Charming 4BR Stone House Near Agen with Land

Listed on
https://storage.googleapis.com/homestra-images/property-image-9688fea9-0a4e-42f7-94bf-51bd6074839d-1713646886.jpg

Aquitaine, Lot-et-Garonne, Puymirol, France, Puymirol (France)

4 Bedrooms · 2 Bathrooms · 144Floor area

€251,450

House

Parking

4 Bedrooms

2 Bathrooms

144m²

Garden

No pool

Not furnished

Description

Charming Stone House in Picturesque Puymirol

Nestled amidst the characteristic beauty of Aquitaine in the Lot-et-Garonne department, this delightful stone village house presents a perfect blend of rustic charm and ample space for both living and potential expansion. Located in the serene town of Puymirol, just a 15-minute drive from Agen, this property is an appealing choice for those looking to experience the tranquil French countryside lifestyle.

Property Features:
- Spacious 144 square meter living area
- Four well-sized bedrooms
- Two bathrooms, one on each floor for convenience
- Entrance hall leading to a comfortable lounge/dining area
- Open-plan kitchen adjacent to the dining area, ideal for family gatherings
- Utility room alongside essential storage space
- An attached barn, providing additional storage or workshop area
- Ample outdoor space with a plot of land suitable for further development or landscaping

Amenities:
- Local shops and markets offering regional produce
- Healthcare facilities including a pharmacy and a medical center
- educational institutions ranging from preschool to a local primary school
- Various local dining options featuring traditional French cuisine
- Access to public transportation with nearby bus routes
- Close proximity to Agen, enhancing access to larger city amenities

Living in Puymirol:
Puymirol, a quaint village steeped in history, provides a peaceful living environment, with its rolling hills and vibrant greenery typical of the South-West of France. The village embodies a strong community spirit paired with the tranquil pace of rural life. Residents can enjoy seasonal festivals and farmers' markets, which are a staple in this region, reflecting the rich culinary and cultural heritage.

For outdoor enthusiasts, the surrounding countryside offers scenic trails for hiking and cycling. The location also benefits from its proximity to Agen, known for its historical sites and larger commercial activities, thus providing the perfect balance between rural charm and access to urban necessities.

Climate:
The climate in Puymirol is mild and generally warm, with distinct seasons that highlight the area's natural beauty. Summers are pleasant and sunny — ideal for enjoying the outdoors and the lush surroundings. Winters are mild, with occasional rainfall, perfect for cozy indoor gatherings around a traditional French fireplace.

Experience of Living in a House:
Living in a house such as this one in Puymirol offers the unique experience of integrating with the rhythms of nature and community life. With ample indoor and outdoor space, residents can enjoy both personal and community activities. The additional land and barn provide potential for gardening, DIY projects, or even expansion, making it an attractive choice for those who enjoy personalizing their living space.

Renovation Potential:
While in good condition, the new owners might view this house as a canvas to bring their own vision to life, whether it is through cosmetic updates or more substantial renovations. The structure and existing layout provide a solid foundation for creating a personalized home that respects the traditional architecture while incorporating modern comforts.

Affordability and Investment:
Priced at €251,450, inclusive of fees, this property represents a reasonable investment in a region known for its stable real estate values. The blend of historical charm, community amenities, and proximity to Agen makes it an appealing option for overseas buyers looking for a tranquil spot that promises a quality lifestyle.

Investing in a home here means not just buying property, but embracing a lifestyle that celebrates relaxation, community, and the enduring appeal of the French countryside. Whether you're looking for a family home or a peaceful retirement haven, this house in Puymirol is a gateway to experiencing the best of rural France.

Details

Amount of bedrooms
4
Size
144
Price per m²
€1,746
Garden size
2800
Has Garden
Yes
Has Parking
Yes
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

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

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

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

Step through the heavy front door of this brick-and-flint maître house on a crisp October morning and you hear it immediately — the kind of silence that costs money in most of France. No traffic, just a wood pigeon somewhere in the garden and the faint metallic ring of the Goderville church bell carrying across the Pays de Caux plateau. This is what 172,000 euros buys you in northern Normandy right now: a real house with bones, history, and a plot of land big enough to breathe. Bretteville-du-Grand-Caux sits right on the edge of the Seine-Maritime plateau, a few minutes from the market town of Goderville where the Tuesday morning market draws farmers and locals who've been shopping the same stalls for generations. Pick up a thick wedge of Neufchâtel heart-shaped cheese, a bottle of Calvados from a producer who doesn't export, and a baguette still warm from the boulangerie on Rue du Général de Gaulle. This is everyday life here, not a tourist performance. The house itself is the kind you used to find everywhere in Pays de Caux and now increasingly don't. Brick and silex — that distinctive local flint — laid in the traditional Norman pattern, with generous ceiling heights that make the reception rooms feel genuinely grand rather than merely large. The ground floor opens into spacious living areas that get proper afternoon light through tall windows facing the garden. There's a scale to these rooms that's hard to fake: wide floorboards, high cornices, proportions that belong to an era when builders weren't counting square centimetres. Upstairs, four bedrooms spread comfortably across the first floor. Two face the rear garden and catch the morning sun. The remaining rooms have that characteristic Normandy quietness that c ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On Sunday mornings in Fourges, the only thing you hear is the river. The Epte moves quietly past the old mill at the edge of the village, and if the kitchen window is open, you catch the faint smell of damp grass and whatever someone nearby is baking. This is a village that hasn't tried to reinvent itself. It's just still here — stone walls, a mill that's been grinding for centuries, a pace of life that feels almost unreasonably good. This two-bedroom house sits in that village, in good condition, single-storey, with a generous 1,000 square metre garden running down to the voie verte — a dedicated greenway trail that cuts through the Vexin-sur-Epte countryside. Step straight out of the back gate and you're on a route that takes you through meadows and orchards, past apple trees whose fruit ends up in the local calvados, all the way toward Gisors or down toward the Seine valley. You don't need a car to feel like you're deep in rural Normandy. The landscape just arrives at your doorstep. Inside, the layout is all on one level — no stairs, no fuss. The entrance leads into a living space with a wood-burning stove that makes the room feel entirely different in November than it does in July. In winter it crackles, the walls hold the heat, and the whole house takes on that particular quality of a place that's actually lived in rather than merely visited. The fitted kitchen is practical and fully equipped. There's a large master bedroom, a proper bathroom, a separate WC, and a second smaller room that works equally well as a guest bedroom or a home office for those who work remotely and want to do it somewhere with better views than their city apartment. Under the eaves, a third sleeping space with storage gives you genuine fl ... 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

Sunday morning in Bergerac starts with the smell of fresh bread drifting up from the boulangerie two blocks away. You open the kitchen door onto the 17-square-metre terrace, coffee in hand, and catch the faint sound of the market vendors setting up along the Place de la Madeleine. That's the rhythm of life this house puts you inside — not on the edge of it, not behind glass. Right in it. This solid 1930s house sits a short walk from the old town centre of Bergerac, one of the most quietly rewarding towns in the entire Dordogne valley. The architecture still carries the bones of the interwar period — the proportions feel generous, the walls thick enough to keep rooms cool well into July — and recent upgrades have brought the practicalities firmly into the present. A newly installed heat pump, air conditioning, full double glazing, and a fitted kitchen mean you arrive and you live, rather than renovate and wait. The ground floor layout is genuinely sociable. The living room flows naturally toward the open-plan kitchen and dining area, which spills directly out onto the terrace. Summer evenings here have a particular quality: the Dordogne region holds its warmth well into September, and al fresco dinners under the fading light are less a special occasion than a Tuesday habit. The ground floor also holds a bedroom and shower room — useful for guests who'd rather skip the stairs, or for turning the upper floor into a private retreat when the house is full. Upstairs, two spacious double bedrooms and a dressing room give the house a flexibility that shorter-term rentals rarely achieve. There's room for couples, families, or the kind of extended-family gathering that the French countryside seems specifically designed to encou ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a slow Sunday morning in Ceaux-en-Couhé, the bread oven in the stone shed still holds yesterday's warmth. Eight bedrooms, a pond catching the light through the oaks, and 4.8 hectares of parkland stretching out beyond the kitchen window — this is what a second home in rural Poitou actually feels like. Not a curated Instagram fantasy, but something real and rooted. This is a rare find in the Vienne department: a fully renovated maison de maître that has been operating as a group gîte, sleeping up to 24 guests across its eight bedrooms, all equipped with private shower rooms and WCs. It's move-in ready — or more accurately, move-in and open-for-business ready. The bones are solid, the renovation is done, and the layout is already designed for the kind of communal living that makes group holidays worth taking. Whether you're imagining family reunions across generations, a yoga and wellness retreat in the French countryside, or a creative residency program, the infrastructure is already in place. Step inside and the ground floor sets the tone immediately. There's a generous entrance hall that opens into a laundry room, a dedicated office, a proper kitchen, a dining room, and a sitting room — the kind of layout where a group of twelve can occupy the same house without tripping over each other. Three ground-floor bedrooms, each with their own shower room and WC, sit along a hallway with fitted storage. Upstairs, five more bedrooms follow the same logic: private bathrooms, cupboard space, and enough separation that guests actually sleep well. The boiler room sits in a separate annex, keeping mechanical noise well away from the living spaces. And then there's the bread oven shed — a detail that sounds minor until you've pull ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Stand at the front garden gate on a Tuesday morning and you'll hear the Blavet river before you see it. That low, constant murmur threading through the valley — that's the soundtrack to life in Saint-Nicolas-des-Eaux, one of the most quietly extraordinary villages in inland Brittany. The church bell chimes at eight. Someone at the bar-tabac two minutes' walk away is already pulling espresso. And your kitchen window in a house that has stood for over five centuries frames all of it. This is not a renovation fantasy or a project dressed up in estate-agent optimism. The property is in good condition — two stone houses, sold together, on a plot of around 1,093 square metres with gardens front and back and a workshop of 26 square metres. Move in, light the wood-burning stove, and work out what to do with the rest later. That's genuinely an option here. The older of the two houses is the one that stops people in their tracks. Thatched roof, stone walls thick enough to keep August heat out and January damp firmly in its place, a kitchen-dining-living room arranged around a fireplace that clearly earns its keep every winter. Upstairs, a mezzanine level — currently used as a bedroom — gives the space a kind of loft-like openness, and a large double bedroom sits alongside it. The bathroom with WC is on the ground floor, practical and sorted. The second house connects directly through a door, which makes the whole arrangement work brilliantly for families or visiting friends: two distinct spaces, one shared garden life. The ground-floor of the second house has a living room, bedroom, kitchen, bathroom with WC, and a useful storage room. Its first floor adds another mezzanine bedroom, a washbasin, and a further bedroom. Three bedr ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Properties nearby

Nestled in the charm of the French countryside, in the picturesque region of Lot-et-Garonne, lies an inviting stone house ideal for those seeking a peaceful retreat with a touch of European grace. This expansive property covers approximately 300 square meters, offering a generous space perfect for family life or hosting gatherings with friends. Whether you are considering relocating to the beautiful Aquitaine region or searching for a holiday home, this property in Puymirol could be a splendid opportunity, especially for overseas buyers and expats looking for a slice of French serenity. As you approach the house, an inviting wrought iron gate welcomes you at the end of the private road. It leads you onto a peaceful estate that is quiet, yet not so isolated. The surrounding views are a testament to the beauty of Lot-et-Garonne's countryside, with rolling hills and pastoral fields stretching as far as the eye can see. Stepping inside, you'll find a home that effortlessly combines comfort and practicality. The ground floor is thoughtfully laid out, featuring an entrance hall that leads to a lounge, where evenings can be spent unwinding in front of a cozy fireplace. Adjacent is the dining room, which is perfectly suited for family meals and entertaining guests. The fitted kitchen, equipped with a dining area, invites culinary explorations with an abundance of local ingredients available in the region. This floor also includes practical spaces like a utility/boiler room, a shower room, and a separate toilet. Climbing to the first floor, you discover a realm designed for rest and relaxation. The property boasts five bedrooms, two with the luxury of an en suite bathroom, offering privacy and convenience. There's also a versa ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Welcome to a stunning opportunity in the heart of the French countryside, specifically located in Puymirol, a charming village in Aquitaine, Lot-et-Garonne. This is not just a property; it's a lifestyle waiting to be embraced. Busy days and hectick schedules won't deter you from recognizing the unique charm and potential this home offers. Prepare yourselves to explore this beautiful nook of France where tranquility meets charm head-on. The property is ideally situated in a small hamlet, discreetly nestled amongst just three houses, your new abode guarantees an alarming level of privacy without making you feel too isolated from the world. The entrance is completely your own, offering a sense of autonomy and exclusivity. While the countryside's peace and quiet are a blessing, you're just a short drive from lively local villages like Puymirol and Beauville where you can find schools, shops, and other marvellous amenities. Moving to the local area, Lot-et-Garonne is a region known for its dense woodlands and vineyards. The climate here is quite gentle; warm summers and mild winters making it an inviting year-round destination. Living in Puymirol, you can also explore the rich history and culture of the area. There’s a plethora of activities to enjoy including visiting ancient villages, medieval castles, and tasting delicious local cuisine at nearby bistros and restaurants. Don’t forget to take a leisurely stroll along the preserved streets of Puymirol—it’s a small village brimming with character and charm. Let’s delve into the property itself. The estate sits proudly on approximately 3 hectares of partially wooded grounds, offering a mix of open space and a touch of wilderness that promises both outdoor adventures and me ... click here to read more

Picture 1

As a busy real estate agent, I'm delighted to present to you a truly remarkable country home nestled in the serene heart of Tayrac, Lot-et-Garonne, Aquitaine, France. Just the sight of this charming estate might make you consider whisking your life into a tale of magical country living. For those hunting for a property that bares vitality and promise, this is the one you should not pass by. This 10-bedroom country gem sits gracefully among five hectares of pristine grounds that include delightful woodlands and a wildflower meadow, offering absolute tranquility away from the city hubbub. It's a pleasant escape set on a quiet country lane, neatly tucked away yet conveniently only five minutes' drive to the local village where you'll find a delightful shop ready to supply daily needs. The property, dating back to 1810, carries with it stories of the ages, some elements even older, giving it rich historical charm. Our centerpiece is the principal, two-bedroom stone house featuring a large, raised covered terrace perfect for a morning breather or an afternoon siesta. This inviting abode presents a comfortable sitting room complete with a log-burning stove to warm you during the cooler months, alongside an intriguing 14th-century stone arched doorway, a piece of history looted (not by current owners!) from the historic abbey in Saint Maurin. The kitchen retains its original terracotta floor tiles, beamed ceiling, fitted units, and equips a gas range cooker. Wander along the charming hallway, where you'll discover the original bread oven, a nod to days past, and another lovely decked terrace with a relaxing fishpond view. The country estate is double-glazed throughout, ensuring coziness during the changing seasons, and emplo ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Dive into the heart of the French countryside with this inviting 4-bedroom Maison de Maître nestled within the picturesque village of Caudecoste in Aquitaine, Lot-et-Garonne. A charmingly impressive residence tempering old-world elegance with modern conveniences, all revolved around the French art of living. This splendid country home is reminiscent of a minature chateau, with its beautiful symmetric facade and original details. Housed within iron railings and an entrance gate, it is set within a large, lush garden that creates a tranquil corner of paradise right in the middle of this thriving village. An above-ground pool adds an extra touch of luxury, perfect for serene summer afternoons. Should you want to venture into the town, every convenience is at your fingertips within walking distance, offering a delightful blend of country charm and modern amenities. The house itself boasts 4 bedrooms, spread over a generous 165 square meters of living space. Despite being in good overall condition, some of its rooms require a touch of refurbishment - a gentle nudge into the present. This offers an exciting opportunity to make your own mark on the property, enhancing its period features and charm to create your dream country home. Property Features: - Four spacious bedrooms - One bathroom - Classic mid-19th-century architecture - Large open garden - Off-road parking space - Brick and stone construction - Above-ground swimming pool - Outbuildings The building's grandeur is enthralling, with features including an impressive main staircase, period plasterwork, original marble fireplaces, old-fashioned terracotta flooring, cast-iron radiators and oil central heating. Furthermore, the substantial attic still retains the ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Property Overview: Nestled in the charming countryside of Aquitaine, in picturesque Lot-et-Garonne, this 2-bedroom stone farmhouse offers a serene rural retreat in Dondas, France. Perfect for those looking to embrace the relaxed, pastoral lifestyle of southern France, this property combines the rustic charm of the past with the essentials for modern living. Property Features: - Early 19th-century stone farmhouse - One guest annexe with a cellar - Three large stone barns usable for garages, workshops, and storage - Established garden with mature trees and vines - Private water source - Living area: 137 square meters - Land area provides ample space for gardening and outdoor activities - Electric heating and a cozy log-burning stove for cooler evenings - Charming interior features including beamed ceilings and exposed stone walls - Spectacular countryside views Condition: While the main house and barns are structurally sound, they require some refreshing to bring them up to modern aesthetic standards. The guest annexe also needs a bit of updating. This offers a fantastic opportunity for personal customization and renovation to truly make the place your own. Local Area: Dondas, a quaint village in Lot-et-Garonne, epitomizes the tranquil life one expects in rural France. The area is lush with scenic vistas, rolling valleys, and sprawling vineyards—an ideal setting for those seeking peace away from the urban hustle. A mere five-minute drive lands you in the nearby village of Saint Maurin, where you can find a local shop for daily necessities. For a broader array of services, Agen is just a 20-minute drive away, providing access to larger retail shops, schools, and healthcare facilities. The vil ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque Lot-et-Garonne region, this historic 19th-century water mill offers a unique opportunity to own a piece of French heritage. Located in the charming village of Dondas, this property is a dream for those seeking a tranquil lifestyle amidst the rolling hills and lush landscapes of Aquitaine. Imagine waking up to the gentle sound of the river flowing nearby, the sun casting a golden hue over the verdant gardens that surround your home. This substantial stone property, with its exposed beams and original stonework, is a testament to the craftsmanship of a bygone era. While the house is in good structural condition, it presents a blank canvas for you to infuse your personal style and create a truly outstanding home. ### A Day in Dondas Living in Dondas is like stepping into a postcard. The village, with its narrow cobblestone streets and traditional French architecture, exudes a timeless charm. The local community is warm and welcoming, making it easy for expats to feel at home. The pace of life here is relaxed, offering a perfect escape from the hustle and bustle of city living. The climate in this part of France is mild, with warm summers and cool winters, ideal for enjoying outdoor activities year-round. Whether it's a leisurely stroll through the countryside, a bike ride along the scenic trails, or a picnic by the river, there's always something to do. ### Local Amenities and Connectivity Despite its rural setting, Dondas is conveniently located just 25 minutes from Agen, a vibrant small city with a fast TGV link to Paris, making it easy to stay connected to the rest of France and beyond. Agen offers a variety of amenities, including shops, restaurants, and cultural attractions, ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled atop a picturesque hill in the serene village of Perville, this 19th-century stone farmhouse offers a unique blend of rustic charm and modern convenience, making it an ideal second home or holiday retreat. With its panoramic views, expansive grounds, and proximity to vibrant local towns, this property is a haven for those seeking a tranquil escape in the heart of France. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the distant chirping of birds, as the morning sun bathes your home in a warm glow. This is the everyday reality at this enchanting farmhouse, where the pace of life slows down, and the beauty of nature takes center stage. Property Highlights: - Spacious Living: The main stone farmhouse boasts four generously sized bedrooms and three bathrooms, providing ample space for family and guests. - Historic Charm: Retaining its original period features, the farmhouse exudes a timeless elegance, with stone walls and wooden beams that tell stories of a bygone era. - Modern Comforts: While steeped in history, the property is equipped with oil central heating, ensuring comfort throughout the seasons. - Versatile Outbuildings: A large stone barn offers potential for conversion, whether for additional living space or as a storage area for a camping car. - Guest Accommodation: A modern wooden chalet with a decked terrace and electric heating serves as perfect guest quarters or a potential rental opportunity. - Expansive Grounds: Set on 7000 m² of land, the property features mature trees and a gated entrance, providing privacy and a sense of seclusion. - Convenient Location: Just a ten-minute drive to Valence d'Agen, known for its lively weekly markets, and five minutes to the charming village of Castelsagra ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a still Sunday morning in Saint-Maurin, the church bell in the 11th-century priory rings out across the valley and drifts through the French doors of this single-story stone country house while the coffee percolates. The kitchen smells of woodsmoke and walnut. Outside, the fishpond catches the early light. This is what you came to France for. Saint-Maurin is one of those villages that hasn't been discovered yet, not really, and locals are quietly grateful for that. Classified among the Plus Beaux Villages de France, it sits in the rolling hills of Lot-et-Garonne, a département that routinely tops French quality-of-life surveys but somehow still flies under the radar compared to its flashier Dordogne neighbor to the north. The village square, shaded by plane trees, holds a small café where the patron knows your order by your second visit. There's a boutique, a boulangerie within walking distance, and in summer the whole village transforms for the Wednesday night markets, where producers from across the Agenais set up under fairy lights and sell duck confit, Agen prunes dipped in Armagnac chocolate, and bottles of Buzet red that cost less than a London sandwich. The open-air cinema runs through July and August. You bring a blanket, somebody always brings too much rosé, and the film starts at dusk against the backdrop of the medieval priory. These aren't tourist attractions in the manufactured sense. They're just what life is here. This three-bedroom vacation home sits on the edge of the village, close enough to walk in for a pastis at 6pm, private enough that you can swim in the 10x5 metre pool without a neighbor in sight. The grounds extend to 6,875 square metres — nearly 1.7 acres — planted with mature specimen tre ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Property Description Nestled in the historic and serene setting of Laroque-Timbaut in the picturesque region of Aquitaine, Lot-et-Garonne, this five-bedroom house presents a delightful opportunity for those looking to embrace a tranquil rural lifestyle. The property, whilst in good condition, offers the new owner a chance to infuse personal touches and perhaps some modern updates to create their ideal living space. This charming home exhibits an inviting aura with its character-rich design and an unusual, engaging layout. It spreads generously across 131 square meters, ensuring ample room for a large family or for hosting guests. The main house boasts four spacious bedrooms, while a supplementary gite provides additional accommodation, complete with a large summer kitchen featuring a BBQ area—perfect for entertaining during the warm months. The living quarters are thoughtfully divided to include a large lounge segmented into a TV area and a more formal sitting space. Adjacent to this, a split-level office area and dining room offer functional spaces for both work and relaxation. The two primary bedrooms and dining area benefit from south-facing views, which bathe these rooms in natural light and provide picturesque vistas of the surrounding landscape. Outdoor and Additional Features The outdoors is equally impressive, characterized by a wooded, enclosed garden that houses an array of wild orchids and a shallow pond adorned with water lilies. The garden’s configuration invites biodiversity and affords fabulous views towards the Pyrenees on clear days. A south-facing patio presents an ideal spot for enjoying the serene environment or partaking in alfresco dining. List of Property Features: - Five bedrooms (includes o ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque village of Dunes, Tarn-Et-Garonne, this delightful villa offers a perfect blend of rustic charm and modern comfort. With its prime location in the southwest of France, this property is an ideal choice for those seeking a second home or a holiday retreat in Europe. Imagine waking up to the gentle sounds of village life, with the sun streaming through your window, casting a warm glow over the original Portuguese tiles that adorn your living room floor. This villa, with its 184 square meters of living space, is not just a house; it's a gateway to a lifestyle filled with relaxation, exploration, and unforgettable memories. A Home with Character and Comfort The villa's layout is thoughtfully designed to cater to both intimate family gatherings and larger social events. The ground floor welcomes you with a spacious living room and dining area, complete with a cozy wood burner that promises warmth during cooler months. The kitchen, fully fitted and equipped, is a culinary enthusiast's dream, offering ample space to whip up local delicacies. Upstairs, the villa boasts four generously sized bedrooms, each offering a tranquil retreat after a day of exploring the local countryside. The master suite, with its own dressing room, provides a private sanctuary, while the additional bedrooms offer flexibility for guests or family. A Village Steeped in Tradition Dunes is a quintessential French village, where time seems to slow down, allowing you to savor every moment. The local shops and services are just a short stroll away, making daily errands a breeze. The village's rich history and vibrant community offer a unique cultural experience, with regular markets, festivals, and events that bri ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Welcome to this absolutely charming chateau located in the picturesque region of Aquitaine, within the serene locale of Lot-et-Garonne, specifically in the endearing village of Laroque-Timbaut. This magnificent property, built in 1901 by the acclaimed Agen architect Ephraïm Pinètre, is a true gem showcasing the stunning Art Nouveau style. With an ample living space of around 300 m² and perched on a sprawling 5.2 hectares of lush, wooded grounds, this home promises a blend of grand historical architecture and modern living. Now, let's dive deeper into the home itself. This chateau offers five bedrooms and two bathrooms, making it an ideal family home or a luxurious retreat. The current owners have meticulously renovated the ground floor, preserving the enchanting period details. You walk into a grand entrance hall that sets the tone for the entire home. Continue moving into the large dining kitchen complete with a utility room. Perfect for those who love to cook or host gatherings, this space flows seamlessly into the elegant dining room, which features a cozy fireplace and charming double aspects. The ground floor also boasts a lounge brimming with period mouldings and cornices that transport you back to an age of timeless elegance. There's also a second lounge area, a laundry room, and a toilet for added convenience. Upstairs, the first floor presents a delightful landing that guides you to the master suite, which is equipped with an en-suite shower room. A guest room also benefits from an ensuite shower room and toilet. An additional bedroom also includes an en suite shower room and toilet. The journey doesn't end here. The top floor is a canvas waiting for your touch. With three lovely rooms in need of some red ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Located in the charming region of Aquitaine, Lot-et-Garonne, in the quaint village of Laroque-Timbaut, this picturesque farmhouse is sure to steal your heart. Spanning an impressive 320 square meters, this property is perfect for families looking for a dream home in the French countryside or for expats seeking a tranquil retreat away from the hustle and bustle. Priced at €646,600, it offers a fantastic blend of history and modern comforts. Let's paint a picture: As you make your way up the long private driveway, you're greeted by fruit trees laden with cherries, apples, and plums lining your path. You’ll find it hard not to be charmed by the scenery. At the end of this enchanting drive is a generous parking area and a double garage measuring approximately 47 square meters—plenty of space for vehicles or even a small workshop. The main stone house is the crown jewel, offering around 230 square meters of living space. Step inside, and you’ll be greeted by a fitted kitchen and living room adorned with rustic stone walls and beautiful wooden beams. A cozy lounge features a fireplace with a double hearth, providing warmth and ambiance for both the living room and the lounge. Imagine yourself nestling into a good book by the fire, while the rest of the family enjoys the adjacent large covered terrace which extends the living space outdoors. On the ground floor, you'll find a charming study, a snug TV room with another fireplace, 4 comfortable bedrooms, and 2 bathrooms. Each room tells its own story, and the stone walls speak of times gone by. Upstairs, a large games room awaits, offering endless possibilities for fun and relaxation. Two spacious attics provide abundant storage or could be converted into additional living sp ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the picturesque landscape of Aquitaine, Lot-et-Garonne in Laroque-Timbaut, France, this unique property offers a harmonious blend of rustic charm and convenience, making it a compelling choice for overseas buyers seeking a serene lifestyle or potentially embarking on a gîte business. The estate encompasses two distinctive stone houses, multiple outbuildings, a contemporary swimming pool, and 8 hectares of diverse land. This property, priced at €657,200, presents itself as a welcoming canvas for those ready to embrace the tranquil French countryside life. Main House Features: - Approximately 230 m² of living space distributed elegantly across various rooms - A welcoming kitchen/living area with stone walls and visible beams exudes warmth and character - A cozy lounge featuring a fireplace with a double hearth extending into the living room - Access to a large, covered terrace offering picturesque views, perfect for outdoor dining or relaxation - 4 bedrooms, and 2 bathrooms designed to accommodate a comfortable family lifestyle - Upper floor transformed into a vast games room plus two attics providing ample storage or renovation possibilities - The basement includes three versatile rooms, enhancing the functional space of the property Secondary House Features: - Approximately 80 m² of habitable space, making it an ideal guest house or rental opportunity - Comprises a lounge, fitted kitchen/dining area, 2 bedrooms, and a shower room, all finished to a good standard - Both north and south-facing covered terraces enhance the living experience with options for sun or shade Amenities and Additional Features: - Newest addition, a saltwater 9x4m swimming pool with a reinforced liner, constructed in 2021 - Outbuildin ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque Lot-et-Garonne region, this enchanting 5-bedroom house in Laroque-Timbaut offers a unique opportunity to own a slice of French paradise. With its prime location in Aquitaine, this property is the ideal second home for those seeking a tranquil retreat amidst nature's splendor. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the soft chirping of birds, as the morning sun filters through the trees surrounding your private sanctuary. This stone-built house, perched on the side of a rock face, is a testament to timeless elegance and modern comfort, offering a perfect blend of rustic charm and contemporary living. A Gateway to French Countryside Living Laroque-Timbaut is a quintessential French village, where time seems to slow down, allowing you to savor every moment. The region is renowned for its rolling hills, lush vineyards, and historic châteaux, making it a dream destination for those who appreciate the finer things in life. Property Highlights: - Spacious Living: With 260 square meters of living space, this home offers ample room for family gatherings and entertaining guests. - Five Bedrooms: Perfect for accommodating family and friends, ensuring everyone has their own private retreat. - Three Bathrooms: Modern amenities meet classic design, providing comfort and convenience. - Expansive Grounds: Set on 2.8 hectares of land, including wooded areas, offering privacy and a connection to nature. - Swimming Pool: A 10 x 5-meter pool provides a refreshing escape during warm summer days. - Stunning Views: Enjoy breathtaking vistas of the surrounding countryside from the large covered terrace. - Detached Outbuilding and Garage: Additional space for storage or potential convers ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the serene landscapes of Bajamonde, Aquitaine, this spacious ten-bedroom house presents a unique living opportunity, especially suitable for those looking to immerse themselves in the tranquility of rural France while still enjoying the conveniences of nearby urban life. The property, a harmonious blend of past and present, features a main residence and two additional gîtes, making it an appealing prospect for families or as a potential business venture. The main house, a period stone structure dating from the early 19th century, holds a characterful appeal with its original features such as insert fireplaces, wooden floorboards, and beamed ceilings intact. A modern touch is provided by the fully equipped kitchen complete with integral appliances, offering a comfortable living environment. This house also boasts a substantial cellar which includes workshop space and garaging for one car, alongside double glazing and oil central heating that ensure the home remains cozy throughout the year. The first gîte, converted from a former barn, offers five en-suite bedrooms adorned with cathedral ceilings and superb exposed beams. The blend of terracotta floor tiles on the ground floor and oak boards on the upper level adds to its rustic charm. This establishment also features a log burning stove and a modern fitted kitchen, ensuring the comfort of guests. A one-bedroom annexe with its private parking expands the living space, ideally suited for hosting friends or family. The second gîte contains two bedrooms and a delightful mezzanine area fitted with modern amenities, including a kitchen and sitting area with a cozy log burning stove. While mostly completed, a few small finishing touches are required, offering new ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Welcome to this charming home nestled in the serene countryside of Pont-du-Casse, in the heart of Aquitaine's Lot-et-Garonne region. A true gem for those looking to immerse themselves in the tranquility of rural France while maintaining easy access to modern conveniences, this property presents a unique blend of comfort, history, and potential. Property Features: - Living Space: The property boasts an approximate living area of 170 m² within the main house, complemented by an additional 65 m² guest house, ensuring ample space for family and visitors alike. - Bedrooms: There are 4 generously sized bedrooms distributed between the main and guest house, designed to provide rest and relaxation. - Bathrooms: The property is equipped with 3 well-appointed bathrooms, catering to the needs of a modern household. - Land: Set within 9,487 m² of lush, wooded parkland, this home offers a private and picturesque setting. - Additional Buildings: A 165 m² barn provides extensive storage space, alongside a workshop and garage. The upper floor of the barn offers around 85 m² of space, ripe for conversion, subject to the relevant permissions. - Amenities: The home is fitted with aluminium double glazing, boasts several fireplaces, and benefits from its own water source and well. Local Area & Climate: Pont-du-Casse lies in a region renowned for its pleasant climate, characterized by warm summers and mild winters, making it an ideal year-round destination. The local area feels like stepping into a postcard of quintessential French countryside, with rolling hills, vineyards, and medieval villages inviting exploration and adventure. Living here means becoming part of a community that values the slow pace of life, local produce, and a dee ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Introducing a charming 3-bedroom house, ideally located in the serene community of Bon-Encontre, nested within France's beautiful Lot-et-Garonne region. This unique property has a captivating history, originally constructed as a 17th-century monastery. Now, it offers 165 square meters of comforting and well-designed living space, without compromising its original charm. Living in Bon-Encontre rewards you with a tranquil ambiance harmoniously blending with the natural beauty of the surrounding environment. The region's moderate climate includes relatively warm summers and gentle winters, allowing residents to make the most of both indoor and outdoor living. Immersed within the idyllic French countryside, residents revel in the charm of rural living without forgoing crucial amenities. Here, you can expect an abundance of local shops, cafes, and markets, selling organic local produce. The property is positioned on the outskirts of the town, providing a serene locale where you can unwind amid flowering gardens, a generous sun terrace, and a cozy shaded terrace. The spacious interiors of the house are designed to resonate with the historic features of the within the open plan kitchen, equipped with tastefully designed Biasotto units. Now, let us journey through this magnificent home: Ground Floor: - Open plan living area with a stunning cathedral ceiling expanding to a designer kitchen: 75m2 - Living zone opening to a covered terrace area - Family Bathroom - Laundry room - WC First Floor: - Mezzanine area, currently serving as an office/snug - Three spacious bedrooms Basement: - Large workshops covering 55m2 Garden: - An inviting garden laden with mature trees and vibrant flowers - Covered terrace extending over ... click here to read more

Photo 32

Introducing a charming, six-bedroom stone country house nestled in the picturesque region of Aquitaine, Lot-et-Garonne, in the idyllic town of Beauville, France. Built in the historic 1840s, this unique property packed with rustic allure is a mere five-minute drive from the heart of Beauville, a thriving bastide village filled with cafes, boulangeries, shops, and restaurants that infuse the air with an irresistible blend of French cuisine. The generous 190 square meter nearly two-century-old property comprises a four-bedroom main farmhouse and a separate, recently converted, two-bedroom barn. This building dates back to 2010 and adds a touch of modernity to the property as a whole. Enclosed in the traditional allure of a hectare of lush gardens, add a heated swimming pool and tennis court, ensuring this place resonates with both tranquillity and vibrancy. At the heart of the main house, appreciate a well-appointed kitchen, equipped with a gas range cooker where gastronomic creations come alive. The living room, complete with oak flooring and a log-burning stove, manages to combine rusticity and comfort elegantly. The intentional use of exposed stonework and beams adds a touch of sophistication. Additional features include double glazing throughout and a sophisticated oil central heating system. You'll find a sizeable, covered terrace perfect for al fresco dining. The recently converted barn adds a layer of modernity, housing two bedrooms and two bathrooms with contemporary interiors. Heating amenities include a pompe à chaleur system offering both hot and cold settings, further complimented by a single garage. Amenities: - Fitted kitchen with gas range cooker - Living room with oak flooring and log burning stove - ... click here to read more

Picture 1