. Upstairs, a mezzanine study area opens off the landing — exactly the right perch for working remotely with a view over the garden, or for teenagers who need their own corner of the world. The third bedroom completes the upper floor, giving the house genuine flexibility for families, couple ... click here to read more

Photo 1
New

Stand on the terrace on a July morning and the air already carries the warmth of the day ahead—cut grass, wild thyme, and the faint sweetness from the sunflowers that blanket the fields around Saint-Martin-de-Gurson. The only sound is birdsong and the distant clang of a tractor somewhere beyond the tree line. This is the Dordogne that people read about in novels and then spend decades trying to find. This five-bedroom house sits on 2.3 hectares of French countryside in the Périgord, one of the most quietly coveted corners of southwest France. At 188 square metres, there is real room here—space to have the whole family over in August, space for teenagers to disappear into their own corners, space to breathe after years of city life. The condition is good and the house is ready to live in, which matters more than people realise when they're buying in a foreign country. No lengthy renovation drama, no months of waiting. You could be spending your first summer evening on the terrace within weeks of completion. Inside, the living room is the kind of space that earns its keep in every season. In the height of summer the French doors pull light in from all angles. Come November, the wood-burning stove becomes the centre of gravity—a proper cast-iron one that heats the room fast and makes the whole house smell like a mountain chalet. The open kitchen flows directly off the living area, with a proper pantry (cellier) that any serious cook will appreciate immediately. Storing olive oil from the Dordogne market, wine from a Bergerac cave, charcuterie from the Saturday market at Montpon-Ménéstrol—there's space for all of it. Five bedrooms gives you options that most French country houses simply don't. Guest rooms, a home office, ... click here to read more

Picture 1
New

Stand in the kitchen doorway on a September morning and the air already smells like pine resin warming in the sun. The woods on your 6000 square metres start just beyond the old stone wall, and apart from a woodpigeon somewhere up in the canopy, nothing breaks the silence. This is Poyanne — a scattering of farmhouses and lanes in the Landes département where the Atlantic forest rolls on so far it starts to feel like its own country. And sitting at the edge of it all, waiting for someone with vision and a willingness to roll up their sleeves, is a proper 18th-century Landaise farmhouse going for €119,000. Let's be honest about what this is. It's a renovation project — the kind that demands decisions, budgets, and patience. But it's also the kind of opportunity that comes along rarely in this part of France, where agricultural heritage properties on wooded plots of this size don't stay on the market long. The single-story layout covers 76 sqm: two bedrooms, a living room anchored by a period fireplace that's the real architectural heart of the house, a bathroom, and a kitchen space ready to be fitted out exactly how you want it. The bones are there. What you're buying is the framework for something genuinely personal — not a developer's idea of a holiday home, but yours. Attached to the main house is a 37 sqm barn. That's not an afterthought. Converted thoughtfully, it could become a guest suite, a studio, a home office, or simply generous storage for bikes and surf gear. Renovation quotes are available on request, so you won't be working blind from day one. The land itself deserves its own mention. Six thousand square metres of wooded terrain with no overlooking neighbours in any direction, and — this is the detail tha ... click here to read more

Picture 1
New

Step off the D roads of the Orne on a Tuesday morning and you'll hear it before you see it—the low rumble of market stalls being set up in Argentan's Place du Marché, vendors calling out prices for unpasteurized Camembert, strings of dried saucisson swinging in the autumn breeze. This is the Normandy that doesn't end up on postcards, and that's precisely why it's worth paying attention to. This 192 m² farmhouse on 5.5 hectares of land sits at the edge of a countryside that moves at its own unhurried pace, a place where a Saturday morning can disappear into a long walk across open meadow and a lunch that stretches into late afternoon. The property itself—main house plus a collection of outbuildings spread across the grounds—is honest in what it offers. The principal dwelling runs to approximately 92 m² and holds five rooms: two bedrooms, a living area, an office, and enough space to start sketching out what your version of a Norman farmhouse looks like. The bones are good. The walls are thick limestone, the kind that keeps rooms cool in July and holds a woodfire's warmth well into a February evening. Renovation work is needed, and that's actually the interesting part. You're not inheriting someone else's taste. You're starting with a structure that has real character—exposed timber, original proportions—and you get to decide what comes next. The outbuildings are where the possibilities multiply. Depending on your vision and local planning permissions, the range of what's workable here is wide. Convert the largest barn into a gîte and you've created a secondary income stream that practically runs itself through the summer high season, when Normandy draws history travelers tracing the D-Day sites at Utah, Omaha, and Sword ... click here to read more

Picture 1
New

Sunday morning in Verteillac starts slowly. The boulangerie on the main square opens early, the smell of baking bread drifting down the stone street before most shutters have rolled up. From the back garden of this four-bedroom village house, you can hear the church bell count out the hour while a wood pigeon settles somewhere in the old walnut tree next door. That's not a postcard image — that's Tuesday, that's October, that's what this kind of life actually feels like. Verteillac sits in the northern Dordogne, tucked between Périgueux and Angoulême in a stretch of Aquitaine that most visitors never find. That's precisely the point. This is deep rural France — sunflower fields in July, truffle markets in winter, walnut orchards turning gold in October. The Dronne Valley is a short drive east. The medieval bastide town of Brantôme, sometimes called the Venice of the Périgord for its abbey and canals, is around 30 minutes away, and on a warm evening its riverside restaurants fill with locals eating duck confit and magret de canard at unhurried pace. Bergerac Airport is roughly an hour south, with Limoges another option to the northeast. Bordeaux, with all its TGV connections and international flights, sits about 90 minutes away by car. The house itself sits right in the village, with stone walls, a traditional roofline, and the kind of layout that's been thoughtfully adapted for modern living without losing its character. The ground floor flows between an open-plan kitchen and dining room — fitted with a wood-burning stove that earns its keep from November through March — into a generous sitting room, which also has a stove and opens directly onto the private walled garden. On a cool spring afternoon, you leave the door ... click here to read more

Picture 1
New

Sunday morning in the Dordogne has a particular quality to it. The air smells of cut grass and something faintly herbal — wild thyme, maybe, drifting up from the countryside that rolls away beyond your pool terrace. You open the patio doors from the kitchen and the sound follows: a distant church bell from the village, the soft knock of a shutter, absolute quiet between each ring. This is what you actually bought. This three-bedroom, single-level home sits just outside Issigeac — one of the most genuinely pretty bastide villages in the Périgord Pourpre — and it does something rare for a property at this price point: it's ready. No projects. No compromise on the important things. You walk in, unpack, and start living. The open-plan living, dining, and kitchen space is the kind of room that earns that overused word "heart of the home" — except here it's actually true. Large double-glazed windows pull the garden into the room visually, and two sets of patio doors open fully onto a covered terrace so that indoor and outdoor living collapse into one uninterrupted space across the warmer months. A wood-burning stove anchors the room for the other side of the year, when Dordogne evenings turn cool and there's nowhere you'd rather be than here with a glass of Bergerac rouge and something slow-cooking on the stove. The kitchen and dining area share the same easy flow, so cooking doesn't isolate whoever's at the hob from the rest of the table — a detail that matters enormously when you're hosting friends for ten days in August. The sleeping wing sits at the opposite end of the house, a sensible arrangement that gives kids or guests real separation from the living spaces. Three proper bedrooms, a shower room, and a separate WC. ... click here to read more

Picture 1
New

Sunday morning in Guingamp, and the bells of the Basilique Notre-Dame-de-Bon-Secours roll across the rooftops just as the light finds its way through the tall original windows, casting long rectangles of gold across a century-old parquet floor. That's the moment you understand what this house is. Not just five bedrooms and a walled garden — a living piece of Breton history, waiting for someone with vision and appetite to bring it fully back to life. This architect-designed Belle Époque mansion sits in the heart of Guingamp, a town that punches well above its weight in character. The house was built when architects designed for eternity — high ceilings that make you stand a little straighter, plaster moldings of the kind you simply cannot replicate today, and original parquet floors that creak pleasingly underfoot, the sound of a house that has held generations of stories. The proportions throughout the ground floor are generous without feeling cold. A majestic entrance hall sets the tone immediately. From there, the kitchen, a welcoming dining room, a refined sitting room, and a summer room that opens directly onto the garden follow in sequence, each space distinct but connected by that same through-light that runs the length of the house. A guest WC completes the ground floor with quiet practicality. Upstairs, five proper bedrooms — including a suite — share two bathrooms, and a converted attic has been given over to a library. Spend a rainy Breton afternoon up there with a novel and a glass of Muscadet and you'll understand the appeal immediately. Outside, the walled and wooded garden is an almost absurd bonus for a town-centre address. Enclosed, private, green — it's the kind of outdoor space that city buyers specif ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a still morning in this quiet Limousin hamlet, the only sounds are birdsong and the occasional creak of the old barn doors swinging open in the breeze. You pour your first coffee and carry it through the glazed door into the garden, past the fruit trees coming into blossom, and sit beside the ancient stone bread oven your architect friend keeps saying you should convert. That's the rhythm of life in Dournazac — slow, deliberate, and quietly extraordinary. This renovated three-bedroom stone house sits in one of the most underrated corners of southwest France, a region where property prices still reflect genuine value and the countryside hasn't been polished into a tourist postcard. The Haute-Vienne département rewards those who seek it out: rolling wooded hills, medieval châteaux, winding rivers, and a food culture that puts Sunday markets at the absolute center of social life. The Saturday market in Châlus — just three kilometres down the road — is where you'll find the region's famous clementines in winter, truffles if you know which stall to hover around, and a very decent andouillette that the locals will insist you try. Nearby Nexon holds one of the finest horse fairs in France each spring. Oradour-sur-Glane, a preserved WWII memorial village, is a sobering and important half-day trip that draws visitors from across Europe. The house itself carries the architectural honesty that Limousin stone buildings do so well. No decorative veneer, no awkward additions — just solid granite walls, exposed ceiling beams, and a staircase hand-built in oak that feels almost too good to rush up. The craftsmanship throughout the renovation was taken seriously. You notice it in the custom kitchen, which stops visitors in their tra ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Sunday morning in Savigné, and the kitchen window is open. The smell of coffee mixes with cut grass drifting in from the meadow out back. Nobody's in a hurry. That's kind of the whole point. This former farmhouse in the Vienne département of Poitou-Charentes has been fully renovated and is move-in ready — no months of waiting on contractors, no difficult decisions about plumbing layouts. Someone has already done the hard work. What you walk into is 130 square metres of comfortable, liveable space that still carries the bones and character of a proper French country property: thick stone walls, outbuildings with real agricultural history, a bread oven that looks like it belongs on a postcard, a barn with a stable, and a former henhouse that has quietly been waiting for someone with imagination to figure out what it wants to be next. The ground floor is practical without being cramped. The kitchen is fully equipped and opens directly into the dining and living area, which means the cook never gets exiled to a separate room while everyone else talks. There's a bedroom on this level too, with its own dressing room — useful if you have guests who'd rather not tackle stairs, or if you want to turn the upper floor into a private retreat entirely your own. A shower room, WC, and a boiler room round out the ground floor. Upstairs, a landing connects three further bedrooms and a second shower room with WC. Four bedrooms in total is a generous count for a French country house in this price range — enough for a family and a couple of friends, or enough to make short-term rental a genuine option during the weeks you're not here. Then there's the land. The enclosed garden is the kind of space where afternoon becomes evening withou ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Step out onto the front terrace with a coffee in hand on a Tuesday morning in September, and the Vézère Valley spreads out below you in that particular golden light the Dordogne does better than almost anywhere else in France. The walnut trees are starting to drop. Someone two streets down is baking. The cliffs behind you still hold the night's cool air. This is what 115,000 euros buys you here — not just a stone cottage, but a specific, irreplaceable foothold in one of the most historically layered corners of rural France. Les Eyzies-de-Tayac-Sireuil sits at the confluence of the Vézère and Beune rivers, and it carries that geographical confidence like a village that knows exactly what it is. This is the self-styled capital of prehistory, and the claim is not idle boasting — the Cro-Magnon rock shelter is literally at the edge of town, and the Musée National de Préhistoire, rebuilt into the limestone cliff face above the main street, draws serious visitors from across Europe year-round. Walk to the Font-de-Gaume cave with its original polychrome bison paintings (one of the last sites in the world where you can still stand in front of authentic Paleolithic art), and you'll understand why UNESCO gave this entire valley World Heritage status. Living here, even part-time, means all of that is just a twenty-minute stroll. The cottage itself is perched on the hillside with the kind of elevated position that means you catch the morning light early and the evening breeze reliably. Stone walls that have stood for well over a century have been carefully renovated — not stripped and sanitised, but worked with. The character is intact: the rough-cut limestone exterior, the proportions that belong entirely to this part of the Péri ... click here to read more

0001

Picture a Tuesday morning in late June: you're at the twice-weekly market in Montguyon, five minutes down the road, picking up a wedge of goat's cheese from the local fromagère and a bunch of sunflowers that cost less than a coffee back home. You drive back through a hamlet so quiet the loudest thing you'll hear is a woodpigeon in the oak at the back of the garden. That's Saint-Martin-d'Ary. And that's what owning this place actually feels like. Set between Montguyon and Neuvicq in the southern stretch of Charente-Maritime, this three-bedroom detached house sits on a generous 3,000 square metres of mature land in a small, unhurried hamlet. It's the kind of spot that takes a minute to find on the map but stays with you long after you leave. At 102m², the house is compact enough to manage easily as a second home, yet laid out with enough rooms that a family or a group of friends won't be tripping over each other. Inside, the ground floor flows from an entrance hall into a comfortable lounge and separate dining room — the sort of arrangement that still works for a long Sunday lunch the way open-plan never quite does. The kitchen has a fireplace, which tells you something important: this room was built to be the heart of the house, not just a functional corner. On cold December evenings when you're down here for a long winter weekend, a fire in the kitchen while something slow-cooks on the hob is exactly the right kind of warmth. There's also a utility room for the practical side of country living — muddy boots, firewood, market bags. At the back, a summer room and veranda opens the house out toward the garden, catching afternoon light and giving you somewhere to eat outside without the full commitment of a terrace meal in ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Sunday morning in Pleuville moves at its own pace. The shutters creak open, the coffee's on, and through the kitchen window you catch that wide roll of Charente countryside—fields fading into tree lines, not another rooftop in sight. This is what 193 square metres of genuine Maison de Maître feels like when it's yours. Set right in the heart of the village, this four-bedroom house carries all the bones that make old French architecture so satisfying: generous proportions, solid stone, rooms that breathe. But it's been updated where it counts. The kitchen was fitted last year—clean, functional, properly equipped for the long lunches that Charente life demands. A new 7 x 5 metre inground swimming pool was also installed last year, sitting just outside where the garden opens up and the views stretch away over the surrounding countryside. On a hot July afternoon, that pool earns its place fast. Inside, the layout flows well. A wide hallway sets the tone as you enter—the kind of entrance that makes guests pause. To the right, the new kitchen leads into a utility room, and there's a shower room with WC on the same side, which makes practical sense for a house that sees wet dogs, muddy boots, or kids coming in from the pool. To the left, the dining room and living room run together in an open plan arrangement, giving you a generous shared space that works for family dinners, lazy evenings, and everything in between. Upstairs, four well-sized bedrooms line up comfortably—room for the whole family, or the friends who always seem to arrive for August—alongside a bathroom with WC. Outside is where this property really delivers. The garden wraps around the house on multiple sides, so you're never short of options: a spot in full ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Step outside on a Tuesday morning and the only sounds competing for your attention are the stream at the edge of the hamlet and a woodpecker working its way up an oak somewhere in the tree line beyond the balcony. No traffic. No neighbor's television bleeding through a shared wall. Just the Périgord Limousin Regional Natural Park doing what it does — quietly making the rest of the world feel very far away. Abjat-sur-Bandiat sits in the northern reaches of the Dordogne, right where the department bumps against Haute-Vienne. It's the kind of village that doesn't try to impress you. There's no tourist office handing out maps, no souvenir shop selling fridge magnets. What there is: a genuine rural France that moves at its own pace, stone lanes that wind past ancient farmsteads, and a landscape of rolling woodland and meadow that turns copper and amber every October like someone slowly turning up a dimmer switch. This former barn — fully converted and completed not so long ago — sits at the tail end of a hamlet, with countryside pressing in on three sides. The conversion was done with real care for proportion. Ground floor living spaces feel open without feeling cavernous: a proper entrance hall with enough room to actually use it, a sitting room where exposed timber beams overhead anchor the space without making it heavy, and a kitchen that opens onto a dining area rather than being squeezed into a corner. The underfloor heating throughout the ground floor is the kind of detail you only truly appreciate on a raw February morning when the mist is sitting on the fields and you're padding around in socks on warm stone. The original character of the barn hasn't been scrubbed away. An oeil de boeuf window — that small circula ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a quiet Tuesday morning in Lorigné, the only sounds you'll catch from the south-facing terrace are birdsong, the faint clatter of a tractor somewhere beyond the stone walls, and the soft hiss of water in the covered pool below. No traffic. No neighbors peering over the fence. Just 1,377 square meters of enclosed garden, a house that's been here long enough to have earned its thick walls and terracotta floors, and the particular French countryside silence that people drive hundreds of kilometers to find. This four-bedroom stone house sits in a small hamlet between Chef-Boutonne and Sauzé-Vaussais in the Deux-Sèvres département — the quieter, less-hyped cousin of the Charente to the south. It's the kind of place that doesn't show up on the tourist trail, which is precisely why people who've discovered it keep coming back. Roughly 150 square meters of living space spread across two levels, a walled garden that feels genuinely private, a heated 8x4 meter covered pool, and a brand-new air-to-water heat pump installed in 2026. Move-in ready isn't a stretch here — this is a house that's been looked after. Step through the front door and the ground floor sets the tone immediately. The kitchen and dining room spans 37 square meters, with original terracotta tiles underfoot and a pellet stove insert in the fireplace that takes the edge off cool autumn evenings. This is the room where the house lives — where long Sunday lunches with a local Pineau des Charentes stretch into afternoon, where garlic and thyme from the garden end up in whatever's on the stove. The proportions feel right. Not cavernous, not cramped. The living room next door is a different proposition entirely: 45 square meters, its own wood-burning stove in a se ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a still morning in early October, you walk out of the kitchen door onto the south-facing terrace with a bowl of coffee, and you realize you can hear absolutely nothing. No traffic. No sirens. Just the faint rustle of chestnut trees down the slope and, somewhere far off, a woodpigeon. Below you, the grounds roll away toward a private forest where cepes and chanterelles push through the leaf litter after autumn rain. The fruit trees — hazelnut, plum, cherry, pear, apple, grape, even an olive — are heavy at this time of year. This is what €259,950 looks like in the Haute-Vienne. This three-hundred-year-old stone cottage and its attached barn in Domps have been painstakingly transformed over two decades into a warm, practical, deeply liveable home. It's 176 square metres of honest rural architecture — exposed stone walls, original timber beams, thick window reveals — brought properly up to date. New roof. Re-done plumbing and electrics to current French norms. Double glazing throughout. Fibre internet. The bones are ancient; everything that matters is sound. Step inside and the kitchen sets the tone immediately. At 41 square metres, it's a serious room — big enough for a long farmhouse table and still have space to breathe. The centrepiece is an original fireplace now housing a pellet burner that quietly heats the majority of the house. This is the room where the house lives. Coffee in the morning light. Wine before dinner. Guests drifting in from the terrace. Adjoining it, a generous living room with a separate dining area pushes another 41 square metres and opens via French doors onto the front of the property. Its Godin wood-burning stove runs almost for free, given what's standing in your forest. A separate office o ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Step outside on a crisp October morning, coffee in hand, and the only sound you hear is birdsong. No traffic. No neighbors peering over a fence. Just open agricultural land stretching toward the foothills of the Pyrenees, the kind of quiet that feels almost physically restorative after months of city noise. This is what 17,796 square meters of Gascon countryside does to you—and it happens every single day you're here. This four-bedroom single-storey house in the Gers department of southwest France sits back roughly 30 meters from the D14, which connects Maubourguet to Plaisance-du-Gers. That distance, combined with exceptionally solid insulation added just six years ago, means road noise is essentially a non-issue. The house is rated A on both energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions—a January 2026 EPC confirmed it. For a rural property of 164 square meters, that's genuinely rare, and it translates directly into heating bills that won't ruin your winter. The layout is all on one floor, which matters more than people realize until they've lived in it. No stairs to negotiate with luggage, no carrying firewood up from a lower level, no thinking twice about ageing parents or young children running between rooms. Everything flows—living room to kitchen to terrace, bedrooms down the hall, garage off the side. Daily life here has a natural, unhurried rhythm built right into the architecture. The living room runs to 32 square meters and centers on a fireplace fitted with an insert, which throws serious heat on January evenings when the temperature in the Gers drops below zero. The separate kitchen—also 32 square meters, notably generous—opens directly onto the rear terrace, making the transition between cooking and eat ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a still morning in Saint-Cyr-la-Campagne, you'd wake to the sound of water. Not distant or muffled — the river runs right along the edge of the property, close enough that you hear it through an open window while the coffee brews. There's no road noise, no neighbors peering over the fence, no reason whatsoever to be anywhere else. This is rural Normandy at its most honest: green, quiet, and completely unhurried. The house itself was built in the 1980s, solid and unpretentious, sitting on a fully enclosed and wooded 1,000-square-metre plot that feels twice as large thanks to the riverbank it borders. Since 2021, the owners have been steadily bringing it up to speed — new electrics throughout, a fitted kitchen, a redesigned bathroom with a proper walk-in shower and bathtub, and freshly renovated upstairs bedrooms completed in 2025. The bones were always good. Now the finishing is catching up. Come through the front door and the ground floor opens into a living room that immediately earns its keep. Terracotta floor tiles run underfoot — the warm, slightly uneven kind that makes a room feel lived-in rather than showroom-perfect — and a wood-burning stove anchors one wall. On a grey October afternoon, when the Normandy rain comes in sideways and the leaves on the riverbank go copper and gold, this room becomes the entire reason you bought a house in France. The kitchen adjoins it directly, recently fitted and fully equipped, functional without being clinical. A hallway off the living area leads to a ground-floor bedroom with its own dressing room — a practical touch that works well as a guest room or for anyone who'd rather avoid stairs entirely. The new bathroom sits nearby, tidy and complete. Upstairs, the landing is ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Sunday morning in Châteauneuf-du-Faou starts with the smell of buttered crêpes drifting from the boulangerie on Rue de la Mairie, and if you crack open the upstairs window, you'll catch the faint echo of church bells bouncing off the stone facades across the square. That's the kind of detail you can't manufacture. It's either there or it isn't — and here, it absolutely is. This is a rare find in the heart of one of Finistère's most quietly compelling villages: two adjoining stone houses, sold together as a single property, sitting right in the village core with everything you need within a short walk. At 80 square metres combined and priced at €123,500, this is the kind of opportunity that makes serious buyers move fast. Five bedrooms spread across two interconnected dwellings, a landscaped enclosed garden, a garage, and a timber-framed attic just waiting to be converted. The bones are solid — natural slate roof, mains drainage, stone walls that have quietly absorbed two centuries of Breton weather. Let's talk about the layout, because it's genuinely interesting. The first house opens at ground level into an entrance hall that flows into a living and dining room anchored by a working fireplace — the kind you actually use from October through April, not just for Instagram. A kitchen with a shower area sits alongside, and a connecting living room links the two houses together. Head upstairs and you get two good-sized bedrooms. The second house has its own front entrance, kitchen, shower room, WC, and a ground-floor bedroom, with two more bedrooms up top. An attic caps the whole structure, unconverted but full of potential — a home office, a games room for the kids, a reading loft. The layout gives you options that most s ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Properties nearby

A Tranquil Retreat in the Heart of Poitou-Charentes Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the soft chirping of birds in the picturesque village of Juignac, nestled in the heart of Poitou-Charentes, France. This charming stone house, with its perfect blend of modern amenities and rustic charm, offers a serene escape from the hustle and bustle of city life. A Home That Tells a Story As you step inside, the warmth of the sun-drenched living room welcomes you. The open-plan design seamlessly connects the living area to a state-of-the-art kitchen, where sleek countertops and modern appliances meet rustic wooden beams, creating a space that is both functional and inviting. The kitchen opens onto a sun terrace, perfect for al fresco dining or simply enjoying a morning coffee while soaking in the tranquil countryside views. The two spacious bedrooms, each with its ensuite shower room, offer a private sanctuary for relaxation. The thoughtful design ensures that every room is bathed in natural light, enhancing the sense of space and tranquility. The potential to expand the living space is evident, with the upper floor already equipped for the addition of two more rooms and a private bathroom. A Garden of Possibilities Step outside, and you're greeted by an expansive garden, a blank canvas for your landscaping dreams. Whether you envision a lush garden oasis or a modest swimming pool, the possibilities are endless. The semi-covered barn offers a versatile space for year-round outdoor enjoyment, whether it's hosting summer barbecues or cozy winter gatherings. Embrace the Local Lifestyle Juignac is more than just a location; it's a lifestyle. The village is a gateway to the rich cultural tapestry of Poitou-Cha ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of Charente's rolling hills, this 4-bedroom stone country home offers a serene escape from the hustle and bustle of everyday life. As you approach the property, the gentle rustle of leaves and the distant chirping of birds set the stage for a tranquil retreat. The air is crisp, carrying the faint scent of lavender from nearby fields, and the sun casts a warm glow over the landscape, inviting you to explore the beauty that surrounds. ### A Day in the Life Imagine waking up to the soft light filtering through the shutters of your spacious bedroom. The morning begins with a leisurely breakfast on the terrace, where you sip freshly brewed coffee while taking in the panoramic views of the countryside. The day unfolds at your own pace—perhaps a stroll through the local market in Montmoreau, just a 10-minute drive away, where you can pick up fresh produce and artisanal cheeses. As the afternoon sun reaches its peak, retreat to the comfort of your elegant living room, where the cool stone walls provide a refreshing respite. The open-plan dining area and kitchen become the heart of the home, perfect for hosting family gatherings or intimate dinners with friends. The aroma of a traditional French meal wafts through the air, promising an evening of culinary delight. ### Local Lifestyle and Attractions Charente is a region rich in history and culture, offering a plethora of activities to suit every taste. From exploring the medieval architecture of nearby villages to indulging in the region's renowned cognac, there's always something to discover. Outdoor enthusiasts will relish the opportunity to hike through scenic trails or enjoy a leisurely bike ride along the winding country roads. The local cuisine is a ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Welcome to the picturesque town of Montmoreau in the charming region of Poitou-Charentes, Charente, France. Nestled in a quiet and historic part of town, this 3-bedroom house is situated perfectly for convenience and tranquility. With a plot size of 1126m² and a total built size of 175m², this home offers enough space for comfort and growth. This property is listed at a price of €159,000, making it a compelling option for those seeking a solid investment or a new place to call home. Living in Montmoreau offers the best of both worlds. With its historical charm and modern conveniences, it is a town that captures the heart of both locals and visitors alike. The climate in this area is generally mild with warm summers, where temperatures can reach up to 28°C, and cool winters, bringing a cozy feel to your new home. The town is known for its rich history and beautiful landscapes that offer breathtaking views at every turn. Living here means enjoying the serenity of rural life, combined with the benefit of having urban conveniences within easy reach. This property is a welcoming home with generous accommodation spread across its structure. As you step inside, you are greeted by a spacious and inviting living area of 16m², perfect for unwinding after a long day. The home features: - 3 well-sized bedrooms on the first floor - 2 bathrooms for convenience - 2 kitchens ideal for hosting and creativity - 2 dining rooms for family gatherings - A very spacious integral garage - Enclosed, sunny, and private rear garden of about 1000m² The garden is a haven, offering a covered terrace that beckons for morning coffees or evening meals under the stars. The presence of outbuildings adds to the utility space, perfect for storage or pot ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the picturesque village of Montmoreau, in the serene region of Poitou-Charentes, this charming 3-bedroom villa presents a fantastic opportunity for those looking to immerse themselves in the tranquil French countryside. Priced at €192,000, this property spans a total of 157 square meters of living space and sits on a generous plot of 1126 square meters, offering ample outdoor space for gardening or leisure activities. For those with a creative vision, this villa, originally serving as a shoe shop, has already undergone significant transformations, making it a comfortable family home yet still providing plenty of scope for further customization. The ground floor is well-appointed with a substantial double garage perfect for storage or DIY activities. Adjacent to the garage lies an office space that can be transformed into a guest room, craft room, or a home office, depending on your needs. The lounge area is spacious and inviting, leading seamlessly into a modern kitchen featuring all new appliances, ideal for home-cooked meals. The kitchen extends into a laundry room and a recently updated shower room. Upstairs, the villa features three delightfully airy bedrooms, a second well-appointed shower room, and a spacious living room accentuated by a beautiful fireplace, offering warmth and ambiance during cooler evenings. The dining room and kitchen open onto a sun-drenched veranda equipped with electric shutters, creating a serene oasis for relaxation or hosting friends and family. As for the local life, living in Montmoreau introduces you to a slower-paced, nature-infused lifestyle that is both relaxing and revitalizing. With its rolling landscapes, vineyards, and historical sites, the area is a haven for anyon ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque Poitou-Charentes region, this charming villa in Salles-Lavalette offers an idyllic retreat for those seeking a second home in France. With its serene surroundings and proximity to local amenities, this property is a haven for relaxation and adventure alike. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the sweet scent of nut and fruit trees that envelop this delightful villa. The morning sun filters through the windows, casting a warm glow over the cozy living area, where you can enjoy a leisurely breakfast before stepping out onto the raised terrace. Here, the panoramic views of rolling fields stretch out before you, inviting you to savor the tranquility of rural France. The villa's design seamlessly blends comfort and functionality. The ground floor features two well-appointed bedrooms, a practical kitchen, and a bright dining room and lounge area. Large windows on three sides ensure that natural light floods the space, creating an inviting atmosphere for family gatherings or quiet evenings with a good book. Downstairs, the basement offers a private retreat with a third bedroom, complete with its own shower room and toilet. A sitting area with patio doors provides direct access to the garden, where you can enjoy the fresh air and the beauty of the surrounding landscape. The expansive 1,890 m² garden is a true gem, offering multiple shaded areas perfect for picnics or afternoon naps. The back of the property, with its unobstructed views, is ideal for sunbathing or hosting barbecues with friends and family. An above-ground swimming pool, though in need of a new liner, promises refreshing dips on warm summer days. Salles-Lavalette is a charming village that embodies the ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Sunday morning in Salles-Lavalette and the smell of fresh bread from the boulangerie two streets over drifts through the tall kitchen windows before you've even put the coffee on. That's not a fantasy — the bakery is genuinely that close, and yes, it's the kind of village where the baker knows your order by your second visit. This is Charente at its most unhurried, and this six-bedroom stone house sits right at the heart of it. At 293 square metres across a thoughtfully restored, characterful layout, the property is substantial without feeling cavernous. Step through the entrance hall and you're immediately in the 44-square-metre grand salon — a proper room with genuine presence, the sort of space where long dinners stretch past midnight without anyone feeling crowded. Original timber-framed doors and windows have been kept throughout, which matters enormously in a house like this. The bones are old and honest; the comfort is modern and discreet. That balance is hard to find and harder to get right, but whoever restored this property understood it. The ground floor also holds a rustic kitchen with real personality — this isn't a showroom kitchen, it's one you actually want to cook in — plus a second petit salon that flexes easily into a library or home office depending on your needs. A cloakroom completes the ground level. Upstairs, the six bedrooms and three bathrooms are arranged across a layout that makes genuine sense for families or groups, not just on paper but in daily use. Adjoining rooms on both the ground and first floors carry real development potential, subject to the usual permissions, which opens up everything from a self-contained annexe to an expanded B&B operation. Speaking of which — this house is ge ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Experience the ambiance and stunning views of French countryside with this charming residence nestled in the rolling hills of South Charente and Dordogne, situated in the heart of the picturesque village of Salles-Lavalette, Poitou-Charentes, France. This stately property with an asking price of €795,000, offers a unique blend of historical charm and contemporary convenience, boasting no less than 13 bedrooms spaciously spread over the 499 m² estate. This captivating, characterful house provides an array of possibilities for prospective owners. Whether you dream of a roomy family dwelling, a guest cottage for itinerant family members, or a cozy bed and breakfast establishment, the property has the adaptability to suit your aspirations with minor modifications, or perhaps none at all. Property features include: - 13 roomy bedrooms - 5 well-appointed bathrooms - Multiple inviting reception rooms - Several comfortable lounging areas enhanced by natural stone fireplaces - A practical, sophisticated kitchen - An airy mezzanine featuring a sitting area - Various terraces, relaxation spaces, and panoramic views Discover the charm of authentic French architecture with every corner of the house offering a picturesque view over the charming local landscape. Enjoy the flow of natural light throughout the residence, amplifying the beauty of the home’s rustic details and infusing the entire structure with warmth. Outside, the 5500 m² of land features a meticulously maintained, landscaped garden; a spacious, heated pool; a tastefully designed sheltered outdoor kitchen area; a useful garage; and even a dedicated area for a sauna. All of these features are carefully curated to offer a complete rejuvenation experience. Ameni ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque village of Salles-Lavalette, this delightful three-bedroom house offers a unique opportunity to own a slice of French countryside charm. Perfectly suited for those seeking a second home or a vacation retreat, this property combines modern comforts with the timeless allure of rural France. Imagine waking up to the gentle sounds of village life, with the aroma of freshly baked bread wafting from the local bakery just a short stroll away. This is the lifestyle that awaits you in Salles-Lavalette, a quaint commune in the Charente department, renowned for its scenic landscapes and rich cultural heritage. Property Highlights: - Spacious Living: With 96 square meters of living space, this house offers ample room for family gatherings and entertaining guests. - Modern Amenities: Recently renovated, the property boasts new electrics, plumbing, and a septic system that meets current regulations. - Comfortable Climate: Double glazing and pellet central heating ensure a cozy atmosphere year-round. - Outdoor Oasis: A 300 square meter garden provides a serene escape, perfect for alfresco dining or simply soaking up the sun. - Additional Potential: Above the garage, an apartment with three rooms awaits your personal touch, ideal for a gîte or summer lounge. - Village Convenience: Enjoy the convenience of a local bar/restaurant and bakery within walking distance. - Scenic Views: The terrace offers breathtaking views of the surrounding countryside, a perfect backdrop for relaxation. The Salles-Lavalette Experience: Salles-Lavalette is more than just a location; it's a lifestyle. This charming village is a gateway to the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region, known for its rolling hills, historic architectur ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the serene landscapes of Poitou-Charentes in the charming area of Montignac-le-Coq, this delightful three-bedroom house combines comfort with beautiful countryside vistas. Spanning 99 square meters, the property is well-suited for families or individuals seeking a peaceful retreat or a permanent residence amongst the rolling hills of Charente. Upon entering, you are greeted by a spacious living area that seamlessly integrates the lounge, kitchen, and dining space, offering a fluid environment for family activities and entertainment. The house comprises three well-sized bedrooms and two bathrooms, accommodating a family comfortably while providing space for guests. The property boasts a large terrace that wraps around two sides, presenting both sun-soaked and shaded spots perfect for any time of the day. It's an ideal setting for outdoor dining or simply enjoying the splendid views of the verdant surroundings. Additionally, residents have access to a well-maintained, shared saltwater swimming pool that measures 12 x 6 meters, providing a refreshing escape during warm days. Living in Montignac-le-Coq offers a taste of authentic rural French life. The nearby village exudes traditional charm with its friendly community and establishment such as a quaint restaurant. A mere five minutes away is Saint Severin, where you can find more dining options along with essential services including a supermarket, medical doctors, and a pharmacy, ensuring convenience is never far away. The local area is ripe for exploration. Outdoor enthusiasts will appreciate the numerous walking, hiking, and cycling trails that traverse the lush countryside. The historical and cultural richness of the region offers numerous festivals, mark ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque Charente region, this delightful home in Montignac-le-Coq offers a unique opportunity to embrace the serene French countryside lifestyle. With its charming blend of traditional architecture and modern comforts, this property is perfect for those seeking a tranquil retreat or a new chapter in the idyllic Poitou-Charentes. Imagine waking up to the gentle sounds of nature, with the sun casting a warm glow over the rolling hills and vineyards that surround your new home. This is the daily reality for residents of Montignac-le-Coq, a quaint village that embodies the essence of rural France. Here, life moves at a slower pace, allowing you to savor each moment and truly appreciate the beauty of your surroundings. Property Highlights: - Spacious Living: The house boasts three well-appointed bedrooms and two bathrooms, providing ample space for family and guests. - Open-Plan Design: A bright and airy living area seamlessly connects the lounge, kitchen, and dining spaces, creating a welcoming environment for entertaining or relaxing. - Outdoor Oasis: A generous terrace wraps around two sides of the property, offering both sunny and shaded areas for al fresco dining or simply unwinding with a good book. - Shared Pool Access: Enjoy the luxury of a 12m x 6m saltwater pool, shared with a small community of neighbors, perfect for cooling off on warm summer days. - Expansive Gardens: Set within 3,090m² of beautifully maintained gardens, the property provides plenty of space for outdoor activities and gardening enthusiasts. - Proximity to Amenities: Just a short drive away, the nearby village of Saint-Séverin offers a range of amenities, including restaurants, a supermarket, a pharmacy, and medic ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the charming village of Bellon, located in the beautiful Poitou-Charentes region in France, there lies a property that's perfect for those looking to immerse themselves in the French countryside lifestyle. This picturesque house carries with it a whisper of history, gracefully blending the traditional allure of a stone house with modern conveniences. Situated on a spacious 3000m2 plot, this property boasts a large heated swimming pool that promises many hours of relaxation and fun. Imagine swimming leisurely while surrounded by fruit trees, offering a bounty of freshness in your very own backyard. A centuries-old lime tree stands majestically nearby, adding an element of privacy and charm to the grounds. Stepping inside, the home features four generous bedrooms and four well-appointed bathrooms, making it amply suited for a large family or to welcome visiting guests. Around every corner, you’ll find a blend of historical charm and comfort. The authentic dining room is a perfect setting for family meals or entertaining friends, while the covered terrace offers a delightful space for al fresco dining as the sun sets. In the heart of the house lies a spacious kitchen, ideal for preparing hearty meals to enjoy with your loved ones, and an adjacent study, providing a quiet place for work or reflection. A comfortable lounge offers a warm and inviting space for all to gather. Storage won't be an issue either, thanks to a practical cellar and a separate garage/workshop that can house hobbies or projects. Here are just a few highlights of the property's features: - 4 bedrooms - 4 bathrooms - Large heated pool - Surrounded by lush fruit trees - Covered terrace - Spacious dining room - Large kitchen with study - Ce ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the serene and picturesque village of Palluaud, in the charming region of Poitou-Charentes, Charente, this five-bedroom house offers a delightful living environment, perfect for those looking to immerse themselves in the tranquil French countryside. Set on a generous plot of nearly half an acre, this property features a well-tended garden, complete with an above-ground pool, providing an idyllic setting for relaxation and outdoor entertainment. The residence comprises two houses and a one-bedroom apartment, offering ample living space and flexibility, ideal for accommodating family and guests or for potential rental opportunities. The main house exudes rustic charm, equipped with a fitted kitchen and breakfast room that leads into a spacious salon. This living area is enriched with a cozy fireplace, a wood burner, and exposed beams, adding to the home's character. The bathroom on this floor benefits from underfloor heating, ensuring comfort during the cooler months. Upstairs, the sleeping quarters consist of two bedrooms, with one open to the mezzanine, offering a unique architectural element. A convenient WC with a wash basin is also located on this floor. The second house features a large living space on the ground floor and two bedrooms upstairs, along with a bathroom, offering privacy and tranquility. Additionally, an external terrace area enhances this structure, perfect for enjoying the peaceful outdoor surroundings. An independent one-bedroom apartment provides additional accommodation or could serve as a private retreat for guests. The property also boasts a games room and a barn, which houses the central heating boiler and laundry facilities, adding practicality to its charm. The garden is a true ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Discover this inviting 1970s bungalow nestled in the serene town of Saint-Romain, located in the heart of the picturesque Poitou-Charentes region of France, part of the larger Charente department. This delightful home, offering around 150 square meters of living space, presents itself as an excellent opportunity for those looking to relocate to the tranquil French countryside. Nestled within a generous 2910 square meter plot, this house combines space, comfort, and convenience, making it an ideal choice for families and individuals alike. As you step into this well-maintained property, you will find a thoughtfully laid-out floor plan, perfect for modern living. The home boasts three spacious bedrooms. Each room offers plenty of natural light, creating a warm and welcoming atmosphere. With the possibility of using one of the bedrooms as a home office, it caters well to those who may work remotely. - 3 spacious bedrooms or 2 plus office - 1 well-appointed bathroom - Central gas heating - Double glazing - Wood burner for cozy winters - Reversible air conditioning - Mains drainage - Spacious hallway - Private garden with mature plants - Dedicated veggie patch - Fruit trees scattered throughout - Outdoor terraces for dining and relaxation - Heated swimming pool - Separate garage - Additional outbuildings for storage This property's location is truly a highlight. Saint-Romain itself is a quintessential French village, exuding a peaceful ambiance that offers a perfect retreat from the bustle of city life. Here you can enjoy the charm of rural France with access to modern amenities. A short stroll through the village reveals a local shop and a primary school, making day-to-day activities convenient and simple. A mere 3-minut ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Welcome to your dream opportunity nestled in the heart of Laprade, a charming enclave in the Poitou-Charentes region, known for its picturesque landscapes and rich culture. This delightful 3-bedroom house is perfect for those looking to immerse themselves in the tranquil French lifestyle, just a stone's throw away from the historical village of Aubeterre-sur-Dronne. Let's take a journey through the potential that awaits in this little corner of paradise. Picture yourself arriving at your new home, built around 2010, where traditional charm meets modern convenience. This property is in good condition and provides a solid base for personal touches. From the moment you step inside, you'll be greeted by a welcoming entrance hall, setting the tone for a home that is both inviting and functional. The heart of the home, the kitchen and dining room, is where family can come together or friends can gather for laughter-filled dinners. It's a versatile space designed for leisurely mornings with coffee and croissants or bustling evening meals. The ground floor also offers two cozy bedrooms and a shower room, providing comfortable accommodation for family or guests. Ascend to the first floor to discover a charming mezzanine, a perfect nook for a reading corner or home office. The third bedroom here comes with the added convenience of a WC and wash basin, offering extra privacy and functionality. Step outside, and you'll find a covered terrace that beckons for alfresco dining or simply enjoying the gentle breezes of a summer's day. The large garage/workshop is perfect for hobbyists or those in need of extra storage, while the expansive enclosed garden of approximately 1000 m² offers endless possibilities for gardening enthusiasts ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque Poitou-Charentes region, this delightful stone house in Gurat offers an idyllic escape for those seeking a second home in France. With its rich history, vibrant culture, and stunning landscapes, Gurat is a hidden gem that promises a tranquil yet fulfilling lifestyle. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the sweet scent of blooming flowers in your private garden. This two-bedroom house, lovingly renovated to blend traditional charm with modern comforts, is a sanctuary for those yearning for a peaceful retreat. A Glimpse into Your New Home: - Spacious Living Area: The ground floor welcomes you with a cozy corner kitchen, perfect for preparing local delicacies. The dining room, adorned with a classic stone fireplace, invites warm gatherings with family and friends. - Versatile Space: An additional room on the ground floor offers flexibility, whether you envision it as a bedroom, a creative studio, or a serene lounge. - Comfortable Bedrooms: Ascend the stairs to find two inviting double bedrooms. The master bedroom features an en-suite bathroom, ensuring privacy and convenience. - Modern Amenities: New double-glazed windows, shutters, and garden doors enhance the home's comfort, providing energy efficiency and a touch of modernity. - Outdoor Oasis: The mature garden, brimming with colorful flowers and fruitful trees, is a secluded sanctuary where you can unwind and reconnect with nature. - Potential for Expansion: The barn offers exciting possibilities for transformation into a two/three-car garage or a creative studio space, subject to proper permissions. The Allure of Gurat and Beyond: Gurat is more than just a location; it's a lifestyle. This charming village is ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque Poitou-Charentes region, this exquisite 5-bedroom house in Saint-Romain offers a unique blend of rustic charm and modern comfort, making it an ideal second home or vacation retreat. With its prime location in the Charente department, this property is a gateway to the quintessential French countryside experience, where rolling vineyards meet historic villages, and the pace of life is as gentle as the breeze that rustles through the trees. Imagine waking up to the soft chirping of birds, the sun casting a warm glow over the lush landscape that surrounds your new holiday home. This single-storey, longère-style house is not just a property; it's a lifestyle waiting to be embraced. With 180 square meters of living space, this home is perfect for family gatherings, romantic getaways, or simply a peaceful escape from the hustle and bustle of everyday life. ### A Home That Tells a Story As you step inside, you're greeted by a large cathedral living room, where a grand fireplace stands as the centerpiece, inviting you to cozy up with a good book or share stories with loved ones. The mezzanine, which can serve as an office or an additional bedroom, overlooks this space, adding a touch of architectural intrigue. The fully fitted kitchen, with its modern appliances and ample counter space, is a culinary enthusiast's dream. Whether you're preparing a simple breakfast or a gourmet dinner, this kitchen is equipped to handle it all. ### Bedrooms and Bathrooms The house boasts five spacious bedrooms, each with its own unique character. Wooden flooring and exposed beams create a warm, inviting atmosphere, while large windows flood the rooms with natural light. Two well-appointed bathrooms ensu ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Sunday morning in Saint-Romain and the only sound is the wind moving through a field of sunflowers. Not a neighbour in sight. Just the soft creak of the farmhouse shutters and, from the kitchen, the smell of coffee brewing in a room that somehow manages to feel both brand new and a hundred years old at the same time. This is the kind of quiet that city people spend years chasing. This four-bedroom, three-bathroom detached farmhouse sits on a full acre of private grounds along a no-through lane in Charente, one of those quietly beautiful corners of southwest France that hasn't yet been discovered by the Instagram crowds. Recently refurbished to a genuinely high standard, it hits a rare balance — the bones of a proper French country house, the comfort of a home that's been thoughtfully brought into the 21st century. You're not buying a renovation project. You're buying the result of one. Step inside and the entrance hall is wide and airy, the kind of space that sets the tone for everything that follows. The sitting room keeps its period features — there's real character here, the sort that can't be installed, only preserved. The kitchen and breakfast room is newly fitted with high-end appliances and opens naturally toward the gardens, so summer mornings flow from coffee to croissants to a chair outside without any real effort at all. A ground-floor bedroom, shower room, and utility room with the central heating boiler round out the practical side of things, meaning guests or family can stay downstairs entirely if needed. Upstairs, three double bedrooms share the first floor. The master has a dedicated dressing area and an en-suite in its final stages of completion — arriving essentially finished. A family bathroom serve ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Sunday morning in Aubeterre-sur-Dronne sounds like this: the church bell at Saint-Jacques tolling the hour, a boulangerie bag rustling on the kitchen counter, and the faint splash of someone already in the pool before nine. This is the rhythm of a village that made it onto France's coveted Les Plus Beaux Villages de France list — and this gîte complex sits right inside it, close enough to walk to the bar-restaurant without moving the car once. Three separate houses. One large garden. A heated pool. One address that almost never comes up for sale in a village this well-known. The complex breaks down neatly. The main house carries four bedrooms and anchors the property with the kind of proportions you simply don't find anymore at this price point in the Charente. A second house adds three more bedrooms, giving families — or groups of friends who like their own front door — room to breathe without feeling miles apart. Then there's the one-bedroom cottage, the quiet outlier, ideal for a couple who want the pool and the garden but not the crowd. Each unit has its own private garden patch, so privacy isn't theoretical here; it's designed in. Total living space across all three sits at 372 square metres, which is substantial by any measure. The garden itself stretches to 2,600 square metres — enough to lose children in for an afternoon, enough to set up a long outdoor table for twelve and still have grass left over. The 10m x 5m pool is heated, which matters in the shoulder seasons when the Charente autumn is golden and warm but the air drops at dusk. There's also a barn on the plot, the kind of structure that immediately starts conversations about wine storage, workshop space, or the fourth rental unit someone always ends u ... click here to read more

Picture 1
New