6-Bedroom Countryside Retreat in Huelgoat, Brittany - Ideal Vacation Home

Listed on
https://storage.googleapis.com/homestra-images/property-image-0ec300f7-722e-470c-bb99-358ce4318261-1762600556.jpg

Brittany, Finistère, Huelgoat, France, Huelgoat (France)

6 Bedrooms · 3 Bathrooms · 260Floor area

€348,150

House

Parking

6 Bedrooms

3 Bathrooms

260m²

Garden

No pool

Not furnished

Description

Nestled in the heart of Brittany's enchanting Finistère region, this expansive 6-bedroom house in Huelgoat offers a unique blend of rustic charm and modern convenience. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the distant call of birds, as the morning sun filters through the lush canopy of the surrounding forest. This is more than just a home; it's a gateway to a lifestyle steeped in tranquility and natural beauty.

A Day in the Life


Picture yourself starting the day with a leisurely stroll through the nearby Huelgoat Forest, where ancient boulders and serene trails invite exploration. As the seasons change, so does the landscape, offering a vibrant tapestry of colors and scents that invigorate the senses. Return home to a warm, inviting kitchen where the aroma of freshly brewed coffee mingles with the crackling of a log burner, setting the stage for a day of relaxation or adventure.

The Heart of the Home


This property is designed for those who appreciate space and flexibility. The ground floor features a bright living room that seamlessly flows into a kitchen area, perfect for hosting family gatherings or intimate dinners. A few steps down, you'll find a convenient bathroom and storage space, while a staircase leads to two cozy bedrooms. One of these rooms boasts a charming mezzanine, ideal for a play area or additional sleeping quarters.

The living room extends into a sunlit veranda, opening up to a spacious kitchen and dining room. Here, the log burner creates a cozy atmosphere, making it the perfect spot for winter evenings spent with loved ones. A ground-floor bedroom, utility room, and WC add to the home's practicality, offering options for guest accommodation or single-level living.

Upstairs Sanctuary


The upper level houses three additional bedrooms, two of which feature en-suite bathrooms, providing privacy and comfort for family and guests alike. The third bedroom includes a small adjoining room, ripe for conversion into a shower room or dressing area, allowing you to tailor the space to your needs.

Outdoor Oasis


Step outside to discover a garden that beckons with possibilities. Whether you envision a lush retreat for relaxation, a vibrant space for gardening, or an area for outdoor entertaining, this garden can accommodate your dreams. A two-level garage offers ample storage and workshop space, catering to hobbyists and practical needs alike.

Local Lifestyle


Huelgoat is a picturesque village renowned for its stunning lake and welcoming community. Here, life moves at a gentle pace, with opportunities for hiking, cycling, and exploring the rich cultural heritage of Brittany. The nearby town of Morlaix offers bustling markets, charming shops, and convenient train connections to Paris, making it easy to enjoy both rural tranquility and urban excitement.

Investment Potential


This property is not only a haven for personal enjoyment but also a smart investment. With its proximity to the north Brittany coast and ferry links to the UK and Ireland, it presents excellent rental opportunities for those seeking a holiday home in a sought-after location.

Key Features:


- 6 spacious bedrooms, including two with en-suite bathrooms
- Bright living room with kitchen area and log burner
- Sunlit veranda leading to a large kitchen and dining room
- Ground-floor bedroom and utility room for added convenience
- Two-level garage for storage or workshop use
- Expansive garden with potential for development
- Proximity to Huelgoat Forest and local amenities
- Easy access to Morlaix and transport links to Paris
- Ideal for permanent living, vacation use, or rental income

Your Next Chapter Awaits


This countryside retreat in Huelgoat is more than just a property; it's an invitation to a new way of life. Whether you're seeking a peaceful family home, a vacation getaway, or a place to blend living and working, this home offers endless possibilities. Arrange a viewing today and take the first step toward making this enchanting corner of Brittany your own.

Details

Amount of bedrooms
6
Size
260
Price per m²
€1,339
Garden size
7832
Has Garden
Yes
Has Parking
Yes
Has Basement
No
Condition
good
Amount of Bathrooms
3
Has swimming pool
No
Property type
House
Energy label

Unknown

Sign up to access location details

Similar properties

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 warm Tuesday morning in Jonzac, you open the terrace doors off the sitting room and the air smells faintly of mineral water and cut grass. Below you, the garden runs downhill in long, generous sweeps — through a canopy of trees, past a woodland patch that filters the light into something almost theatrical — until it reaches the quiet banks of the River Seugne. A heron stands perfectly still at the water's edge. You can hear the church bells from the old town center, just five minutes away on foot. That's the daily reality of owning this five-bedroom geothermically heated house in the heart of one of Charente-Maritime's most quietly compelling spa towns. The property sits less than 500 meters from Jonzac's center, which puts you close to everything without sacrificing the sense of space that defines life here. The upper floor holds three well-proportioned bedrooms, a bathroom with a separate WC, and a triple-aspect living and dining room that catches light from three directions. That room connects directly to the south-facing terrace — the kind of terrace you end up living on from April through October, drinking Pineau des Charentes in the early evenings while the swallows dart over the garden. The kitchen is bright and practical, also opening onto the terrace, so cooking here in summer means constant movement between inside and out. What makes this house genuinely unusual is the lower floor. Two independent guest accommodations sit completely self-contained on that level, each with private access. For a family wanting multi-generational space — grandparents, adult children, close friends who visit for weeks at a time — this layout is hard to find at this price point in France. For a buyer thinking about income gen ... 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

Picture this: it's a Saturday morning in late June, and you're already swimming laps in a 9-by-4.5-metre heated pool before the rest of the hamlet has stirred. The Dordogne air is cool but warming fast, the swallows are cutting arcs over the meadow, and through the covered summer kitchen you can smell coffee brewing. This isn't a fantasy borrowed from a magazine. It's Tuesday, actually—because when you own a place like this, every day feels like a day you chose. The house sits in the tiny hamlet of Creyssensac-et-Pissot, tucked into the rolling green hills of the Périgord Vert, a corner of France that still operates largely on its own timetable. Built in 2012 on a generous 3,725 m² plot, the single-storey villa carries none of the renovation burden that comes with older Dordogne stone farmhouses—no crumbling walls, no damp to chase, no ten-year project looming over your holidays. It earned a B energy rating thanks to full double glazing and underfloor heating throughout, which means winter visits are genuinely comfortable, and your energy bills won't make you wince. Inside, the open-plan living space does what good architecture should: it gets out of your way. The lounge, dining area, and fitted kitchen flow together naturally, lit by wide windows that pull the countryside views directly into the room. The log burner in the corner is less of a necessity—the underfloor heating handles that—and more of an occasion. Light it on a wet November evening with a bottle of Bergerac rouge and a board game on the table, and you'll understand why people keep coming back to the Dordogne season after season. Three well-proportioned bedrooms branch off a central corridor, alongside a family bathroom with both bath and shower, plus a ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a Sunday morning in Saint-Séverin, the only thing that stirs you is the smell of bread drifting up from the boulangerie two streets over and the faint clinking of bottles as the weekly market sets up on the square. You pad out through the conservatory doors in bare feet, coffee in hand, and stand at the edge of 7,000 square metres of your own French countryside. That's not a fantasy — that's Tuesday here, too. This is a proper Charente stone house. Not a ruin dressed up for photos. Not a weekend project. Solidly renovated, genuinely liveable, and built the way they built things in this part of southwest France — thick walls that stay cool through August, exposed beams that have held up for generations, and a fireplace in the sitting room that earns its keep from October through March. The stone has colour in certain light, going from pale grey to warm amber depending on the hour. You'll notice that. You'll stop noticing other things you used to care about. The main house runs to three bedrooms and flows the way a French farmhouse should — not rigidly, not in a straight line, but through rooms that connect to each other and back out to the garden at multiple points. The ground floor living and dining space anchors everything, anchored itself by that stone fireplace with its inset wood burner. From there you move into the kitchen, which is properly fitted rather than decorative, or into the conservatory, which catches afternoon light and works equally well as a reading room or an extra dining space when the table inside fills up. The main sitting room has its own wood burner too — this house takes winter seriously — and connects through to a study or music room depending on what you need it to be. The master suite oc ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Pull up the private drive on a June morning and the first thing you notice is the silence. Not the absence of sound exactly, but the particular kind of quiet that only comes with 2.2 hectares of your own woodland and gardens wrapped around a grand stone house in the Vienne countryside. Then the birds start up. Then, faintly, the church bell in La Trimouille village counts out nine o'clock. And you realize this is going to be a completely different kind of morning. This is a rare piece of rural France — a three-floor principal residence of 293 square metres plus a fully independent gatekeeper's cottage, tucked down its own private lane just a short walk from the centre of La Trimouille in the Poitou-Charentes region. At €315,650, you're looking at a property that would comfortably command double this price in Dordogne or Provence. The Vienne département still operates on its own timetable, which is one of the many reasons people who discover it tend to stay. The main house has a generous, unhurried quality. Wide wooden floors run throughout all three levels — the kind that creak pleasantly and catch afternoon light differently depending on the season. On the ground floor, the living room opens through double doors onto a south-facing terrace overlooking rolling countryside. You'll eat breakfast out there far later into autumn than you'd expect; this part of France averages close to 2,000 hours of sunshine per year. The ground floor also holds a dining room, a well-proportioned kitchen, two offices (useful for remote working or, frankly, finally writing that novel), a bedroom, a shower room, and a separate toilet. Head upstairs and four more bedrooms spread out across the first floor, served by a full bathroom. Above tha ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a clear morning in the Périgord Noir, you open the shutters and the Vézère valley just sits there below you — mist still clinging to the tree line, the stone walls of the house still cool under your fingertips. There's a smell of woodsmoke somewhere down the hillside. This is Le Bugue on a Tuesday in October, and it's enough to make you wonder why you ever left. This five-bedroom stone house sits elevated above the valley floor, its 3,400 square metres of grounds giving it a quiet authority over the surrounding landscape. From the terrace beside the swimming pool, you look out over one of the most quietly celebrated river valleys in France — the Vézère, which threads its way through prehistoric caves, market towns, and walnut orchards before joining the Dordogne near Limeuil, a village so absurdly picturesque it barely seems real. And yet here you are, looking at it. The house itself is solidly Périgordine in character. The exposed stonework isn't decorative — it's structural, original, the same golden limestone that built the churches and manor houses of this region over several centuries. The stone spiral staircase connecting the two floors is the kind of thing you'd find photographed in a heritage architecture journal. The fireplace in the 39-square-metre living room anchors everything: in January, when the Dordogne countryside pulls on a coat of frost, you'll be grateful for it. Electric underfloor heating runs throughout, so comfort is never a negotiation between atmosphere and practicality. The layout works well for a family or a group of friends. Two bedrooms sit on the ground floor — useful for anyone who prefers not to deal with stairs, or for hosting guests who value a little separation. Upstairs, three m ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Sunday morning in Chancelade sounds like this: a distant church bell from the 12th-century abbey down the road, the creak of old oak floorboards under your feet, and the smell of coffee drifting through a kitchen that has fed generations of the same family. Step outside and the light hits the raised stone terraces in that particular golden way the Dordogne does so well — not filtered or softened, just honest and warm. This is what you're actually buying. Set just five minutes from the centre of Périgueux on a plot of just under an acre, this six-bedroom stone property represents something increasingly rare in the Dordogne: genuine substance. The main residence runs across three levels and holds onto its original bones with real conviction — wide-plank floors worn smooth over decades, a sequence of open fireplaces, and a covered terrace finished in pizé du Périgord, that traditional rammed-earth technique you almost never see intact anymore. It's a material that ties the house directly to the region's building history in a way no renovation could replicate. The layout divides naturally into two distinct living zones, which opens up serious flexibility for how you use the place. The main house offers four bedrooms spread across its three levels, with the kind of generous room proportions that older French country homes do so well — proper ceiling heights, deep window reveals, spaces that feel considered rather than carved up. Then, separate from the main residence, the guest accommodation provides two en suite double bedrooms with their own living area, all overlooking the grounds. It functions entirely independently, which matters enormously whether you're hosting friends for a fortnight in August or considering the pro ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On Sunday mornings, the bells from the village church carry clean and clear through the upstairs windows — and from the second floor of this 215-square-metre manor house, you can actually see the steeple they ring from. That's not a detail you find in every property. It's the kind of thing that makes you stop mid-coffee and remember why you came to Normandy in the first place. Saint-Aubin-lès-Elbeuf sits on the south bank of the Seine, a few kilometres from Elbeuf and just 20 minutes by train from Rouen's cathedral city centre. It's a proper Norman town — bakeries that still close on Mondays, a weekly market where the cheese vendor knows regulars by name, and streets lined with the kind of stone-and-brick architecture that takes a century or two to earn its look. This manor house sits on one of those streets, on a one-way road that keeps through-traffic away, behind a large gate that shuts the outside world out entirely. The plot runs to 1,150 square metres, fully enclosed by walls — not a hedge, not a fence, actual walls — and the south-facing orientation means the terrace catches the sun from mid-morning until the light goes golden in the early evening. There's a carport, two outbuildings (one fitted with a rainwater tank for garden irrigation, which in Normandy is less of a luxury than you'd think), and mature trees that give the garden a settled, unhurried feeling. The terrace already has a sun lounger and outdoor table set up. On a warm July afternoon, with a glass of Calvados or a cold Leffe from the fridge, this corner of the garden could easily become your most-used room in the house. Inside, the ground floor is well-configured for daily life. The fitted kitchen connects to a dining room — a layout that actual ... 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

On a still Sunday morning in Saint-Grégoire-d'Ardennes, the only sound you'll hear is birdsong cutting through the cool air and the faint creak of a shutter as light rolls across the garden. That's not poetry — that's what the mornings actually feel like here, in this former farmhouse on the edge of the Haute-Saintonge, where the rhythm of life runs about three speeds slower than anywhere you've lived before. This is a 230 m² stone house with five bedrooms, sitting on more than 4,700 m² of fenced, wooded grounds between the market towns of Pons and Jonzac. It's priced at €422,000. And while those numbers are useful, they don't begin to explain what makes this place worth serious attention. Step inside and the floor plan immediately makes sense. The ground floor is laid out for living — not for showing off. A wide living room flows into a dining room with a working fireplace, the kind that you'll actually use from October through to March when Charente evenings cool fast and the region's oak forests start smelling like autumn in a way no candle has ever managed to replicate. The kitchen has its own dining area, so morning coffee happens here, not in some separate formal room nobody uses. A utility room keeps the practical mess out of sight, and also on the ground floor: a bedroom, a shower room, and a full bathroom — meaning this house works completely on a single level if that's ever needed. Upstairs, three more bedrooms with original hardwood floors that have the satisfying solidity only old timber gets with age. A quiet study that faces the garden. Two large attic spaces that are currently unconverted — and this is where the real opportunity sits for international buyers. The bones are already there to add guest roo ... 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 clear morning in Aramits, you wake to the sound of nothing except birdsong and, if the wind is right, the faint clang of sheep bells drifting down from the high pastures above the village. That's not a cliché — it's Tuesday. This is the Pyrenees-Atlantiques, one of the least spoiled corners of southwest France, and this former mountain sheepfold is the kind of place that reminds you why you started looking for a second home in Europe in the first place. What started life as a traditional bergerie — a working stone sheepfold used by Basque shepherds for centuries — was fully reconstructed between 2007 and 2010 into a three-bedroom, three-bathroom home of 160 square metres. The result is a property that has real bones: exposed ceiling beams, thick walls that keep summer heat at bay, and a large picture window in the sitting room that frames the Pyrenean ridgeline like a painting you never get tired of. Underfloor heating on the ground floor runs off an air source heat pump, the whole building is double-glazed and insulated throughout, and the DPE rating sits at C — solidly efficient for a property of this age and character. You're not buying a renovation project. You're buying a house that's already been done well. The 160m2 of habitable space is arranged across three levels. On the ground floor, an open-plan kitchen and dining area flows into the sitting room — proper, lived-in space with room for a long table when family arrives in August. Two of the three bedrooms are on this level, each with its own en-suite shower room, which makes the layout genuinely practical for hosting guests or renting short-term. The first floor landing doubles as a home office, a detail that matters more than it used to, and the third b ... click here to read more

Photo 1

Stand in the east-facing garden on a clear morning and you'll understand why Monet kept coming back to this stretch of the Seine valley. The medieval keep of La Roche-Guyon rises above the treeline, close enough that you can watch the light shift across its old stones from your own lawn. That view — that specific, unhurried view — is part of what you're buying here. The rest is a 135-square-metre stone house in Vétheuil, a village small enough that the baker knows your order by your third visit. This is not a weekend retreat you'll spend fixing. The house is in good condition, well maintained, and ready to move into or rent out from day one. The bones are serious: thick stone walls that keep rooms cool through July and August without air conditioning, original woodwork that no renovation has managed to sand away, and a gas condensing boiler installed to handle proper French winters. The character is already here. You won't need to manufacture it. On the ground floor, the layout does something increasingly rare in houses of this age — it actually works. A generous double living space runs the width of the house, with the dining room opening onto a west-facing terrace through full-height doors, and the sitting room on the east side giving onto the garden and that castle silhouette beyond. There's a fireplace in the sitting room, the kind you actually light in October, not the kind that's been sealed over and turned into a shelf. The kitchen is fully equipped and positioned so that whoever's cooking isn't exiled from the conversation happening ten feet away. Upstairs, three proper bedrooms — not two bedrooms and a room the listing optimistically calls a bedroom. There's also a study with its own terrace, a second smaller ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Step outside on a Saturday morning and the Seine is right there — glinting through the tree line, unhurried, wide, reflecting the kind of sky that makes you put your phone away. This is the Yvelines you don't see on postcards: quieter than the Loire, less trafficked than the Dordogne, and just over an hour from Paris by car or train. Bonnières-sur-Seine sits in one of the river's great looping bends, and once you've spent a weekend here, the city starts to feel like the place you go to work rather than the place you live. The house itself was built in 2007, which means it comes without the charming headaches of older French rural properties — no crumbling lime plaster, no antiquated wiring, no surprises behind the walls. What you get instead is solid modern construction on a 1,500-square-metre plot, 136 square metres of living space, and a layout that actually makes sense for how families use a home. Ground floor first. The entrance hall opens into a double living room — proper sized, not the cramped salon you find in so many French holiday homes — with an open-plan kitchen that connects the cooking and the conversation. There's a master bedroom on this level with its own shower room, which is genuinely useful if you've got older relatives or guests who'd rather not tackle a staircase. A laundry room and direct garage access round out the practical side of things. Head upstairs and the first floor opens into something more unexpected. The partial attic conversion gives the space real character — sloping ceilings in the right places, three additional bedrooms, a full bathroom, a dressing room, and a generous open area that previous owners have used as a TV lounge and a large home office. If you need a fifth bedroom, it ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Stand at the kitchen window on a still October morning and the Seine is right there — silver-grey and unhurried, sliding past your private riverbank without a sound. No road between you and the water. Just your garden, the soft thud of a fallen apple from the old tree, and a heron working the shallows. This is Chantemesle, a hamlet so quiet that even locals in nearby Vétheuil will raise an eyebrow when you mention you live there. And that is precisely the point. Set on the Haute-Île between Vétheuil and La Roche-Guyon, this four-bedroom house with an independent studio and private Seine frontage sits in one of the most quietly remarkable stretches of the Vexin Normand — a region that somehow manages to be both genuinely rural and less than 70 kilometres from central Paris. Monet painted the cliffs at Vétheuil obsessively between 1878 and 1881, and once you see the light here in late afternoon, bouncing off the river and catching the limestone bluffs, you stop wondering why. The house itself reads like a proper family home that has been lived in and loved. Ground floor: a sitting room anchored by a working fireplace — the kind you actually use from November through March — a separate dining room, a fitted kitchen, and a WC. On the first floor, three bedrooms and a master suite with its own dressing room and bathroom, plus a second shower room. Four bedrooms and a bathroom configuration that works equally well for a couple wanting room to spread out as it does for a multi-generational family pulling in from Paris for the long weekend. 158 square metres in total. Not oversized. Just right. The independent studio is the feature that makes this property genuinely interesting for buyers thinking beyond personal use. Fully s ... 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

Stand on the 80-square-metre terrace on a late June morning and you'll hear the Lot River before you see it — a low, unhurried sound threading through the stone village below, mixing with the clatter of a market being set up on the square. That's the rhythm here. Slow, deliberate, and completely irreplaceable. This five-bedroom 17th-century house on the right bank of St-Geniez-d'Olt — the oldest quarter, where the streets are barely wide enough for two people to pass comfortably — sits at a kind of sweet spot that's genuinely hard to find anywhere in southern France at this price point. The village itself is the kind of place travel writers keep "discovering" and then quietly keeping to themselves. Crossed by the Lot River and framed by the wooded hills of Aveyron, St-Geniez-d'Olt sits at the edge of the Aubrac plateau — one of the last genuinely unspoiled high plateaux in France. The surrounding landscape is why people who come here for a week end up buying property. Rolling grassland grazed by the famous Aubrac cattle, forests of beech and oak climbing the valley sides, and the Lot cutting a clean green line through it all. In July, the village hosts its annual fête with fireworks over the river. In autumn, the hills go amber and rust, and local restaurants put aligot — that volcanic, cheese-pulled potato dish unique to this corner of France — on every menu. In winter, the Aubrac plateau gets real snow, and the cross-country skiing trails around Laguiole are less than 40 minutes away. The house carries its age with dignity rather than fragility. Push open the street door and the shift is immediate: pebble-set floors underfoot, walls of raw stone, and the particular cool quiet of a building that has absorbed three cen ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Properties nearby

Imagine waking up to the gentle sounds of a stream flowing through your garden, the crisp Breton air filling your lungs as you step outside to greet the day. This is the reality of owning a second home in the enchanting village of Huelgoat, nestled in the heart of Brittany's Finistère region. This three-bedroom house offers not just a place to stay, but a lifestyle steeped in tranquility, creativity, and the rich cultural tapestry of rural France. A Home with Character and Comfort This property is a testament to the harmonious blend of traditional charm and modern convenience. Recently renovated, it boasts a bright, modern kitchen that seamlessly flows into a cozy living and dining area. Here, exposed beams and a traditional wood-burning stove create a warm, inviting atmosphere perfect for family gatherings or quiet evenings by the fire. The master bedroom, with its en-suite bathroom, offers a private retreat, while two additional bedrooms and a contemporary family bathroom provide ample space for guests or children. The house is fully double-glazed and features a newly installed electric heating system, ensuring comfort throughout the year. Endless Possibilities for Creativity and Expansion One of the property's standout features is the attached storeroom beneath the master bedroom. Currently housing the water tank, this versatile space is ripe for transformation. Whether you envision an art studio, guest annex, or workshop, the possibilities are limited only by your imagination. The grounds of the property are equally promising. With over a hectare of land bordered by a gentle stream, there's ample space for a vegetable garden, keeping a horse, or simply enjoying the open countryside. A substantial outbuilding ad ... click here to read more

Image 1

Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the distant call of birds, as the morning sun filters through the lush canopy of Armorique National Park. This is the daily reality for those fortunate enough to own a second home in the picturesque hamlet on the outskirts of Huelgoat, Brittany. This charming house, nestled in the heart of Finistère, offers a unique blend of rustic allure and modern convenience, making it an ideal retreat for those seeking tranquility without sacrificing accessibility. A Gateway to Nature and Culture Huelgoat is a gem in Brittany's crown, known for its enchanting forests, mystical rock formations, and vibrant local culture. Just a ten-minute drive from the property, this market town offers a delightful array of shops, cafes, and community events, ensuring that you're never far from the pulse of local life. For those who crave a bit more hustle and bustle, the towns of Carhaix and Morlaix are within a 20-minute drive, providing a broader range of services, schools, and transport links. A Home Designed for Comfort and Style This south-facing house has been meticulously renovated to offer a harmonious blend of traditional character and contemporary style. The spacious 169m² interior is thoughtfully designed to cater to both relaxation and entertainment. The heart of the home is a stylish 25m² kitchen, seamlessly flowing into a bright dining area, perfect for hosting family gatherings or intimate dinners. The 43m² living room, with its inviting wood-burning stove, offers a cozy retreat during cooler months, while direct access to the garden ensures a seamless indoor-outdoor living experience. The luxurious 23m² family bathroom, complete with a freestanding bathtub and walk-in shower, ... click here to read more

Image 1

Welcome to this delightful five-bedroom townhouse, located in the scenic Huelgoat, France. This private corner in Brittany, Finistère, offers an excellent opportunity for those looking for a spacious family home or a remote retreat. With a generous size of 107 sqm, a number of bedrooms to accommodate a large family, low-maintenance gardens, and accompanied by a calming patch of woodland, this property allows you to live freely without being too far from the vibrant life of Huelgoat. The house itself is well-maintained and in good condition. The welcoming entrance hall paves the way to a spacious lounge where you can entertain guests or enjoy a relaxing evening. The hall connects to the extensive dining room that leads to the garden. Conveniently situated next to the dining room is a well-equipped kitchen, boasting all the facilities necessary for gourmet cooking. A utility area with an inventive downstairs shower and a separate WC adorns the ground floor. The first floor promises abundant comfort with three double bedrooms, one of which even features its very own balcony - an ideal spot for morning cups of coffee or reading in the tranquility. The second floor harmonizes practicality and comfort with two additional bedrooms, one double, and one single, along with an accommodating bathroom. Extra storage spaces and a one-car garage are attached to the house, fulfilling all your parking and storage needs. The garage also holds a boiler room, while an outbuilding at the rear of the property houses the fuel tank and offers more storage solutions. The low maintenance garden is mainly gravelled, creating an effortless landscape that overlooks the attached woodland. Property Features: - Five bedrooms - Comfortable lounge ... click here to read more

Image 1

Nestled in the enchanting heart of Brittany, this charming detached house is a gem waiting for its next chapter. Located in the picturesque town of Huelgoat, Finistère, the property offers an enticing mix of comfort and opportunity, perfect for those seeking a slice of French life or an idyllic retreat. As a busy real estate agent, I'm thrilled to share this alluring property with you—it’s prime for those who relish the mix of tranquility and community life. Huelgoat is a tranquil little town with a magical atmosphere, gracing its residents with breathtaking views and quaint streets. This area of Brittany is famous for its stunning natural landscapes, with Huelgoat Forest nearby—a mystical woodland rich with folklore and stunning trails—perfect for weekend adventures and picnics. The town itself boasts a vibrant cultural scene, with traditional French markets where you can indulge in local delicacies and fresh produce. Living here offers a unique tapestry of life rhythms, where one can enjoy a relaxed pace intertwined with lively local activities. The house itself stands invitingly at the end of a cozy gated gravel driveway, which sweeps gracefully into the property. The home, well-maintained but not without the potential for personal touches, provides a promising canvas for you to make it your own. The vibrant garden encircles the house, fenced at the back, ensuring your family or guests can enjoy private outdoor moments amidst flower blooms and perhaps some home-grown herbs. Features of the property include: - 3 inviting bedrooms, ensuring comfort for family or guests - 3 shower rooms, each modern and convenient - A bright and airy master bedroom with 3 windows and garden access - Open-plan living area connecting s ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Are you looking for a home that offers both serenity and convenience in one package? Then, allow me to introduce you to this delightful 4-bedroom house located in the southwest region of Brittany, precisely in the small picturesque town of Huelgoat, France. It's a charming corner of the world that you're going to fall in love with, and let me tell you why! First, let's talk about the house—nestled peacefully at the end of a quiet dead-end lane, it presents itself as an ideal retreat for those who enjoy the tranquility of nature while still being close to the hustle and bustle of town livin'. You aren't going to be isolated whatsoever; rather, you'll be surrounded by the enchanting Armorique National Park, close to forest trails, and graced by the stunning lake views that Huelgoat is renowned for. The property itself consists of a cozy main cottage that is quaintly laid out with two bedrooms and a positively charming attached gite that offers an additional two bedrooms. There's plenty room for family, friends, or even for renting out to create a nice supplementary income. Imagine the possibilities! With its southwest facing positioning, you'll enjoy ample natural light throughout the day, adding to the charm that this property radiates. As soon as you enter through the door of the main cottage, you're greeted by a warm dining room leading into a snug lounge complete with a log-burning stove—perfect for those chilly Brittany evenings. The kitchen is fitted and opens out onto a pretty back garden, meaning al fresco dining could practically be a daily event! Now, don't expect to adjourn into a luxurious bath; there is no extravagant bathroom suite here, but you'll appreciate the shower room that is sensibly located off t ... click here to read more

Image 1

Nestled in the heart of Brittany's picturesque countryside, this delightful stone house in Plouyé offers a unique blend of rustic charm and modern convenience. With its breathtaking views of the rolling fields and the distant Black Mountains, this property is a haven for those seeking tranquility and a touch of adventure. Imagine waking up to the gentle sounds of nature, the sun casting a warm glow over the lush gardens that surround your new home. The ancient wisteria, with its vibrant blooms, gracefully drapes across the front facade, adding a touch of timeless beauty to the property. The well-maintained gardens are a testament to the care and love that has been poured into this home, featuring a sunny patio perfect for morning coffees or evening gatherings. Local Lifestyle and Activities Living in Plouyé means embracing a lifestyle that is both relaxed and invigorating. The village, just 3 kilometers away, is a charming hub of local culture. Here, you can enjoy live music at the local bar, savor freshly made pizzas on weekends, or simply stroll through the village square, where the Mairie and a well-stocked grocery bar await. For those who love the outdoors, the nearby tourist town of Huelgoat offers a plethora of activities. Whether you're cycling along the greenway or exploring the enchanting forest trails, there's always something to do. The climate in Brittany is mild, with warm summers and cool winters, making it an ideal location for year-round outdoor adventures. Property Features and Amenities - Size: 120 sqm - Bedrooms: 3 spacious double bedrooms - Bathrooms: 3, including 2 en-suites with bathtubs - Living Area: Bright and spacious lounge with dining area - Kitchen: Fully fitted and equipped - Outdoor S ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Welcome to a unique opportunity in Brittany, Finistère, Scrignac, France, where tradition meets modern comfort in a delightful 2-bedroom detached stone Breton longère. Nestled in the picturesque countryside just outside the charming town of Scrignac, this property is a canvas for those eager to infuse their personal touch while enjoying the serene beauty of Brittany. Property Features: - Bedrooms: 2. The spacious and bright bedrooms are designed to provide a peaceful retreat. The second bedroom features a dressing area that could alternatively serve as a cozy child’s bedroom. - Bathrooms: 1. The property includes a shower room with a WC on the ground floor, and a separate bathroom with a WC accessible from one of the bedrooms, ensuring convenience and privacy. - Size: 103m². Offering ample space for comfortable living and creativity. - Price: €178,000. A reasonable investment for a property in such a captivating location. Upon entering the longère through a welcoming hallway, you are greeted by a generously sized kitchen/diner complete with a wood-burning stove that adds warmth and character to the space. The kitchen, updated a few years ago and equipped with modern appliances, provides enough room for a dining table and a sofa, making it a perfect gathering place with views over the Breton countryside. Adjacent is another lounge, large and inviting, featuring a stunning fireplace with a wood-burning stove and a granite floor, bathed in natural light from the large window overlooking the pristine fields. Amenities Include: - Fully furnished, including SPA and a caravan. - A low-maintenance garden adorned with flowers, trees, and shrubs, offering various seating areas to enjoy the breathtaking views. - A 30m² garage. - ... click here to read more

Image 1

Immerse yourself in the rustic charm of France with this 2-bedroom detached house nestled in the picturesque commune of Poullaouen, in the Finistère department of Brittany. This stone-built cottage, comfortably housed on a 460 sqm land surface, is a delightful mix of traditional allure and densely blooming surroundings. As you open the front door, you are welcomed by a generously proportioned open-plan lounge that seamlessly blends with a neatly arranged kitchen corner. Here, the ground floor also accommodates a practical shower room abundant with natural light, equipped with a modern hand basin and WC, promising a cleansing experience that leaves you refreshed every single day. Uncover the charm of the two spacious double bedrooms situated on the house's first floor, exuding a peaceful atmosphere for a perfect night's sleep. Stepping outside, this propety doesn't disappoint. The rear door leads the way to a quaint coverred terrace, apt for those peaceful late afternoon teas, while enjoying the mesmerizing view of the lush rear garden. Plus, a neat storage shed is situated conveniently in the garden which can be utilized as per the needs. To the front of the house, a delightful garden awaits exploration, it serves as a tranquil green oasis for your morning cup of coffee. Poullaouen is a vibrant commune in Brittany. Residents enjoy a slow-paced, peaceful lifestyle here, savouring the local culture, local Breton language, traditional music and dance. The wonderful winding streets of Poullaouen, adorned with flowers and gorgeous cottages, match well with the unspoilt scenic beauty of the country. The vicinity also houses another 2-bed cottage, which could potentially interest those who are looking forward to own a holi ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the serene hamlet of Loqueffret, in the heart of Finistère, Brittany, this delightful detached house offers an ideal opportunity for those seeking a peaceful retreat or a charming second home. As a global real estate agent with a busy schedule, I can say that properties like this, in an enchanting corner of Northwest France, do not come along often. The region is known for its picturesque landscapes, characterized by lush green fields, gentle rolling hills, and a pleasant climate that suits those who enjoy a mild temperate environment. The property is located in a tranquil neighborhood, ensuring privacy and tranquility, perfect for unwinding from the hustle and bustle of busy city life. The house is not overlooked by nearby homes, allowing for an atmosphere of solitude and peace. The hamlet itself offers a serene escape, with friendly locals who cherish the slower pace of life in this scenic region. Arriving at the property, you'll notice the entrance set back from the lane into a welcoming hallway. This straightforward home layout leads you straight to the heart of the property. On the right, is a well-sized kitchen offering the perfect spot for family meals, warmed by the comforting glow of a wood-burning stove. This feature adds both an element of coziness and practicality, especially during Brittany's cooler months. On the opposite side of the hallway, you find a bright and airy lounge area, thanks to its large picture windows and rear doors that allow light to dance into space. Whether you envision this as a family living room or a space for entertaining guests, it holds great potential. A solid wooden staircase guides you to the upper floor, where two sizable bedrooms offer tranquility and rest. The f ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of Brittany, the picturesque village of Plonévez-du-Faou offers a serene escape from the hustle and bustle of city life. This charming 4-bedroom house, located on the outskirts of the village, is a perfect blend of rustic charm and modern comfort, making it an ideal second home or holiday retreat. Imagine waking up to the gentle sounds of nature, with the lush greenery of Finistère as your backdrop. This property, lovingly renovated over the past two decades, stands as a testament to quality craftsmanship and attention to detail. With its neutral decor and spacious layout, it offers a blank canvas for you to create your dream holiday home. ### A Gateway to Brittany's Rich Culture and Natural Beauty Plonévez-du-Faou is more than just a location; it's a lifestyle. Known for its vibrant cultural scene and stunning landscapes, Brittany is a haven for those seeking both relaxation and adventure. From the rolling hills to the rugged coastline, every corner of this region tells a story. - Cultural Experiences: Dive into the local culture with traditional Breton festivals, music, and dance. The nearby towns offer a rich tapestry of history and art, perfect for leisurely exploration. - Outdoor Activities: Whether you're a fan of hiking, cycling, or fishing, the surrounding countryside provides endless opportunities for outdoor pursuits. The property's own lake, stocked with fish, is a delightful spot for a quiet afternoon. - Gastronomy: Savor the flavors of Brittany with its renowned seafood, crepes, and cider. Local markets and restaurants offer a taste of the region's culinary delights. - Accessibility: Despite its tranquil setting, Plonévez-du-Faou is conveniently accessible, with major transport links ... 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

Picture yourself stepping through ancient wooden doors into a centuries-old Breton village where morning mist rolls over canal waters and church bells mark the rhythm of unhurried days. This substantial stone property sits in the heart of Châteauneuf-du-Faou, a working Finistère village where authentic Brittany unfolds beyond the tourist trail. Here, two adjoining houses connected by history and stone walls offer 5 bedrooms across 80 square meters of lived-in character, waiting for vision and energy to unlock their considerable potential as your family's Brittany vacation home base. Châteauneuf-du-Faou occupies a privileged position in Brittany's interior, where the Nantes-Brest Canal threads through green valleys and the Montagnes Noires rise to the south. This is rural Brittany at its most authentic: working farms, weekly markets overflowing with Breton produce, and stone villages where everyone still greets neighbors by name. The property sits steps from bakeries, butchers, cafés, and essential shops, making daily life wonderfully walkable while positioning you perfectly for exploring Brittany's dramatic coastlines, medieval forests, and cultural treasures. The dual-house configuration creates fascinating possibilities for vacation home ownership. The first house welcomes you through an entrance hall into a generous living and dining space anchored by a working fireplace, where winter evenings gather around crackling wood and summer doors open to garden breezes. The kitchen includes an integrated shower area, reflecting the practical Breton approach to space, while a connecting living room provides passage to the second residence. Upstairs, two bedrooms offer sleeping quarters under slate eaves. The adjoining second ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Immerse yourself in the serene and serene landscape of Brittany, situated in the Cotes d'Armor, specifically near Carnoët, France. Presenting a 3-bedroom mesmerizing property, cloistered within .57 acres of lush, fertile garden. This abode also presents an intriguing outbuilding that stands adjacent to the main property. This annexed addition is equipped with a spacious garage, dedicated boiler room, a practical utility room, and a further two storage rooms graciously blessed with space. Above all these provisions, you'll discover a vast attic, simply begging to be converted into a stunning room that could cater to myriad uses. As you step into this commodious home, you're welcomed by an entrance hall, quaintly fitted with staircases, spanning 9.69 m². Look to your right, and you're greeted with a cozy lounge stretched across a comfortable 21.25 m², and endowed with a charming wood burner. Tread to the left, and surprise yourself with a sprawling, well-fitted kitchen cum diner, minimalistically spread over 18.61 m². Meander up the stairs to the first floor, and you'll be greeted by a landing, cozily set within 7.65 m². On this level, you will find three double bedrooms – one of 9.64 m², the other of 10.17 m², and the large bedroom, lavishly sprawled out over 19.86 m². This floor also includes a shower room paired with a water closet, occupying a modest 4.39 m². The staircase leads to a second floor which is home to a sizable attic room, ripe for transformation. This prospective gem covers an expansive 48.14 m² area with a boarded floor and is enlightened by natural light filtering through three velux windows, enabling endless potential for a generous bedroom with en-suite facilities. Adjacent to the main house stands ... click here to read more

Photo 1

Picture yourself sipping morning coffee in a sun-filled kitchen as mist lifts from the Breton countryside, revealing rolling green hills dotted with ancient stone farmhouses. This is life in Saint-Thois, where your 4-bedroom family home sits on nearly 5,000 square meters of private land, offering the perfect blend of authentic Brittany character and comfortable modern living. Here, just minutes from the artistic town of Quimper and the wild Atlantic coastline, you've found your anchor point for exploring one of France's most distinctive regions. This 158-square-meter house combines traditional stone construction with contemporary updates, creating flexible living spaces that adapt to family gatherings, summer visitors, or peaceful winter retreats. The ground floor flows naturally from the entrance into an open-concept living area where the fitted kitchen merges with the main living space, centered around a wood-burning insert that becomes the heart of the home during cooler months. The generous room currently serving as a games area offers endless possibilities: transform it into a guest suite, home office for remote work, or artist's studio flooded with northern light. A separate laundry room and ground-floor WC complete this practical level. Upstairs, the sleeping quarters provide genuine family accommodation with three bedrooms including one with an ensuite shower room, plus a full bathroom and separate WC. The second floor adds even more versatility with a mezzanine space and an additional bedroom, perfect for teenagers seeking independence, visiting friends, or creating rental income by offering a private floor to holiday guests. Throughout, PVC double-glazing ensures comfort and energy efficiency, while the natur ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Discover a charming 3-bedroom house nestled in Brittany, Morbihan, in the picturesque town of Gourin, France. This beautifully renovated property is not just a house; it's a home that awaits those looking to immerse themselves in the rich culture and tranquil lifestyle of Brittany. With a welcoming living space of approximately 173 m², this residence is thoughtfully designed for comfort and ease, making it a perfect choice for overseas buyers looking for a serene getaway or a new place to call home. The house sits on a generously sized plot of 0.10 of an Acre, boasting an enclosed garden with a gated entrance, providing both security and privacy. Parking is convenient, with ample space for 2 cars. Featuring a stone outbuilding, this property offers the potential for expansion, opening up possibilities such as creating additional accommodation, subject to the necessary planning permissions. ### Property Features: - Bedrooms: Three spacious bedrooms, two of which are double bedrooms with fireplaces and bioethanol burners, creating a warm and inviting atmosphere. One of these bedrooms benefits from an ensuite shower room. - Bathrooms: In addition to the ensuite, there is a well-appointed family bathroom and a separate utility room with WC on the ground floor. - Living Area: A spacious and elegant lounge/diner graced with a stunning wood-burning stove, exposed beams, and stone walls, spreading over 60 m². - Kitchen: A functional kitchen equipped with handmade fitted units, appliances, and a cozy space for a breakfast table and chairs. - Additional Spaces: The first floor hosts a mezzanine bedroom with a dressing area and a large attic, offering the potential to create further bedrooms. The property also enjoys the benefit ... click here to read more

Photo 28

Welcome to your future home nestled in the quiet, charming countryside of Trébrivan. This picturesque village, located in Côtes-d’Armor, Brittany, France, offers a perfect blend of serenity and accessibility, ideal for those seeking tranquility yet still wishing to be connected to the world. Imagine waking up each morning to the expansive views of verdant landscapes, with no one overlooking your private little haven. The property in question is a delightful two-bedroom house, sprawling across 73 square meters. While it may not be considered a sprawling mansion, it offers just the right amount of space for comfort and coziness. The main living area is accessible via a few exterior steps leading to an inviting entrance hallway. On the right, you'll step into a bright and airy living room. Here, large windows—newly installed with double glazing—flood the room with sunlight while keeping the chill at bay. Complementing the room's warmth is a traditional wood-burning fireplace, perfect for those crisp Brittany winters. Adjacent to the living room is a separate, functional kitchen. Spacious enough to whip up a French feast, this kitchen has all you need without being overly ostentatious. It's a practical space, ideal for both everyday meals and hosting dinner parties for your neighbors or visiting family. From the hallway, a sturdy wooden stairway takes you to the upper floor, where two surprisingly spacious double bedrooms await. Each room is designed to offer comfort and the windows provide vibrant glimpses of the surrounding countryside. Upstairs, you'll find the family bathroom featuring a full-sized bathtub with an overhead shower, ensuring both convenience and luxury. Venture outside and you'll discover one of this p ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the picturesque landscape of Brittany in the Côtes-d'Armor department, the charming village of Maël-Carhaix presents a unique opportunity for those looking to immerse themselves in French rural living. This delightful 1-bedroom detached house, available for sale, offers an ideal dwelling for couples or serves as a perfect retreat as a holiday home. The property has recently undergone significant renovations to enhance comfort and functionality. These upgrades include the installation of new PVC windows and doors, ensuring improved insulation and security. Additionally, crucial infrastructural enhancements have been made with a new fosse septic system. The interior has been thoughtfully updated; the ground floor features an open-plan layout with a warm, inviting lounge and dining area, complemented by a wood-burning stove that adds a cozy ambiance during cooler evenings. A newly fitted kitchen provides modern conveniences, blending functionality with style. Ascending to the upper floor, the spacious bedroom offers a tranquil setting for rest, accompanied by a newly installed bathroom suite complete with a WC, ensuring all the comforts of home. Outside, the property boasts a gated driveway with ample space for two cars and a charming garden predominantly at the front of the house. The garden is adorned with an array of shrubs and plants, and also features a well, enhancing the rustic appeal of the home. An additional shed provides convenient storage solutions or potential for a workshop. Property Features: - 1 spacious bedroom - Modern fitted bathroom - Open plan lounge/dining area - Wood burning stove - Newly installed PVC windows and doors - Modern kitchen - Gated driveway with parking for two cars - Front ... click here to read more

Image 1

Welcome to a charming and quiet part of Brittany, Côtes-d'Armor, in the humble village of Maël-Carhaix, France. Surrounded by the enchanting French countryside, this house offers the ultimate provincial life experience. Set in a peaceful, rustic setting, the property's location provides a tranquil retreat away from the fast-paced urban lifestyle. It is ideally situated only a short 4-minute drive from the verdant heart of Maël-Carhaix, an authentic village brimming with local cultural charm. This idyllic house boasts a sizable 40 square meter floor area and is poised on a generous 984m2 of land — offering ample outdoor space for recreational activities or simply enjoying the serene ambiance. The living area is designed with an open plan which harmoniously blends the lounge, dining room, and kitchen into one. A newly fitted kitchen camouflages modern functionality in traditional aesthetics, creating an environment that is both comfortable and inviting. The welcoming lounge area is equipped with a wood-burning stove, perfect for those cozy winter evenings. Upstairs, the house harbors a vast bedroom exuding character and warmth. The new bathroom suite with a WC meets the demands of today's modern comforts without compromising the house's rustic charm. The property is surrounded by a garden adorned with various plants and shrubs and a well, indicating the possibility of natural groundwater. A gated driveway can comfortably accommodate two vehicles. Additionally, there is a 6m2 shed that provides extra storage or potential for a quaint workshop. The local area introduces ample amenities: - Restaurants and bars offering local cuisine - A bank for financial convenience - A weekly market showcasing local produce and crafts ... click here to read more

Image 1