Charming 4-Bedroom House in Mialet, Dordogne: Ideal Second Home or Holiday Retreat

Listed on
https://storage.googleapis.com/homestra-images/property-image-87eeab45-d1c8-4203-a1b2-2dcac75fe071-1750962269.jpg

Aquitaine, Dordogne, Mialet, France, Mialet (France)

4 Bedrooms · 2 Bathrooms · 80Floor area

€155,000

House

No parking

4 Bedrooms

2 Bathrooms

80m²

Garden

No pool

Not furnished

Description

Nestled in the picturesque village of Mialet, in the heart of the Dordogne region, this delightful four-bedroom house offers an idyllic escape for those seeking a second home in France. With its blend of rustic charm and modern comforts, this property is perfect for anyone looking to immerse themselves in the tranquil lifestyle of the French countryside.

Imagine waking up to the gentle sounds of nature, sipping your morning coffee on the terrace as the sun rises over the lush landscape. This is the everyday reality for those who choose to make this house their second home. The property is in good condition, ready for you to move in and start enjoying the serene surroundings.

Key Features:
- Location: Situated in Mialet, a vibrant village in the Dordogne, known for its rich history and stunning natural beauty.
- Bedrooms: Four spacious bedrooms, including a versatile study that can double as a fourth bedroom.
- Bathrooms: Two modern bathrooms, ensuring comfort and convenience for family and guests.
- Living Space: An open-plan living area with a cozy wood burner, perfect for entertaining or relaxing on chilly evenings.
- Kitchen/Diner: A renovated kitchen with a dining area, ideal for family meals and gatherings.
- Garden: A generous garden with mature fruit trees, offering ample space for outdoor activities or a vegetable patch.
- Garage and Hangar: Additional storage and potential for further development, subject to necessary permissions.
- Accessibility: Just a short drive from La Coquille, with its supermarket and train line, providing easy access to larger towns and cities.
- Local Amenities: The village boasts a bakery, butcher, post office, restaurant, and shops, ensuring all your daily needs are met.

Lifestyle and Activities:
Living in Mialet offers a unique blend of rural charm and modern convenience. The village is a hub of activity, with local markets, festivals, and community events that provide a taste of authentic French culture. The surrounding countryside is a haven for outdoor enthusiasts, with hiking trails, cycling routes, and opportunities for fishing and kayaking in the nearby rivers.

The Dordogne region is renowned for its mild climate, making it an ideal location for a holiday home. Summers are warm and sunny, perfect for exploring the local vineyards and enjoying alfresco dining. Winters are mild, allowing for cozy evenings by the fire and leisurely walks through the countryside.

Investment Potential:
This property not only offers a peaceful retreat but also presents an excellent investment opportunity. The Dordogne is a popular destination for tourists, and the demand for holiday rentals is high. With its prime location and charming features, this house has the potential to generate a substantial rental income.

A Second Home Experience:
Owning a second home in Mialet means more than just having a place to stay; it's about embracing a lifestyle. It's about leisurely mornings spent exploring the local markets, afternoons filled with outdoor adventures, and evenings enjoying the company of friends and family in a beautiful setting.

Whether you're looking for a holiday retreat, a place to retire, or an investment property, this house in Mialet offers it all. Don't miss the chance to own a piece of the French countryside and create lasting memories in this enchanting location.

Contact us today to arrange a viewing and take the first step towards making this dream a reality.

Details

Amount of bedrooms
4
Size
80
Price per m²
€1,938
Garden size
3290
Has Garden
Yes
Has Parking
No
Has Basement
No
Condition
good
Amount of Bathrooms
2
Has swimming pool
No
Property type
House
Energy label

Unknown

Sign up to access location details

Similar properties

On a quiet Sunday morning in Alba-la-Romaine, you open the shutters and the smell of fresh bread drifts up from the boulangerie two streets over. Church bells knock out a lazy rhythm from the old campanile. Below, the stone-paved lanes are still cool in the shade. By nine, there will be neighbours at the cafe tables on Place de la Mairie, the morning market will be arranging itself around the old fountain, and you will have nowhere particular to be. That is the specific texture of life on Rue Chabrol — and this 113-square-metre village house puts you right at the centre of it. Alba-la-Romaine sits in the southern Ardèche, about twenty minutes west of the Rhône valley and the A7 motorway. It is not famous in the way that Gordes or Les Baux-de-Provence are famous — and that is precisely its appeal. The village has earned its place on the list of France's most architecturally significant historic settlements without becoming overrun. The Château d'Alba crowns the basalt rock above the rooftops, medieval in its silhouette but built on Roman foundations that were themselves raised over a Gallo-Roman town. Active archaeological excavations still turn up finds on the edge of the village, and a small but genuinely interesting local museum — the Musée de l'Ardèche — displays mosaics and pottery recovered from the site. It is the kind of place where history is not performed for tourists; it is simply woven into the stone underfoot. The house itself is on Rue Chabrol, steps from the village core. The ground floor opens around a vaulted room — proper barrel-vaulted stone, the kind that took craftsmen centuries to figure out and nobody builds anymore. It gives the kitchen and dining area a weight and atmosphere that no amount of in ... click here to read more

Front view of 24 Chabrol 0740
New

Step outside on a Tuesday morning and the air smells like damp grass and woodsmoke. Somewhere down the lane a church bell marks the half-hour. The kitchen has a wood burner going, the coffee is strong, and through the window you can see all the way across the bocage — that ancient patchwork of hedgerows, meadows, and apple orchards that makes this corner of Normandy feel like somewhere time forgot to rush. That's the daily reality of owning this early-1900s stone house in Tinchebray-Bocage, and it's hard to overstate how quickly it gets under your skin. The house itself sits on just under 1.5 acres, which in this part of the Orne département means genuine privacy, genuine quiet, and genuine space. At 106 square metres across two floors, the layout is generous without being unmanageable — the kind of house you can open up fully in summer and hunker down in warmly during the colder months. The previous owners clearly put in the hard work already: the property is in very good condition throughout, with double-glazed windows keeping the heat in and the renovation done to a standard that means you arrive, unpack, and start living rather than start snagging. The ground floor sets the tone immediately. The living room stretches to over 26 square metres and has a fireplace at its heart — on a wet November afternoon, this room becomes the centre of the universe. Beside it, the fitted dining kitchen runs to nearly 17 square metres and comes equipped with its own wood-burning stove, so even cooking here has a particular warmth to it, both literally and in atmosphere. A utility room handles the practical side of country life — muddy boots, wet coats, firewood — and a ground-floor shower room with WC adds real convenience for guest ... click here to read more

Photo 1

There's a particular kind of quiet you only find in this corner of France. Standing on the private terrace on a Sunday morning, coffee in hand, you hear nothing but birdsong and the faint rustle of leaves from the garden's edge. No traffic. No sirens. Just the deep, unhurried exhale of rural Limousin. That's what this two-bedroom house in Rochechouart offers — and once you've felt it, you'll understand why people come here and never quite want to leave. Rochechouart sits in the Haute-Vienne department, about as authentically French as a town can get without being on a tourist poster. It's built on the rim of a 200-million-year-old meteorite impact crater — yes, an actual crater — and the local Musée de la Préhistoire documents this remarkable geological history in ways that'll have even skeptical visitors lingering longer than planned. The medieval château dominates the hilltop, and on market days the square below it fills with vendors selling Limousin beef, local walnuts, and cheeses that have no business being as good as they are. This isn't the manicured, postcard-perfect Dordogne that gets all the magazine coverage. It's better. It's real. The house itself is a compact, single-story bungalow — 56 square metres of well-proportioned living that gets the essentials exactly right. Two bedrooms, one bathroom, and four rooms total, arranged in a way that feels practical rather than cramped. The kitchen-diner is the heart of the home: a proper gathering space with a fireplace where the whole point is to sit around it on October evenings with a bottle of local wine and absolutely nowhere to be. The living room opens to views across the private garden, and the terrace catches the afternoon light in a way that makes you reth ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Sunday morning in La Roquette: the bells of Villefranche drift across the valley, a faint smell of woodsmoke still lingering from last night's fire, and from your terrace you look out over a medieval village that hasn't changed its roofline in three centuries. That's the view from this 160 m² stone house. Not a simulation of rural French life — the real thing, at a price that still makes sense. La Roquette is the kind of hamlet that doesn't appear in guidebooks. It sits in the Aveyron, a department that most international buyers fly over on the way to somewhere flashier, which is precisely why property values here remain grounded while quality of life absolutely doesn't. This is deep southwest France: the Rouergue plateau, walnut orchards, limestone ridges, rivers cold enough to swim in well into August. The local dialect is Occitan, the bread is dense and sour, and the Wednesday market in Villefranche — ten minutes down the road — has been running since the bastide town was founded in 1252. The house sits elevated above the village lane, giving it that unobstructed sweep across the rooftops and out to the surrounding countryside. Stone houses in this part of Aveyron are built to last centuries, and this one carries all the hallmarks: thick walls that keep rooms cool through July and warm in January, original stonework on the facade, and the kind of solidity underfoot that modern construction simply cannot replicate. The condition is good — this isn't a renovation project waiting to swallow your budget, but a property you can move into and gradually make your own. Downstairs, the layout is genuinely liveable rather than just photogenic. The 32 m² living room with its fireplace is the heart of things — big enough to ho ... click here to read more

Photo 5

Picture a Tuesday morning in summer: you step out of your front door, still holding a coffee, and within three minutes you've nodded to the boulanger on Rue du Marché, bought tomatoes that were on the vine yesterday, and are back in your courtyard under a lime tree before the morning gets warm. That's not a fantasy — that's just Tuesday in Chef-Boutonne. This five-bedroom townhouse sits right in the middle of it all, and at under €100,000, it's one of those rare finds that makes you stop scrolling. Chef-Boutonne is a small market town in the Deux-Sèvres department of Poitou-Charentes, the kind of place that French people from the cities quietly buy into while property prices elsewhere have gone sideways. It sits in a gentle limestone valley about 40 minutes southeast of Niort, roughly an hour and a half from Poitiers, and about two and a half hours from Bordeaux if you take the N10. La Rochelle — with its Atlantic beaches, its old harbour, and its year-round flights from the UK, Belgium, and the Netherlands — is under an hour and a half away. The practical reality for international buyers is strong: fly into La Rochelle or Poitiers, pick up a rental car, and you're here before lunch. The house itself sits on three levels and gives you 174 square metres to work with — serious floor area for a family or for anyone thinking about rental income. On the ground floor, the entrance opens into a living and dining room that gets good afternoon light, with a kitchen alongside and a ground-floor bedroom complete with its own shower room and WC. That ground-floor suite is worth noting: it works well for elderly relatives or guests who'd rather avoid stairs, and for rental purposes, it functions almost as a self-contained annexe. U ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Saturday morning in Sauzé-Vaussais and the smell of fresh bread from the boulangerie on Rue du Marché drifts through the kitchen window before you've even put the coffee on. The cathedral ceiling above you catches the early light, throwing long shadows across original stone walls that have stood here for well over a century. This is what slow French living actually feels like — not the postcard version, but the real one. This four-bedroom stone farmhouse in the heart of Deux-Sèvres sits on the edge of one of Poitou-Charentes' most genuinely liveable market towns. At 234 square metres of interior space plus multiple stone outbuildings, there's a generosity here that's increasingly rare at this price point in rural France. The property is in good condition throughout — meaning you can arrive, unpack, and start living rather than project-managing. Walk through the entrance hall and the double-height living room stops you. Properly stops you. The open mezzanine gallery floats above, a cast-iron wood-burning stove anchors one wall, and the exposed beams overhead give the room a warmth that no interior designer can manufacture — it just accumulates over decades. On a January evening with the stove lit and rain on the old stone courtyard outside, this room earns its keep in a way no modern open-plan ever quite manages. The kitchen is the other great room. Stone-flagged floors, a traditional range cooker, a fireplace fitted with its own log burner, and a dining area large enough for the whole extended family to argue cheerfully around. It's the kind of kitchen where Sunday lunch becomes a four-hour event. The ground floor also includes a bedroom — genuinely useful if you have older relatives visiting or simply prefer not to c ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a quiet Tuesday morning in Charroux, you can walk out onto your wooden terrace with a coffee and hear almost nothing. A church bell in the distance. Maybe a tractor somewhere beyond the stone walls. The air carries that particular mix of cut grass and old limestone that you only get in the Vienne countryside, and the view out over the surrounding hills doesn't have a single billboard, rooftop antenna, or modern intrusion to break it. This is what €130,780 buys you in one of France's most overlooked medieval villages — and once you've spent a weekend here, you'll struggle to understand why more people haven't discovered it already. Charroux sits in the heart of Poitou-Charentes, a region that most international buyers race through on their way to the Dordogne or the Vendée coast without realizing what they're passing. That's your advantage. The village itself is classified as one of the Plus Beaux Villages de France — a designation earned by fewer than 160 communes in the entire country — and it earns that status honestly, with its 11th-century abbey ruins, cobblestone lanes barely wide enough for a Citroën, and a Saturday market where the same families have been selling goat cheese and walnuts for generations. The centre is a five-minute walk from this house. Not a vague "close to amenities" five minutes — a genuine, flat, pleasant walk past honey-coloured stone walls. The house itself has been fully renovated and is genuinely ready to move into, which matters more than it sounds in this part of France where "good condition" can sometimes be a generous interpretation. Here, the work has been done properly: double glazing throughout, electric shutters, and — crucially — an air-to-water heat pump system that keeps ene ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Sunday morning in Villecomtal sounds like this: a church bell somewhere above the rooftops, the clatter of a shutter being thrown open two doors down, and the faint smell of bread drifting up from the boulangerie on the square. You're standing on your lower terrace, coffee in hand, and the village is just waking up around you. This is the kind of morning that made you start looking for a place in France in the first place. This house has been here since the 14th century — and it looks it, in the best possible way. The stone walls are thick enough to keep rooms cool through the fiercest August heat. The slate roof, regularly maintained, does what good roofs are supposed to do: nothing dramatic, just quietly keeps everything below it safe and dry. A 19th-century extension added breathing room without disrupting the logic of the original structure, and a recent renovation has brought the whole 150 sqm into genuine comfort without filing away the edges that give the place its character. Walk through the front door and the main living area — roughly 43 sqm — opens up in a way that makes you exhale. The kitchen, dining area, and sitting room flow into each other naturally, and the fireplace with its wood-burning stove anchors everything. On a cold January evening in the Aveyron, that stove isn't a decorative detail. It's the reason you'd rather be here than anywhere else. Three bedrooms occupy the garden level, which sits below the main living floor and opens onto the lower terrace — the more sheltered of the two outdoor spaces, screened from the lane, genuinely private. The master suite runs to around 31 sqm with its own bathroom and WC. The two further rooms, at 19 sqm and 13 sqm respectively, work well as guest rooms, ki ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Step through the heavy oak door on a Saturday morning in October and the smell hits you first — old stone warmed by a wood-burning stove, with just a trace of whatever someone baked in that antique bread oven a century before you arrived. That's the thing about a proper French longère. It carries its history lightly, without making a fuss about it. Valdelaume sits in the heart of Deux-Sèvres, a département that most international buyers haven't discovered yet — which is precisely the point. This isn't the tourist-worn Dordogne or the sun-scorched Côte d'Azur. It's rural Poitou-Charentes at its most honest: rolling bocage countryside, sunflower fields that stretch to the horizon in July, and village life that still runs on its own unhurried clock. Your nearest town, Melle, is just a short drive away, and it punches well above its size — a Romanesque church that's part of the UNESCO-listed pilgrimage route to Santiago de Compostela, a weekly market on the square that's been running longer than anyone can remember, and a handful of decent restaurants where the duck confit is the real thing. The property itself sits at the end of a quiet cul-de-sac, which in practice means you hear almost nothing from the road. What you do hear: wood pigeons, the occasional tractor working a field somewhere in the distance, and in the evenings, absolute silence. The fully enclosed plot runs to over 1,700 m², giving you genuine privacy on all sides — no neighbours looking over a fence, no holiday park noise, no compromise. At 165 square metres of living space, the house has real substance. The ground floor flows from an entrance hall into a fully fitted kitchen — the kind of kitchen that actually functions, with proper appliances already i ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Saturday morning in Civray starts with a sound you won't hear in Paris or London — the unhurried clatter of market stalls being set up along the town square, vendors arranging towers of local goat's cheese, bunches of sunflowers, and baskets of walnuts from the Charente countryside. From this house, you can walk there in under ten minutes. That's not a selling point dressed up as a lifestyle — it's just Tuesday. Or Saturday. Or any day you choose. Civray sits in the southern tip of the Vienne department, in a region that most international buyers haven't discovered yet — which is precisely why it still feels real. The Charente River curves lazily around the edge of town, and the surrounding landscape is the kind of unhurried, rolling farmland that makes you slow down involuntarily. If you've been looking at overpriced Dordogne villages or the increasingly crowded Lot, the Vienne is quietly offering something comparable for a fraction of the cost. This house is a proper maison bourgeoise — the kind of solid, high-ceilinged French townhouse that was built to last centuries and very much has. At 103 square metres, it's not enormous, but every room breathes. The ground floor draws you in through a living room lined with decorative wood panelling that catches the afternoon light in a way that feels almost theatrical — warm, amber, like the inside of a French film you can't quite name. That room flows into a lounge with an ornamental fireplace, and beyond it, a fitted modern kitchen that somehow manages to feel at home alongside all the period character. French doors off the kitchen open directly onto the terrace, so summer dinners happen naturally outside — a carafe of Haut-Poitou rosé, the garden going gold in the evening ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Picture this: a Saturday morning in early June, the air carrying the faint sweetness of flowering linden trees, a rooster somewhere in the distance, and nothing but the sound of your own footsteps on old stone as you walk across the courtyard to figure out what this barn could one day become. That's the kind of quiet that Clussais-la-Pommeraie deals in. It's not dramatic. It's not performant. It's just deeply, genuinely peaceful — the kind that people from Paris or London or Amsterdam spend years trying to find and then overpay for somewhere more famous. This is Poitou-Charentes, one of France's most underrated rural regions, sitting right in the soft belly of the country between the Loire Valley to the north and the Cognac country to the south. The Deux-Sèvres department doesn't have the international name recognition of Provence or the Dordogne, and that's precisely why a stone property complex on roughly 2,400 square metres of land with a courtyard, a garden, a 240-square-metre barn, and multiple outbuildings is available for €70,000. Let's talk about what that number actually means. For the price of a decent second-hand car in London or a semester of private school fees in Switzerland, you're acquiring a genuine piece of rural France — original stone construction, exposed beams, a fireplace still intact, an attic that adds another 46 square metres of potential living space above the 90-square-metre ground floor. The property needs full renovation, and that's the point. It's a blank canvas, not a compromised one. Someone hasn't already ripped out the character and replaced it with laminate flooring and recessed lighting. The bones are there, waiting. The barn alone changes the arithmetic of what's possible here. At ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a quiet Sunday morning in Brie, the kind of quiet that cities charge a premium for, you open the French doors off the first-floor living room and step onto the terrace with a coffee. The Charente countryside rolls out in front of you — pale gold fields in summer, mist-softened green in autumn — and the only sound is a distant tractor and whatever bird has claimed the courtyard wall. That's the morning this house gives you, reliably, every time you show up. Brie is a small commune in the Charente department, deep in the Poitou-Charentes region of southwestern France. It sits in that comfortable middle ground that serious buyers of French property know to look for: rural enough to feel genuinely removed from the pace of modern life, but close enough to real infrastructure that you're never stranded. The commercial hub at Champniers is just a few kilometres away — hypermarket, hardware, the practical errands done in twenty minutes. Angoulême, one of the most underrated cities in France, is eighteen minutes by car to the main station, which puts you on a direct TGV to Paris Montparnasse in under two hours. Bordeaux is roughly ninety minutes south. This is not a remote retreat you'll eventually resent; it's a genuinely usable second home in France. Angoulême deserves more than a passing mention. The city runs on two great obsessions: comics and cognac. The Festival International de la Bande Dessinée, held every January, transforms the old town into an open-air gallery and draws visitors from across Europe. Year-round, the medieval ramparts above the Charente river offer some of the best walking in the region, and the covered market on Place des Halles — open Tuesday through Sunday — sells Charentais melons so ripe in Jul ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a still morning in the Cantal countryside, the only sound is a wood pigeon calling from the oak at the edge of the field. No traffic. No sirens. Just the creak of old timber, the faint smell of woodsmoke still lingering from the stone fireplace the night before, and light coming in slow and gold through windows that frame a landscape unchanged for centuries. This is Bessé — and life here moves at a pace most people have forgotten is still possible. This six-bedroom stone house sits in a quiet hamlet in the Cantal department of Auvergne, one of the least-visited, most quietly rewarding corners of rural France. It's the kind of property that stops you mid-conversation the moment you step through the door. The exposed stone walls have a solidity to them that feels almost geological, and the heavy oak beams overhead give the interior that particular warmth you can't fake with renovation. The proportions are generous — genuinely generous, not estate-agent generous — with a ground-floor living room stretching to around 80 square metres, anchored by a period fireplace fitted with a wood-burning stove. On a January evening with snow on the hills and a Truyère stew on the stove, this room becomes the entire world. The layout works well for a large family or a rotating cast of guests. Three bedrooms on the ground floor, three more upstairs, a shower room, a bathroom, and sensible separation between sleeping and living spaces. The house is in good condition — you're not buying a project that swallows summers and savings. You're buying something that's already liveable, already warm, already itself. Outside, the grounds include a well — useful and evocative in equal measure — plus a collection of outbuildings that opens up ser ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Sunday morning in Melle, and the smell of something baking drifts up from the boulangerie on Rue de Niort before you've even opened the shutters. You pad downstairs in socks, fire up the log burner in the kitchen, and the whole ground floor starts to warm up. That's the rhythm of life in this corner of Poitou-Charentes — unhurried, deeply French, and nothing like the tourist-saturated south. Melle is one of those towns that rewards people who actually look. Sitting in the Deux-Sèvres department, it punches well above its weight: three Romanesque churches dating to the 11th and 12th centuries, a working silver mine that once supplied coins to the Frankish kings (the Mines d'Argent des Rois Francs is genuinely fascinating, not just "historically significant"), a weekly market on Saturday mornings where local producers sell Charentais melon, goat's cheese rolled in ash, and the area's distinctive Pineau des Charentes. It's about 70 kilometres south of Poitiers and 80 kilometres east of La Rochelle — close enough to the Atlantic coast for a spontaneous beach day on the Île de Ré, far enough to feel worlds away from the summer crowds. This four-bedroom, four-bathroom house sits right in the commune and has been finished to a level you don't often find at this price point. At 201 square metres, it gives everyone room to breathe — which matters enormously when you're sharing a holiday home with extended family or hosting friends from abroad. The centrepiece of daily life here is the large eat-in kitchen, anchored by a log burner that turns it into the kind of room where conversations last hours. On grey November afternoons or cold January evenings, when the courtyard stones glisten with rain, this is where you'll want to be. ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a quiet morning in Villemain, the only sound you'll hear is birdsong cutting through cool air and the distant creak of a wooden shutter swinging open somewhere down the lane. That's the pace of life here — and once you've felt it, the city you came from starts to feel very far away indeed. This four-bedroom stone farmhouse sits on the edge of the village of Villemain, a small commune in the Deux-Sèvres department of Poitou-Charentes, in a part of France that most international buyers haven't discovered yet. That's both an honest observation and, frankly, a significant advantage. Property prices here remain well below those of the Dordogne or the Lot, yet the quality of the landscape, the food, and the way of life is every bit as rewarding. The house itself is in good condition — no project property requiring months of contractors, just a well-built, characterful home that's ready to live in from the first weekend you arrive. Pull through the iron gates onto the broad gravelled driveway and the house announces itself properly. The full stone frontage stretches the width of the plot, and there's room to park four or five cars comfortably — useful when family comes down from Paris or friends fly in from London through Poitiers-Biard airport, barely an hour's drive north. Step through the front door and the entrance hall does something that very few rooms manage: it makes you want to slow down. Original terracotta tiles underfoot, a fireplace for the cooler months, and a wooden staircase that curves upward with the kind of confidence that only comes from being built to last. This is not a house that was thrown up quickly. The lounge runs wide across the front of the building, wooden floors worn smooth with age, a stone ... click here to read more

Picture 1

The wood-burning stove in the kitchen is already lit when you picture yourself here on a grey November morning, a pot of something slow-cooking on the range, the smell of oak smoke drifting through the ground floor, and nothing outside the window but your own seven thousand square metres of French countryside. That's the pull of this place. It doesn't try to impress you. It just quietly gets on with being exactly what rural France is supposed to feel like. Set in the village of Messé in the Deux-Sèvres département of Poitou-Charentes, this three-bedroom house sits on a generous plot that extends well beyond 7,000 m² — land that includes a large barn ripe for conversion, several outbuildings, a workshop, and a wood store. For buyers hunting a proper second home in France with room to grow, this is a rare find under the €200,000 mark. The property is in good condition and liveable right now, but the real story here is what it could become over time. Walk through the front door and the entrance hall opens into a kitchen that makes you want to cook. Not open a packet — actually cook. It's fitted, it's generous in size, and it has both a range-style cooker and a wood-burning cooking stove that doubles as the heart of the home on cold evenings. The living and dining area flows from here with its own wood-burning stove, creating the kind of ground-floor warmth that central heating alone never quite manages. A shower room with WC completes the downstairs layout, practical and neatly arranged. Upstairs, a landing connects three comfortable bedrooms and a family bathroom with WC. The heating system is cleverly thought through: the stoves handle the ground floor, while an air-to-air heat pump covers the upper level — a mixed sys ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Imagine waking up on a Saturday morning to the faint toll of church bells drifting across the rooftops of Brux, pulling on a linen shirt, and walking two minutes to the local boulangerie for a still-warm baguette before the rest of the village stirs. That's the pace of life here. Quiet, unhurried, and real. This four-bedroom renovated stone house in the Vienne department of Poitou-Charentes isn't just a property — it's a doorway into one of rural France's most genuinely liveable corners, at a price that makes it one of the smartest second home opportunities in the country right now. The house itself pulls you in from the street. The traditional stone façade gives nothing away — you have to step through the front door to understand what's been done here. Whoever renovated this place clearly loved it. Exposed stone walls run through the open-plan living and dining room, where timber beams cross the ceiling overhead and wide wooden floorboards run underfoot. A wood-burning stove anchors the room, and on a cool October evening with the fire lit and a bottle of local Charentais Pineau opened, you'll understand exactly why people fall for French country houses and never quite recover. The kitchen is the kind that makes you actually want to cook. A central island, generous worktop space, well-thought-out storage, and a direct door out to the courtyard — so you can hand plates through to guests without navigating a corridor. The materials are authentic: stone, wood, solid fittings. Nothing feels like a shortcut. On the ground floor, there's a bedroom with its own modern shower room. For families with older parents or guests who can't manage stairs, this is genuinely useful. Upstairs, three further bedrooms hold onto the build ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a quiet Sunday morning in the hamlet of Saint-Romain, you'd hear almost nothing. A wood pigeon somewhere in the oaks. Maybe the distant clang of church bells drifting over from Charroux, that perfectly preserved medieval village ten minutes down the road where market traders set up their stalls beside the ruins of a Benedictine abbey. That stillness is the point. This is rural Vienne at its most unhurried — and this renovated farmhouse sits right in the middle of it. The property is a former working farmhouse that's been brought back to life without losing its bones. Stone walls, generous room proportions, the kind of building that took decades to settle and now feels entirely solid underfoot. At 148 square metres across two floors, it has real breathing room. The ground floor arranges itself practically: a living kitchen that opens directly onto a covered pergola — your default setting for every meal between May and October — a separate lounge for cooler evenings, and a bedroom with its own shower room and toilet. That ground-floor bedroom is a detail worth pausing on. It makes the house genuinely work for mixed-generation groups, guests with mobility considerations, or owners who want the option to use the upstairs rooms purely as a private retreat. Head up the stairs and the character shifts. The first floor has the slightly improvised warmth you only get in converted agricultural buildings — skylights cut into the roof, dormer windows framing sections of the surrounding countryside, ceiling lines that aren't quite parallel. There's a large double bedroom, another bedroom with its own en-suite bathroom and toilet, an additional room that could easily become a study or a fourth sleeping space, and a separate WC. T ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Properties nearby

Nestled in the picturesque region of Aquitaine, in the heart of Dordogne, lies a delightful house that's waiting for you to call it home. Located in Mialet, France, this 168 square meter residence offers an intriguing blend of comfort and potential. It's a dwelling that whispers stories of both relaxation and adventure, balanced in a locale that's as rich in history as it is in beauty. As an internationally-focused real estate agent with an eye for global lifestyles, I'm always on the move. But let me take a moment of my busy schedule to walk you through what makes this property—and the area—so special for overseas buyers. Starting with the property itself, it's a practical choice for families as well as a solid investment for expats looking to get the most out of the French countryside. This 4-bedroom, 3-bathroom house rests snugly at the end of a peaceful residential street, offering a sense of privacy without feeling too isolated. Imagine waking up in your cozy bedroom, perhaps with the morning light filtering through double-glazed windows, and stepping into an inviting open-plan kitchen to start your day. A standout feature is the basement with its private 1-bedroom apartment, complete with an open-plan kitchen/living space, a bathroom, and its own entrance. This area screams potential for those interested in hosting extended family or guests. You could even consider it a rental opportunity in the picturesque Dordogne, pending the necessary permissions, of course. Features of the Property: - 4 bedrooms - 3 bathrooms - Private 1-bedroom apartment - Open-plan kitchen/dining - Raised pool with safety fence - Spacious deck - Sun terrace - Cinema room - Utility room in basement - Garage - Oil central heating - Double- ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Imagine waking up surrounded by the picturesque landscapes of the Périgord Vert natural park in the heart of Aquitaine, Dordogne. This is not just a daydream; it's the everyday reality when you make this delightful 3-bedroom house your new home. Lying peacefully in Mialet, France, this distinct property stands as an invitation to embrace a life merged with nature's most serene beauty. This abode offers approximately 98 square meters of living space, smartly divided into four rooms that radiate warmth and comfort. Upon entering the home, you are welcomed into a fitted kitchen, which seamlessly flows into a spacious living room—a perfect setup for those who enjoy hosting gatherings with family and friends or simply reveling in cozy evenings. The kitchen stands ready for culinary adventures, while the living room beckons for relaxation. Adjacent to this lively space there’s a small veranda, ideal for sipping your morning coffee while soaking in the tranquility of the surroundings. Stepping outside, the property sprawls over 4,945 square meters of land which is fully fenced—your personal haven filled with floral displays and a myriad array of fruit trees that promise bountiful harvests. For those with a penchant for gardening, an onsite greenhouse awaits your green thumb touch. But the offerings of this property don't stop there. An artist's studio stands ready to ignite your creative passions or to be transformed into a delightful guest room for visiting family or friends. Meanwhile, a substantial barn, approximately 300 square meters in size, suggests immense potential for personalization. Whether you envision a workshop, additional living space, or something unique, the possibilities are vast. Living in Mialet connect ... click here to read more

Picture 1

If you're seeking a promising opportunity in the heart of France's picturesque countryside, look no further than this hidden gem nestled in the serene village of Mialet in Dordogne, Aquitaine. Here lies a property waiting for the right visionary to breathe new life into it. This solid stone house sits in a quaint hamlet in the expansive Natural Park of North Dordogne, a location known for its lush natural beauty and tranquil environment. It becomes an ideal haven for those yearning for peace and the embrace of nature, coupled with the excitement of a renovation project. At 130 sqm, this house presents itself as the canvas for your imagination. A fixer-upper, yes, but with a potential brimming with untapped possibilities. As you step into this property, you'll find a mix of authentic features. Original exposed beams catch the eye, harkening back to the craftsmanship of older times when homes had more personality and history embedded within their walls. The large fireplaces stand as a testament to the warm gatherings they once hosted and promise to welcome many more in the future. Then there is the beautiful stone sink, a rare piece that could well be the centerpiece of your future design. Now, let's set realistic expectations—a project like this requires substantial work and dedication. The house, though boasting double glazing, awaits its transformation. The interior needs a complete overhaul to align with modern standards. However, this journey of restoration offers the unique thrill of seeing your ideas turn into reality. You get to decide on everything—from wall colors to the layout of each room—making it genuinely yours. Here are some features worth noting: - Stone house construction - Double glazing - Exposed bea ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque Dordogne region, this delightful two-bedroom house in Mialet offers an idyllic escape for those seeking a second home in the serene French countryside. With its charming stone architecture and lush surroundings, this property is a perfect retreat for families, couples, or anyone looking to immerse themselves in the tranquil beauty of Aquitaine. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the sweet melody of birdsong, as the morning sun filters through the trees. This is the everyday reality in Mialet, a quaint village that embodies the quintessential French rural lifestyle. The house, in good condition, is ready to welcome you with open arms, offering a cozy kitchen/diner, two comfortable bedrooms, and a bathroom. The attic, with its stunning oak frame, presents an exciting opportunity for expansion, allowing you to tailor the space to your needs. ### A Gateway to French Culture and Nature Mialet is more than just a location; it's a lifestyle. Situated just 15 minutes from Thiviers, the area is renowned for its rich history, vibrant culture, and breathtaking landscapes. Whether you're exploring the local markets, indulging in the region's exquisite cuisine, or simply enjoying a leisurely stroll through the countryside, Mialet offers a wealth of experiences. - Proximity to Thiviers: A short drive away, Thiviers is known for its bustling markets and culinary delights, including the famous foie gras. - Cultural Richness: The Dordogne region is steeped in history, with numerous castles, museums, and prehistoric sites to explore. - Outdoor Activities: From hiking and cycling to fishing and canoeing, the area offers endless opportunities for outdoor enthusiasts. - Local Cuisi ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Welcome to the enchanting world of St-Jory-de-Chalais, a serene and scenic village nested within the lush region of Aquitaine, Dordogne, in the captivating country of France. Here, we present an extraordinary opportunity to own a wonderfully restored 18th-century farmhouse offering both history and modern living. This home is a testament to historical architecture, meticulously restored, residing amidst the verdant landscape of the delightful Perigord Vert. This generously sized 147 square meter residence brings you into a space where history meets comfort. The front door opens into a world of rustic charm, where the classic structure of the house has been carefully preserved. Immediately captivating your gaze, the exposed beams stretch across the spacious living room ceiling, which holds a piece of history with its period fireplace that stands proudly at the heart of this living space. Perfect for chilly evenings, the warmth of the fireplace complements the cozy, inviting atmosphere. The fitted open kitchen makes the perfect spot for culinary endeavors, equipped with all the necessities to delight a food enthusiast. Here, one can imagine weekends filled with the aroma of fresh baking or the simmering of meals made from fresh local produce. Moving through the house, you will find four well-appointed bedrooms, each offering its unique character and a touch of tranquility. The cozy living room, complemented with a charming mezzanine, provides a perfect retreat for relaxation or to host guests. Whether you enjoy reading a book in the peacefulness of your own space or hosting family gatherings, this home offers versatile living environments to accommodate your needs. For those who appreciate practical spaces, the proper ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Tucked away in the serene and picturesque landscape of the Perigord Vert, here lies a delightful stone house waiting for its next chapter. Situated in Saint-Jory-de-Chalais, Aquitaine, Dordogne, this property carries with it the whispers of the 17th century. Nestled in the heart of an area renowned for its tranquility and picturesque beauty, this home is a splendid reflection of history merged with the comforts we cherish today. Saint-Jory-de-Chalais is one of those places where life slows down just enough to appreciate the finer details. Its charming streets, lined with local cafes and friendly faces, offer a warm welcome. As you settle here, you'll discover the local markets brimming with fresh produce, and the promise of authentic French countryside living unfurls in every corner. With gentle hills and vast greens, there is a perfect backdrop for leisurely walks or adventurous hikes, making it an inviting spot for nature lovers and peace seekers alike. The climate here in the Aquitaine region is temperate oceanic, meaning you're treated to mild winters and warm summers—perfect for enjoying the outdoors almost year-round. It's a climate that nurtures the abundant greenery and keeps the gardens flourishing, making outdoor living spaces almost an extension of the home. Stepping inside the house, one is immediately drawn to the light-filled expansive living room that invites you to settle in with its soothing atmosphere. A fully equipped open kitchen occupies this grand space, allowing you to entertain or simply enjoy the day-to-day culinary delights. The authenticity of the home is accentuated here, with a grand period fireplace standing proudly, offering warmth and ambiance. The ceiling soars to 3.40 meters, creating ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the peaceful and picturesque Perigord Vert natural park, this 18th-century stone farmhouse in Aquitaine, Dordogne, offers a serene living environment ideal for those dreaming of a quieter, countryside lifestyle. Restored with meticulous attention to detail while preserving its historical essence, the property spans over 2 hectares of fenced and wooded land, providing substantial outdoor space for a variety of activities. This unique real estate complex features two spacious and bright houses, measuring 130 square meters and 110 square meters respectively, each exuding its own distinctive charm. The houses are complemented by a large 200 square meter outbuilding, presenting numerous opportunities for development or customization according to personal or business needs. As a perfect abode for nature lovers and those seeking tranquility, this property boasts breathtaking panoramas of lush, verdant landscapes. It is equipped with modern amenities that blend seamlessly with the old-world charm, ensuring comfort without detracting from the authentic rural atmosphere. The addition of two horse boxes will appeal to equestrian enthusiasts, making it easy to engage in horse riding around the scenic surrounds. While the house is secluded enough to offer privacy and respite from urban bustle, it remains conveniently close to local amenities in Saint-Jory-de-Chalais and surrounding towns. The property's gardens, including a well-maintained vegetable garden, allow for enjoyable outdoor activities and the chance to practice organic cultivation. For families, the area provides a safe and engaging environment for children to explore the outdoors and become involved in the local community. The proximity to natu ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled into the verdant expanse of the Perigord Vert, a region renowned for its picturesque landscapes and tranquil environment, lies a captivating residential opportunity in Saint-Jory-de-Chalais, France. This 18th-century farmhouse, carrying its historical foundation with grace, is a genuine reflection of authenticity, offering overseas buyers an inviting gateway into the serene French countryside life. With four spacious bedrooms spanning across 147 square meters, the house strikes a balance between the rustic charm of its past and the functional needs of today’s lifestyle. Upon entering, residents are greeted by the expansive living room, where exposed ceiling beams graciously paint the story of the home’s storied past. A period fireplace makes the perfect centerpiece, offering warmth and ambiance on a chilly evening. Adjacent, the open kitchen, fully equipped and fitted, beckons culinary exploration. Imagine leisurely mornings, brewing coffee while gazing out at the endless landscape that surrounds this homestead. Inside, a cozy living room with a mezzanine creates opportunities for relaxed evenings with family or diving into your favorite book. The sheer potential offered by this configuration is perfect for expansive gatherings or more intimate family moments. Each of the four bedrooms provides ample space, ensuring that family, friends, or guests feel at ease and at home. Stepping outside, the property unfolds across a generous plot of 3178 square meters, a tapestry of beautifully flowered gardens and mature fruit trees. There is a unique thrill in harvesting your fruits, an experience that this property provides abundantly. Ensuring ample space for myriad opportunities, a 45 square meter garage and a 100 squ ... click here to read more

Picture 1

A Tranquil Retreat in the Heart of Dordogne Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the sweet scent of blooming flowers, as the morning sun filters through the trees. This is life at your new country home in Saint-Jory-de-Chalais, nestled within the lush landscapes of the Dordogne region. Here, the pace of life slows down, allowing you to savor each moment in a setting that feels like a world apart. A Home Steeped in Character and Comfort This four-bedroom country home is a harmonious blend of traditional Périgord architecture and modern comforts. The stone façade, reminiscent of a bygone era, invites you into a space that has been thoughtfully renovated to preserve its authentic charm. Step inside to find a sun-drenched veranda, perfect for morning coffees or evening reflections. The heart of the home is the open-plan kitchen and living area, where a wood-burning stove adds warmth and ambiance. The kitchen, fully equipped with modern appliances, opens onto a cozy living room, creating a seamless space for entertaining or family gatherings. Adjacent, the dining room offers a bright and inviting space for meals shared with loved ones. A Sanctuary of Rest and Relaxation The master suite on the ground floor is a private haven, complete with an en-suite bathroom and toilet. Upstairs, a landing leads to three additional master suites, each with its own shower room and toilet, ensuring comfort and privacy for family and guests alike. Embrace the Outdoors Step outside to discover a beautifully enclosed park, where fruit trees and vibrant flowerbeds create a tapestry of colors and scents. The property also boasts a double garage, an outbuilding with a gardening workshop, and a woodshed, catering to all your ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the enchanting Perigord Vert, this exquisite 17th-century stone house in Saint-Jory-de-Chalais offers a rare opportunity to own a piece of French history. Perfectly blending the charm of yesteryears with modern comforts, this property is an ideal second home for those seeking a tranquil retreat in the picturesque Dordogne region. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the soft chirping of birds, as sunlight filters through the lush greenery surrounding your private garden. This is the lifestyle awaiting you in Saint-Jory-de-Chalais, a quaint village that embodies the essence of rural France. A Glimpse into the Property: - Size: 170 m² of living space, thoughtfully renovated to preserve its historical integrity. - Bedrooms: Two spacious bedrooms, each exuding warmth and character. - Bathrooms: One elegantly designed bathroom, offering modern amenities. - Living Area: A grand 56 m² living room featuring a period fireplace and soaring 3.40 m ceilings. - Kitchen: Fully equipped open kitchen, perfect for culinary enthusiasts. - Garden: Enclosed 680 m² garden, a serene oasis with mature trees and vibrant flowers. - Outbuildings: Two charming outbuildings, one with a traditional bread oven. - Additional Features: A cellar and a well, adding to the property's unique allure. The Allure of Saint-Jory-de-Chalais: Located in the Dordogne, Saint-Jory-de-Chalais is a haven for those seeking a slower pace of life. The region is renowned for its rolling hills, dense forests, and charming villages, making it a popular choice for second home buyers. Local Lifestyle and Activities: - Outdoor Adventures: Explore the scenic hiking trails and cycling routes that weave through the verdant landscape. ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the serene landscape of Aquitaine in the Dordogne region, the quaint village of Saint-Saud-Lacoussière presents a charming three-bedroom house that is ideal for those who appreciate the idyllic French countryside. This area is known for its scenic beauty and tranquil surroundings, offering a peaceful retreat from the hustle and bustle of city life. The property itself is situated on a sizable plot of 1886m², with a total built size of 94m², spreading across a single storey with an additional lower level that provides useful extra space and potential for customization. The home features a delightful garden, mainly laid to lawn, with flourishing fruit trees, mature hedges, and a small pond that adds to the charm of outdoor living spaces. Entering the house, residents are welcomed by a spacious hallway leading to a bright and airy open plan L-shaped living space. Several recently installed double-glazed French windows enhance the natural light, connecting the indoor spaces with the outdoors effortlessly. The living room is equipped with a cozy pellet wood burner, ideal for cooler evenings, while the dining area includes additional oil-filled electric wall heaters ensuring comfort throughout the seasons. The kitchen, which is fitted with modern conveniences including a built-in oven and hob, opens onto a large conservatory. This 19m² space is great for entertaining, leading to a patio with a barbecue setup, perfect for alfresco dining and social gatherings. Accommodation includes two well-sized double bedrooms on the main level, each providing a warm and inviting atmosphere. These rooms also benefit from adequate heating with oil-filled electric wall heaters, and one boasts French windows offering direct acce ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Located in the serene hamlet of St-Saud-Lacoussière, within the picturesque confines of Dordogne in Aquitaine, France, this delightful 3-bedroom house offers a warm and inviting atmosphere for those looking to immerse themselves in the tranquil French countryside. With a total floor area of 94m² and ensconced in a generous 1886m² plot, the property strikes a fine balance between comfort and the potential for personalization. The house itself unfolds over a single storey with an additional lower level, presenting an ideal fixer-upper opportunity for those inclined towards crafting their bespoke haven. The main living space is bright and spacious, adorned with several recently installed double-glazed French windows that usher in abundant natural light. The living room is anchored by a charming pellet wood burner, complemented by extra oil-filled electric heaters in the dining area, ensuring a cozy environment regardless of the season. Feature Highlights: - Total plot size: 1886m² - Built area: 94m² - Bedrooms: 3 - Bathroom: 1 - Large conservatory (19 m²) with access to a patio and barbecue area - Basement with storage, utility area, and garage - L-shaped open plan living space with multiple double-glazed windows - Well-maintained garden with mature hedges, fruit trees, and a small pond Amenities in the home include a fitted kitchen with built-in oven and hob, a brightly lit conservatory poised for alfresco dining, and a modern shower room featuring a large built-in shower and heated towel rail. The external areas of the house offer an alluring canvas for gardening enthusiasts or those who simply wish to bask in the pastoral beauty of their surroundings. Living in Saint-Saud-Lacoussière provides a splendid mix of calm a ... click here to read more

Picture 1

This splendid 11-bedroom house is tucked away in the heart of Aquitaine, Dordogne, in the delightful quaint village of St-Saud-Lacoussière, France. Set against the backdrop of a plot size of 6981m² and a total built size of 515m², this residence aims to intrigue potential buyers desiring a blend of modernity and tradition, convenience, and tranquillity. Aureate sunlight streaming through French windows further illuminates this expanse of 50m² living area, adding another layer of vibrance to the entire setting. The main house, designed with an open plan, epitomizes modernity and brightness. The French windows open onto the veranda, offering views of the tranquil garden. A quiet haven away from the hustle and bustle, this house radiates tranquillity and elegance. Here is a nuanced look at the features this house offers: - Open plan living/dining and kitchen area - 2 double bedrooms - Wet room and family bathroom - Utility area - Mezzanine, accessible via stairs from the living room - Further room available as per need. In addition to the main household, the long independent stone building holds a secret of four separate dwellings while preserving the original character of the beams and stone walls seamlessly. The dwellings range from single-storey houses with open floor plans to one specifically designed with wheelchair access. Each one is restored tastefully, contributing to the overall aesthetic appeal of the entire property. Amid these buildings is a beautiful 12 x 6 meter swimming pool fortified with security fencing, offering residents an excellent way to unwind and recharge. The property is surrounded by mature gardens adorned with lush shrubs and trees, creating a large open space for children to frolic and play ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the picturesque Dordogne region of France, in the tranquil village of St-Jory-de-Chalais, this inviting 3-bedroom, 1-bathroom house presents an intriguing blend of comfort and potential. The home is well-appointed and offers a plot size of 7350m² along with a total built size of 112m². The inviting living area extends to 40m², characterized by its open plan and access to delightful outdoor terraces. For those considering relocation or seeking a serene retreat, this property offers more than just a living space—it embodies a lifestyle. The house sits on flatter, lawned gardens, framed by mature trees, providing both privacy and a verdant outlook. It features gated access that leads to a welcoming gravel drive, presenting a strong first impression. The living area connects seamlessly to a covered front terrace and opens onto a rear terrace with a shade blind, perfect for enjoying views of the garden and above-ground pool. Internally, the property has been maintained to a high standard. The airy living space is complemented by double glazed windows and doors throughout and benefits from central electric heating to ensure year-round comfort. Additionally, a cozy wood burner in the living room adds charm for those cooler evenings. The bedrooms are equipped with built-in wardrobes and are generously proportioned. The kitchen has been recently updated, embracing modernity with its fixtures and fittings. A smart shower room and a convenient utility room that leads out to the open garage mark the practical aspects of the house. Adjacent to the private dwelling, a small campsite adds a unique dimension to this property, perfect for entrepreneurship or hosting visitors. It includes a reception hut, six pitches, an a ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the scenic countryside of Aquitaine, Dordogne, in the quaint village of Saint-Jory-de-Chalais, France, this charming farmhouse presents a unique blend of privacy, rustic appeal, and modern conveniences, ideal for a family looking to immerse themselves into French country living or seeking a potentially rewarding business venture. The property itself features three sizeable bedrooms, each outfitted with built-in wardrobes, designed to accommodate a family comfortably. The interior offers a generous open plan living space which includes a living area equipped with a cozy wood burner, a dining area, and a newly fitted kitchen that opens out to a back terrace. Here, blinds provide shade allowing for serene views of the expansive garden and an alluring pool area. The farmhouse spans a total built area of 112 square meters and is complemented by a substantial plot of 7350 square meters. The residence boasts a practical layout encompassing a utility room that leads to an open garage and an adjacent hangar with space sufficient for a motorhome. Part of the allure of this property is its adjoining campsite, accessible through separate gates and featuring six pitches. An ideal setup for hosting visitors, it includes a reception hut, an above-ground swimming pool, a covered seating area, and a play area, making it an exciting addition for those looking into hospitality ventures or simply a lovely space for entertaining. Living in Saint-Jory-de-Chalais translates to embracing a tranquil lifestyle, surrounded by nature’s beauty. The area is renowned for its historical villages, each telling a story of the rich French heritage. For the outdoorsy types, there's an abundance of walking and cycling trails, and several la ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the serene village of Chaleix, right in the heart of the Dordogne region, this delightful property beckons those in search of a peaceful yet vibrant place to call home. With its captivating French countryside aura and the lush landscapes that surround it, this four-bedroom house provides a perfect escape for families, expats, or anyone seeking a second home away from the hustle and bustle of modern city life. As you approach the property, the first thing you'll notice is the gentle quietness that envelops the area, a beautiful reminder that nostalgia and serenity are still alive and well. The clime here is generally mild, with warm summers perfect for outdoor gatherings and mild winters that paint the landscape in soft, muted hues. Perfectly suitable for those who appreciate a laid-back lifestyle in a country setting, Chalais offers just the right amount of seasonal diversity. Once inside, the house presents itself in a condition ready to accommodate comfortably, sparing you the immediate hassle of fixing and mending. As you enter through a welcoming entrance hall, it seamlessly leads you to the kitchen on your right, paired perfectly with an adjoining dining room. The dining area is flooded with natural light, thanks to the charming bay window that gives the space a lively feel, perfect for enjoying meals with family and friends. As you make your way around the ground floor, you'll find: - Entrance hall - Bright kitchen - Adjoining dining room with bay window - Laundry room - Cellar with a glass roof - Spacious living room - Access to rear garden - Covered terrace with electricity and heating - Two ground floor bedrooms with built-in closets - Bathroom - Separate toilet The living room is your gateway to ... click here to read more

Picture 1

A Tranquil Retreat in the Heart of Dordogne Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the soft chirping of birds, as the morning sun filters through the lush canopy surrounding your expansive country estate. Nestled just outside the quaint village of Saint-Saud-Lacoussière, this remarkable property offers a serene escape from the hustle and bustle of everyday life. With its sprawling grounds, three distinct residences, and a wealth of amenities, this estate is more than just a home—it's a lifestyle. A Story of Space and Versatility As you step onto the property, you're greeted by a beautifully landscaped park garden, where garden lanterns cast a warm glow over multiple terraces. The estate comprises three spacious homes, each with its own private entrance, offering flexibility for multi-family living or a lucrative holiday rental business. The main building is thoughtfully divided into three residences, ensuring privacy and comfort for all occupants. The two front homes, each boasting six bedrooms, are perfect for accommodating large families or groups. Designed with accessibility in mind, one of the homes features a ground-floor bedroom with an en-suite shower, catering to those with reduced mobility. The third residence, located at the rear, serves as the manager's or owner's home, complete with a spacious living area and three bedrooms. A Haven for Relaxation and Recreation The estate's two swimming pools, including a separate children's pool, provide a refreshing oasis for relaxation and entertainment. The pool house, equipped with an outdoor shower, toilet, and sauna, enhances the vacation experience, making it an ideal spot for unwinding after a day of exploration. For equestrian enthusiasts, the ... click here to read more

Front view of the estate

Nestled within the heart of Aquitaine, in the picturesque Dordogne region of St-Saud-Lacoussière, France, lies a charming two-bedroom house that is perfect for those looking to immerse themselves in the tranquil French countryside. This 300-year-old stone house, priced at 299,600 Euros, is a unique blend of historical character and modern potential. Set across over 2 acres of beautifully manicured gardens and woodland, the property also boasts its own enigmatic stone tower, presenting a tantalizing renovation project for inspired buyers. The aura of heritage that surrounds this estate is palpable, with its robust stone architecture offering a serene and sturdy living environment. Upon entering the property, an immense open-plan ground floor unfolds, incorporating the kitchen, dining, and living areas. This space is complemented by a sun-drenched conservatory on the southwest side, providing a scenic vista of the surrounding greenery and a perfect nook for relaxation or entertaining guests. Upstairs, the residence hosts two comfortably sized bedrooms separated by a generously proportioned bathroom, ensuring privacy and convenience. The character-filled interiors, with exposed stone walls and wooden beams, evoke a sense of timelessness and charm that’s hard to find. For those who value extra space and potential, the property includes several outbuildings — one of which houses a small apartment complete with a shower room, bedroom, and living area. Additionally, a workshop, garage, and a well-sized hangar which is also home to a sauna, are part of the estate. The standalone stone tower, linked with a staircase to a first floor and a summer kitchen, presents an exciting opportunity to be converted into a quaint gîte, of ... click here to read more

Picture 1