Delightful Single-Storey Home Near Quettreville-sur-Sienne: 3-Bedroom Retreat with Spacious Living and Expansive Land

Listed on
https://storage.googleapis.com/homestra-images/property-image-c9aebe61-4ed7-4e7b-9ba9-8f94ab6eec81-1735727903.jpg

Quettreville Sur Sienne, Basse-Normandie, 50, France, Quettreville-sur-Sienne (France)

3 Bedrooms · 1 Bathrooms · 101Floor area

€295,000

House

No parking

3 Bedrooms

1 Bathrooms

101m²

No garden

No pool

Not furnished

Description

Nestled on the edge of the scenic Quettreville-sur-Sienne in the Basse-Normandie department of France, this delightful single-storey home beckons its new owners to a life surrounded by the quintessential charms of French country living. Built in 2023, this property marries the promise of new construction with an inviting warmth, making it a prime choice for those looking to reside in a peaceful village yet remain close to the vibrant heartbeat of neighboring areas.

Set in a location that’s less than a 15-minute drive from the picturesque beach of Hauteville-sur-Mer, and just 10 minutes away from the town of Coutances, the home is perfectly positioned for both relaxation and convenience. Life here grants easy access to leisurely beach outings, invigorating walks along the coastline, and quick trips to explore local shops and cafes in nearby locales. The proximity of Quettreville-sur-Sienne makes it a hidden gem, offering a sanctuary away from the bustling city pace without sacrificing accessibility to urban comforts.

This home, offering single-storey living, unfolds across a generous 101 square meters of thoughtfully designed space. As you step inside, you’re welcomed by a spacious, sunlit living area that has been well-positioned facing South-West. This orientation ensures an abundance of natural light, enhancing the warmth provided by the pellet stove, a thoughtful addition for cozy winters. The heart of the home is undoubtedly its open-plan kitchen – fully fitted and equipped to cater to all culinary adventures, it provides not just a space to cook, but a hub for entertaining or enjoying casual family meals.

The bedroom wing promises tranquility and relaxation. It features three well-proportioned bedrooms, including a master suite that boasts its own private bathroom, equipped with a walk-in shower. This setup offers a private retreat within the home, perfect for unwinding after a long day. Additional features such as a separate laundry room and a toilet on this level accentuate functionality and appeal to families of various sizes.

Upstairs, versatility meets comfort with a landing area that doubles as an office space, allowing for work-from-home conveniences or creative endeavors. Two additional bedrooms on this level are serviced by another bathroom and an additional toilet, making this home particularly suited for growing families or hosting guests.

Outside, the property extends over a generous 1,225 square meters of fully fenced land. This expansive outdoor area offers ample room for gardening, recreational activities, or even potential future enhancements such as a pool. The motorised gate with videophone not only adds a layer of security but also enhances the ease of entry, making coming home a seamless experience.

- Spacious living room with pellet stove
- Fully fitted and equipped kitchen
- Master suite with private bathroom
- Walk-in shower in master bathroom
- Laundry room
- Separate toilet on ground floor
- Landing-office on upper floor
- Two additional bedrooms upstairs
- Second bathroom upstairs
- Fully fenced land with gated entry
- Motorised gate with videophone
- Proximity to beach and town centers
- Generous land area for outdoor activities

Living in Quettreville-sur-Sienne promises a climate typical of the region, characterized by mild winters and warm summers, perfect for enjoying the change of seasons in a serene rural setting. The local area is steeped in history and culture, offering a plethora of activities from exploring local markets to visiting historic sites and participating in the lively community events that paint this village as a vibrant mosaic of life.

For those only familiar with urban living, this property provides a wonderful balance between modern comforts and rural tranquility. Here, the pace of life slows down just enough to appreciate the simple pleasures—like the cool breeze from the coast or the sound of birds chirping outside on a sunny morning. Moving into a house like this offers the chance to not just live, but truly experience life in the French countryside. While the home is ready to move into and enjoy, it still leaves ample room for one’s personal touches to make it feel uniquely theirs, further enhancing the joy of settling into this lovely abode.

Details

Amount of bedrooms
3
Size
101
Price per m²
€2,921
Garden size
1225
Has Garden
No
Has Parking
No
Has Basement
No
Condition
good
Amount of Bathrooms
1
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

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

On 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

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

Picture 1

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

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

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

Picture 1

Properties nearby

Nestled within the serene landscapes of Normandy, Manche, this charming 7-bedroom house in Quettreville-sur-Sienne, France, presents a perfect blend of rustic allure and comfortable living, making it an appealing option for overseas buyers and expats. Positioned less than 15 minutes from the picturesque coastal regions, and surrounded by rich, lush countryside, the property provides a tranquil yet connected habitat. While retaining an abundance of traditional features such as flagstone floors, granite fireplaces, and exposed wooden beams, the home also offers modern amenities to ensure comfortable living conditions. The residence is divided into two distinct wings, presenting an ideal scenario for those wishing to engage in hospitality ventures like a bed and breakfast or a gite while maintaining private living quarters. Revel in the ground floor's ample living spaces which include an inviting entrance hall and a dining room characterized by an open fireplace and stone floors which welcome warmth and family gatherings. A cozy study and a breakfast room with dual aspects allow for sunny, leisurely mornings, while the double reception room equipped with a wood burner is perfectly suited for entertaining guests. The professional kitchen, complete with various sections and a walk-in fridge, caters to culinary exploits. For practicality's sake, the property also includes a stock room, boiler room, and a laundry room with a ground floor WC. Ascending either of the two staircase leads to the first floor, where personal space is amply provided with seven bedrooms, four of which boast en-suite facilities. A family bathroom and a separate WC ensure convenience for all inhabitants. Outside, the property offers considerable outd ... click here to read more

Image 1

Nestled in the serene embrace of Quettreville-sur-Sienne, in the picturesque department of Manche, France, lies a promising opportunity: a 2-bedroom house waiting to be transformed. Located a stone's throw from the charming town of Annoville, this quaint residence beckons those with a vision to breathe new life into its walls. Allow me to paint a picture of not just the property but the enriching experience of residing in this delightful corner of Normandy. Upon arriving at the address in Quettreville-sur-Sienne, one is greeted by a modest yet beguiling exterior, hinting at stories of past eras. The house is set on a generous plot of approximately 1400 square meters, split between adjoining and non-adjoining segments. While the structure itself is in need of renovation, it’s precisely this aspect that offers a unique canvas for creativity. The potential here is tremendous, ideal for those yearning to put a personal stamp on their home. Walking through the entrance, you step into a spacious living room filled with possibilities. Imagine the warmth of wooden floors underfoot or a cozy sitting area by a future fireplace. The kitchen, though currently requiring modern touch, offers ample space to design a culinary haven, where family recipes can be cooked and shared. This house features: - Two spacious bedrooms - One bathroom - A practical entrance hall - Large living room - Generous kitchen space - Two chicken coops - Two stables for storage - Extensive land, both adjacent and non-adjacent Each bedroom awaits transformation, poised to be comforting refuges for rest and rejuvenation. The single bathroom, while functional, stands ready for an easy upgrade to suit contemporary tastes. The property also includes two chicke ... click here to read more

Picture 1

In the charming village of Le Mesnil-Aubert, nestled in the picturesque region of Normandy, lies a property that truly captures the essence of rural French living. This spacious 7-bedroom farmhouse, boasting a habitable surface area of 242 square meters, is a genuine find for those looking to immerse themselves in the tranquil countryside of Manche. Set at the end of a long driveway, this property is surrounded by 4.69 acres of lush land, with no close neighbors, making it an idyllic retreat for anyone seeking peace and privacy. Starting on the ground floor, you'll be greeted by a modest hallway that leads to a grand sitting/dining room of 45 square meters. This expansive living area features an inviting open fireplace and two charming French windows that open to the exterior, letting in loads of natural light. Just off this space, a second sitting room of 23.5 square meters offers more room for relaxation, complete with a staircase that ascends to the first floor. The kitchen, although compact, is well-fitted and ready for culinary adventures. There’s a shower room with evacuation pipes for a washing machine and a separate WC on this floor too. The first floor is equally impressive, starting with a large landing and corridors leading to each room. For those interested in potentially running a B&B, the first four bedrooms are ideally situated for this purpose. The first double bedroom, measuring 14 square meters, includes an en suite shower room. The second double bedroom, at 12 square meters, features a built-in cupboard and an en suite shower room with WC. The third bedroom follows a similar layout, while a single fourth bedroom includes its own private WC. The fifth bedroom, at 17 square meters, comes with a WC, of ... click here to read more

Photo 1

Discover a delightful two-bedroom house nestled in the charming commune of Muneville-sur-Mer, located in the scenic Manche department. This house makes an ideal setting for those looking to experience a blend of peaceful rural life with convenience to modern amenities. Situated just one stone’s throw from the glorious Atlantic coastline, this property is a sanctuary for both relaxation and adventure. This two-story house, measuring an expansive 185 square meters, sits gracefully on a 505 square meter plot, offering a generous outdoor area perfect for gardening enthusiasts or families seeking outdoor play space. The ground floor features an inviting entrance leading into a well-appointed kitchen, which flows to a spacious dining room, perfect for family meals or entertaining guests. A cozy living room offers a relaxing space for quiet evenings at home. Also included on the ground floor are a bathroom, toilet, and a versatile games room area, adding an element of fun to the home's dynamics. Ascending to the first floor, you’ll find a sizeable mezzanine, ideal for a study or additional lounge area, alongside two comfortably sized bedrooms, and another well-equipped bathroom with a toilet. The attic has been cleverly converted, providing additional space that could be customized to meet any number of needs, be it extra storage or a hobby area. Additional property highlights include: - Large garden ideal for outdoor dining and activities - Expansive 50 square meter garage - Sea views enriching the serene ambiance - Excellent potential for customization and enhancements This property, while in good condition, offers new owners the perfect canvas to put their personal touch on their new home, making it an ideal choice for ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Welcome, international home seekers, to the tranquil and scenic village of Bricqueville-sur-Mer, nestled in the Manche department of Normandy, France. Here, you have the unique opportunity to acquire a lovely two-bedroom house, offering ample space and comfort for families or aspiring couples longing for a quintessential French lifestyle. Imagine waking up in a serene, quaint village where every morning is kissed by the gentle Normandy air. Bricqueville-sur-Mer, sitting comfortably in the Lower Normandy region, offers an idyllic country setting just a short drive from the bustling activity of larger towns and the stunning coastal views of the English Channel. The climate here is typically oceanic with mild summers and mild, but wetter winters, making it a year-round retreat. The property itself is built on a generous plot of 1800 square meters, providing ample outdoor space for gardening, leisure, or future expansions. Built in 1995, this home boasts a solid structure and is well-maintained, needing no immediate changes but open to personalization and improvements to truly make it your own. The house is currently rented, which offers an additional appeal for investors looking for ready tenants. Upon entering the home, you will find yourself in a welcoming entrance hall that leads you into the bright and open living room, complete with a cozy open fireplace – a perfect spot for gathering during the cooler months. The open kitchen adjoins this space, creating a wonderfully social area for entertaining guests or family gatherings. Also on the ground floor is a convenient office space equipped with a shower, a laundry room, and a separate toilet – all the groundwork for modern living is here. As you ascend to the upper f ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the serene countryside of Gavray-sur-Sienne in the Manche department, this charming two-bedroom house offers an appealing retreat for those looking to immerse themselves in the tranquil pace of rural French life. Positioned on a generous plot spanning 911 square meters, this home promises a quiet environment surrounded by picturesque landscapes. The house itself boasts a comfortable living space spread over two floors with an overall size of 85 square meters. On the ground floor, a spacious 34-square-meter kitchen provides ample room for culinary endeavors, complemented by a utility room and a bathroom for added convenience. Moving upstairs, a landing room leads to two cozy bedrooms, measuring 12 square meters and 17 square meters respectively, each offering peaceful views of the surrounding countryside. Additionally, the property includes a garage in the annex, enhancing its practicality. While the exterior of the house is in good condition, potential buyers should note the property's inviting aspects as a place of residence. The exterior's maintained appearance and the garden space offer several possibilities for personalization and landscaping to truly make it your own peaceful haven. In terms of amenities and environment, living in Gavray-sur-Sienne provides a well-rounded experience with local attractions and necessities: Large kitchen ideal for family meals Utility room Bathroom Two sizable bedrooms Garage included Spacious garden area Located a mere ten-minute drive from the nearest train station in Villedieu-les-Poêles and with easy access to the A84 motorway 7 kilometers away, commuting and traveling to neighboring towns and beyond is convenient. Local schools and recreational facilities, i ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Immerse yourself in the rustic charm of Normandy, Manche, specifically nestled in the peaceful town of Hudimesnil, France. On offer, is a striking 4-bedroom country home, brimming with potential and authentic French character, set amidst a generous 5.3 acres of fertile land. Priced reasonably at €191,000, this quintessential French farmhouse is awaiting the discerning overseas buyer seeking an authentic and unique French lifestyle. Despite currently requiring a little internal upgrading, the opportunity to transform this home into your dream country retreat is substantial. This home exudes authenticity from every corner, embodying the true essence of rural France. With four bedrooms and two bathrooms, there's no shortage of space for the family to sprawl, or for you to entertain your guests. On the ground floor, this house offers a spacious, fully equipped kitchen diner (26m²) complete with a country-style fireplace with a fitted wood burner that adds warmth and coziness to meals. Also on the ground floor, you’ll find a living room (27m²), adorned with an open fireplace and fitted cupboards, giving it a traditional feel, along with a convenient WC. Ascending to the first floor, here is meticulous planning expressed in a floorplan created to showcase a thoughtful balance between privacy and shared living. The first-floor layout hosts a double bedroom 1 (18.84m²), a bathroom, double bedroom 2 (10.20m²), single bedroom 3 (8.26m²), and a spacious bedroom 4 with an ensuite shower room (17.80m²). Furthermore, this home comes equipped with electric heating, along with double glazed, wooden framed windows, ensuring both comfort and efficiency, regardless of the season (Energy rating F). The outdoor areas enveloping this h ... click here to read more

Photo 1

Stand at the kitchen window on a October morning and you'll hear it — the wind cutting across open bocage fields, leaves skittering along the stone path to the barn, and somewhere in the distance the faint toll of the church bell from the village of Hudimesnil. This is Normandy at its most honest. No tourist gloss, no weekend crowds. Just raw countryside, salt-threaded air, and the kind of quiet that most people have to drive three hours from Paris to find — except from here, Paris is less than four hours by road and the Normandy coast is a ten-minute drive. The property sits in the commune of Le Loreur, tucked into the Manche department — an area that most international buyers haven't yet discovered, which is precisely why the prices still make sense. At 107,000 euros for nearly two acres of land, a three-bedroom country house, a semi-attached barn, and a convertible loft of 50 square metres, you're buying raw potential at a price point that frankly doesn't exist anymore in the better-known corners of France. Let's be straightforward about what this is. The house needs a full renovation — the energy rating is G, there's single glazing throughout, and the heating relies on electric radiators and two open fireplaces. This isn't a lock-up-and-enjoy situation. It's a project. But for the right buyer, that's the whole point. The bones are good: thick stone walls, proper room proportions, an entrance hall, a generous kitchen and dining room with an open fireplace, a rear kitchen, and a sitting room that measures over 29 square metres — a room that, once restored, will be the kind of space you spend entire winter evenings in, fire going, local Calvados on the table, not wanting to be anywhere else. Upstairs, two double bedr ... click here to read more

Photo 1

Nestled in the quaint countryside of Tourville-sur-Sienne, Manche, this intriguing single-bedroom house presents a unique opportunity—a stone barn brimming with potential, just waiting to be transformed. Situated on a generous plot of approximately 909 square meters, this property is a blank canvas, ideal for those with a vision for renovation. It is a chance to bring new life to a space that, with the right touch, could become an idyllic retreat or a charming little home away from the hustle and bustle of city life. Let’s dive a little deeper into what this property and its surrounds have to offer. Located to the north-east of the property, the stone barn beams with possibilities. With openings to the south, there's the potential for beautiful natural light to fill the future living spaces. There is also room for expansion on this plot, offering a chance to extend the existing building, perhaps adding more rooms or recreational spaces, or even subdividing the land for other projects. Imagine crafting an outdoor garden space, something resplendent with local flora, or indulging in the dream of a summer kitchen for al fresco dining. For those unacquainted with the Manche region of Lower Normandy, you're in for a delightful surprise. Not only is this area known for its rolling green landscapes, but it's also a treasure trove of historical and cultural riches. The proximity to the English Channel presents a maritime climate, which means mild temperatures through the year with a fair share of cloudy days, ideal for those who enjoy the seasons but preferring a temperate climate. Living in Tourville-sur-Sienne is akin to stepping back into simpler times while still enjoying the conveniences of modernity. You’ll find yoursel ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the lush and tranquil countryside of Mesnil-Amand, near the charming commune of Gavray-sur-Sienne in Normandy, France, this three-bedroom house offers more than just a roof over your head. It's an opportunity to embrace the serene rustic lifestyle, dotted with medieval history and picturesque landscapes. For those considering a home in the heart of this stunning region, you will find this property brimming with potential and bursting with character, all while being reasonably priced at €149,000. As you step into the heart of this home, you will notice the expansive living room that invites residents to gather around its robust stone fireplace. This room, which also opens into a fitted kitchen, forms the hub of household interaction. At approximately 24.78 square meters, it is spacious enough for cozy family evenings or entertaining friends. A separate sitting room with a staircase provides additional space to unwind or host guests. Adjoining these areas is a large rear kitchen and utility room, roughly 20.8 square meters, that not only caters to all your culinary needs but also doubles as a practical area for everyday tasks. The ground floor also features a shower room with a WC. Upstairs, the first floor greets you with a landing that leads to two generous double bedrooms. These spaces are sizeable and versatile, allowing residents to customize them according to personal taste or family needs. Additionally, a compact study provides room for a quiet retreat or a practical home office setup. This floor also includes a WC and a small box room. The second floor of this property has two intercommunicating bedrooms. While the house requires internal updating, it provides a blank canvas for a buyer with vision t ... click here to read more

Photo 1

This delightful four-bedroom house, nestled in the charming Gavray-sur-Sienne in Normandy, France, is a perfect blend of accessibility and tranquility. With a picturesque setting and a well-maintained garden, this home extends a warm welcome to those looking for a spacious family residence mere 25 minutes from the bustling coast at Granville and 10 minutes from the main A84 Caen to Rennes route. This makes traveling and commuting from nearby ports and airports both convenient and hassle-free. Upon entering, one finds themselves in a home that offers a cozy yet functional ambiance. The ground floor features a fully fitted kitchen boasting an Aga range cooker with an extractor, an integral dishwasher, exposed beams, and tiled flooring, perfect for cooking family meals. Adjacent to the kitchen, a dining area with a wood burner provides ample space for a large dining table, ideal for family gatherings. The living room is bathed in natural light with dual aspect views and underfloor heating, ensuring comfort throughout the seasons. Additionally, there's a utility room which conveniently leads out to the rear garden and includes a shower room with a toilet. The bedrooms are split over the first floor, accessed by two separate staircases at each end of the house ensuring privacy. Each set comprises two bedrooms and a shower room, with a separate toilet for convenience. This layout offers flexibility that can accommodate a large or growing family, or even guests. Outside, the house is surrounded by lush lawns with mature trees and shrubs, and a terrace at the front presents the perfect spot for enjoying evening drinks. The driveway encircles the house, providing an easy entrance and separate exit. Property Features: - Spacio ... click here to read more

Image 1

Situated in the tranquil setting of the Normandy countryside, near Gavray sur Sienne in the Manche region of France, a charming 2-bedroom house could be yours. Imbued with classical French charm, this property has all the potential to become a quintessentially French dream home for its next owner. Spread over a total area of 135 sqm, the property maintains a good condition albeit some areas are for renovating. It offers countless opportunities for elaboration and personalization. Its spaces include room for further bedrooms and living areas, which will make it an inviting space for family and friends visiting. The home’s ground floor features an entrance hall with 2.43 square meters of space, transitioning into an open plan living area that combines the sitting area, dining room, and kitchen in a harmonious 30.48 square meter setting. Tiled flooring and a stone fireplace add to the rustic charm of the home, ensuring utmost comfort and warmth during the winter months. On this level, there is also a small storage room for added practicality, as well as a WC. On either end of the property sit rooms waiting for a creative touch. Spreading across 15.86 square meters and 29 square meters, these rooms are just aching to be converted into extra bedrooms, a game room, or perhaps a study. The latter of these spaces was the previous village hall, speaking to the home’s rich history. Upstairs on the first level, a corridor leads to two sizable bedrooms (10.78 m², and 8.90 m²). Following the corridor, you will find a shower room measuring at a convenient 3 square meter of space. Three more rooms crying out for renovation are available on this level, as well as a small storage room. The attic, convertible into additional living s ... click here to read more

Photo 1

Nestled in the scenic and tranquil countryside of Basse-Normandie, the charming village of Gavray-sur-Sienne offers a unique opportunity to own a bit of French rustic living. This country home, a former presbytery, sits peacefully surrounded by lush greenery and captivating landscapes that paint a perfect backdrop for those wishing to embrace the slower pace of life. With Gavray town just a mere 6-minute drive away, you can easily access an array of shops, schools, and a middle school, making it convenient for families or those looking to integrate into a small yet vibrant community. Living in Gavray-sur-Sienne is like stepping into a storybook. The picturesque countryside thrives amid rolling hills and meandering rivers, offering a serene landscape that changes beautifully with the seasons. The climate in this region of Normandy is mild, with balmy summers and cool winters, adding to the allure of living in such an idyllic setting. This area is well-known for its traditional countryside activities like horse-riding, hiking, and cycling. It’s not uncommon to see locals and visitors alike enjoying leisurely strolls through the verdant fields or picnicking by the tranquil Sienne riverside. The property itself, although habitable, is a project waiting for a vision. With solid stone construction and a timeless slate roof, this house provides a sturdy foundation upon which to create the home of your dreams. The interior spans 123 square meters offering ample space that's ripe for personalization and enhancement. The ground floor features a welcoming entrance hall alongside a practical living area, a pantry, and additional restroom facilities, all complemented by classic stone walls that whisper stories of bygone days. Vent ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Located in the picturesque region of Normandy, Manche, in the charming commune of Saint-Denis-le-Gast, France, this delightful two-bedroom house presents a compelling opportunity for those looking to experience the tranquil essence of rural French living. Priced at €169,000 and set within a generous 0.64-acre garden, this property not only offers space and serenity but also the potential to create a personalized haven away from city hustle. The residence provides a comfortable living space of 119 m² distributed over two floors. On the ground floor, the inviting sitting room spans just over 20 m², offering a cozy setting for relaxation and family gatherings. Adjoining this is a spacious dining room of approximately 27 m², complete with an open fireplace that adds a touch of rustic charm and warmth during the cooler months. The fitted kitchen, about 16 m², is pragmatically designed to cater to culinary endeavors. Additionally, there’s a storage/boiler room and a laundry area with a toilet, which conveniently opens to the garage, enhancing the usability of the space. Ascending to the first floor, the layout includes a modest landing that leads to three bedrooms, two of which are interconnecting, making them ideal for families with children or guests. These rooms measure 16.63 m², 17.77 m², and 9.58 m² respectively. A compact yet functional shower room with a toilet serves the sleeping quarters. Property features: - Total area: 121 m² - Bedrooms: 2 (with possible use as 3) - Bathrooms: 1 - Open fireplace - Double glazing windows - Fosse toutes eaux drainage system - Attached garage - Extensive garden area: 0.64 acres The property is in good condition, yet it offers ample scope for further personalization and enhancement ... click here to read more

Photo 18

Nestled in the charming commune of Saint-Jean-des-Champs, this delightful stone house is awaiting its next fortunate owners. Priced attractively at €176,500, this 4-bedroom dwelling offers a warm and embracing aura of French countryside living. Let me take you on a journey through this property of character and explore the beauty of the local area. As you arrive at this Stone house, the charm of rustic architecture makes an immediate impression. Built with steadfast stone, the house emits a timeless allure, fitting for anyone seeking a quintessential French experience. The house is comfortably spread across 119 square meters and comprises six well-appointed rooms, offering ample space for family life or hosting guests alike. Ground Floor: Step inside where a fitted and equipped kitchen beckons you to try your hand at French cuisine. The dining room, complete with a comforting wood stove, serves as the heart of the home, where leisurely meals and stories are shared. Adjacent, is a cozy living room perfect for relaxing evenings. A bedroom, shower room, WC, and storage room complete this floor. Upstairs: The first floor houses two charming bedrooms, each a sanctuary for rest and repose after a day out exploring. Second Floor: The top floor endeavors to delight with a spacious bedroom paired with its own dressing room, offering both privacy and comfort. The plot of land surrounding the property is a manageable 437 square meters, ideal for a budding gardener to cultivate a personal oasis or for children to frolic safely. Living in the beautiful region of Manche is filled with possibilities. Just a short 15-minute drive will escort you to pristine beaches, where the soothing sound of the waves can melt away all worrie ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Discover a charming 4-bedroom house nestled in the heart of Yquelon, Manche, 50400, France. This dreamy dwelling is not just a house, it's a homely abode that is in good condition, promising years of contentment. Built in 2010, the house is a blend of modern design complemented with homey appeal. Upon entering, you'll find a welcoming entrance area fitted with cupboards for seamless storage. The house seamlessly flows into the living room, making it an excellent space for family bonding and entertaining guests. A well-fitted kitchen stands adjacent to the living room, ideal for whipping up meals while still being part of the conversation. The property boasts of four commodious bedrooms, providing the exact space needed for a comfortable living. One of these bedrooms includes fitted cupboards, offering ample personal space. The house is also equipped with a convenient hallway, a bathroom replete with WC, and an independent WC room with a hand basin, defining utmost convenience. Additional features include: - A garage with a laundry area, perfect for a comfortable lifestyle - Integrated living room with a fully-fitted kitchen - Land area of 523 m2 If you've dreamed of a des-res, this house gives a penchant for detailed architecture. Intriguing to investors who love properties with a stamp of character, with the promise of an unmatched French lifestyle. Yquelon is a quaint town in the historic region of Lower Normandy, renowned for its idyllic location bordered by Calvados, Orne, Mayenne, and Ille-et-Vilaine. This property, wrapped up in the embrace of the English Channel to the west, north, and north-west coastlines, provides an ease of accessibility through its many ports from other parts of the UK and Europe. The c ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Discover Your Dream Home in Yquelon, Manche Nestled in the picturesque landscape of Yquelon in the Manche department, this captivating 4-bedroom house offers a blend of comfort and convenience, ideal for families looking for a serene lifestyle in France. Built in 2010, this home has been meticulously maintained, making it a turnkey solution for those wishing to settle without the immediate need for renovations. House Description: - Embrace the comfort of this lovely house spanning 110 square meters. - Features a welcoming entrance with practical storage cupboards. - Spacious living room seamlessly connected to a fitted kitchen, perfect for family interactions. - Four cozy bedrooms, including one with built-in cupboards for extra storage. - Two well-appointed bathrooms, enhancing morning routines with a separate WC equipped with a hand basin for added convenience. - A utility-driven garage with an ample 21 square meter laundry area. - Set on a generous 523 square meter plot, offering both privacy and space for outdoor activities. Local Area and Lifestyle: Yquelon, located within the scenic region of Lower Normandy, offers a peaceful countryside environment complemented by the proximity to the vibrant cultural and historical tapestry of the area. Residents enjoy easy access to the English Channel’s beautiful coastlines, providing exceptional opportunities for boating and maritime activities. The climate in Yquelon is temperate maritime, characterized by mild winters and cool summers, ideal for enjoying the outdoors year-round. Living in Yquelon: Living in Yquelon means being part of a community where life moves at a gentle pace, yet is enriched with the cultural depth and historical landmarks of the Normandy region. N ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Welcome to this delightful 3-bedroom house nestled in the serene countryside of Saint-Planchers, Manche, France. Just a short 5km drive from the beautiful sea, this charming property is sure to captivate you with its peaceful surroundings and easy access to the coastal wonders of Granville. Built originally between the years of 1980 and 2000, with a renovation carried out in 2008, the house offers comfort along with modern convenience and charm, making it an excellent choice for those looking to settle in a tranquil, yet vibrant, location. The house stands independently, boasting a spacious 165 square meters of living space. Sitting on a plot of 1,864 square meters, there is ample room for exploring and leisure amidst the green embrace of nature. As you step inside, the ground floor welcomes you with an entrance that leads into a cozy bedroom, perfect for guests or family members desiring a bit of privacy. A well-appointed bathroom and a separate toilet ensure convenience. An intriguing aspect of this floor is the artist's studio, sprawling across 30 square meters. This space shouts potential; it could effortlessly transform into an additional bedroom or perhaps a creative retreat. Venture up to the first floor, and you’ll find the master bedroom, a casual yet elegant haven measuring 10.50 square meters. The adjoining bathroom and dressing room come with a walk-in shower that adds a touch of luxury to everyday living. For your convenience, the floor features a separate toilet. The highlight here is a large living room with a charming fireplace, offering 30 square meters of warmth and comfort. Imagine cozying up here during the cool winters with a crackling fire. Additionally, the fully fitted kitchen, which shares an ... click here to read more

Picture 1