Enchanting Stone House in Biron, Aquitaine: Your Ideal French Holiday Home

Listed on
https://storage.googleapis.com/homestra-images/property-image-efa5bc40-b28a-41b0-83ca-379c3fb25955-1752932062.jpg

Biron, Aquitaine, 24540, France, Biron (France)

3 Bedrooms · 1 Bathrooms · 164Floor area

€574,750

House

Parking

3 Bedrooms

1 Bathrooms

164m²

No garden

Pool

Not furnished

Description

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque Aquitaine region, this enchanting stone house in Biron offers a unique opportunity to own a slice of French paradise. With its rich history, stunning landscapes, and vibrant local culture, Biron is the perfect location for those seeking a second home that combines tranquility with adventure.

Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the distant chime of church bells, as the sun casts a golden hue over the rolling hills. This 164m² stone house, in excellent condition, is more than just a property; it's a gateway to a lifestyle steeped in charm and elegance.

A Glimpse into Your New Home

The ground floor welcomes you with a spacious 82m² living and dining area, where a wood burner adds warmth and character. The open-plan kitchen, fully fitted and ready for culinary adventures, is perfect for hosting family and friends. A master suite with a dressing room and private bathroom offers a serene retreat, while a separate toilet and storeroom add convenience.

Upstairs, two additional bedrooms with covered terraces provide cozy spaces to unwind, each offering breathtaking views of the surrounding countryside. A shower room with WC and a storage room complete the first floor, ensuring ample space for guests or family.

Outdoor Living at Its Finest

Step outside to discover a covered terrace, ideal for al fresco dining during the warm summer months. The 10x5m heated swimming pool, equipped with an electric roller shutter, promises endless hours of relaxation and fun. A carport provides shelter for your vehicle, while the expansive grounds, spanning over 1 hectare, are adorned with mature trees, offering both privacy and beauty.

For those with a vision, the property includes a 66m² drying shed and a 130m² stone house, both ripe for renovation. These outbuildings present an exciting opportunity to expand or personalize your estate.

The Allure of Biron

Biron is a charming village that captures the essence of rural France. Dominated by the majestic Biron Castle, the area is steeped in history and offers a plethora of activities for all ages. From exploring the local markets to hiking the scenic trails, there's always something to do.

The climate in Aquitaine is mild, with warm summers and cool winters, making it an ideal location for a holiday home. The region is well-connected, with easy access to major airports and transport links, ensuring that your French retreat is never too far away.

Investment Potential

As a second home, this property offers not only a personal sanctuary but also a lucrative investment opportunity. The demand for holiday rentals in this region is strong, providing potential for rental income when not in use.

Key Features:
- 164m² stone house in excellent condition
- 3 bedrooms, including a master suite with private bathroom
- Spacious living/dining area with wood burner
- Open-plan fitted kitchen
- Heated swimming pool with electric roller shutter
- Covered outdoor terrace for summer dining
- Carport and ample parking
- Over 1 hectare of landscaped grounds
- Potential to renovate additional outbuildings
- Proximity to Biron Castle and local amenities
- Strong rental potential in a sought-after holiday destination

Owning this property means embracing a lifestyle where every day feels like a holiday. Whether you're seeking a peaceful retreat or an active adventure, this stone house in Biron is your gateway to the best of French living. Let Homestra guide you to your dream second home in Europe, where memories are made and cherished for a lifetime.

Details

Amount of bedrooms
3
Size
164
Price per m²
€3,505
Garden size
14104
Has Garden
No
Has Parking
Yes
Has Basement
No
Condition
good
Amount of Bathrooms
1
Has swimming pool
Yes
Property type
House
Energy label

Unknown

Sign up to access location details

Similar properties

Stand at the edge of the private lake on a July morning and the only sounds are a wood pigeon somewhere in the oak canopy and the soft lap of water against the bank. No road noise. No neighbors. Just 14 hectares of meadow, woodland, and sky — and a stone estate that has been quietly watching over all of it for generations. This is Genouillé, a commune in the Vienne department of Poitou-Charentes, and this property is the kind of find that makes serious buyers stop scrolling and pick up the phone. The estate is anchored by a substantial main house — proper stone walls, exposed timber beams that have darkened beautifully over the decades, and reception rooms large enough that a gathering of twenty people still feels unhurried. Four bedrooms, each with its own private shower room, mean that a multigenerational family or a group of close friends can arrive for two weeks in August and never queue for a bathroom. The private in-ground pool sits within the grounds of the main house, giving the primary residence its own self-contained world. Completely separate and fully independent, the gîte adds another four to five bedrooms and a second pool. This is where the property starts to reveal its financial logic. Poitou-Charentes draws steady summer traffic — cyclists riding the Vélodyssée, families heading to the Marais Poitevin, history enthusiasts making their way between Romanesque churches — and good-quality rural gîtes in the Vienne book up fast from June through September. The infrastructure here is already in place. You're not building from scratch; you're stepping into a ready-made hospitality setup with genuine income potential. The third structure on the property is a cottage: sitting room, dining space, one bedroom, b ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a Sunday morning in Fayence, the church bell at the top of the old village counts nine slow strokes, and they drift down through the lavender-scented air all the way to your terrace. Coffee in hand, you're looking out over a ripple of forested Provençal hills, the surface of the pool catching the early light. This is not a fantasy. This is a Tuesday in October, or a Thursday in June — this is just what life looks like when you own a converted stone sheepfold in one of the most quietly compelling corners of southern France. Fayence sits in the Var, roughly halfway between the bustle of Cannes and the rocky grandeur of the Gorges du Verdon. It's a perched village — the kind the Var does so well — with cobbled lanes climbing to a 15th-century church, a rotating cast of artisan markets, and restaurants that take their bouillabaisse and daube provençale seriously. The Tuesday and Saturday markets on the Place de la République pull producers from across the region: olives pressed in Draguignan, goat cheese from the farms above Callian, honey from hives in the Maures hills. You're not driving to a supermarket here. You're walking five minutes to fill a basket. That proximity to the village center is one of this property's quiet advantages. It reads as countryside — the greenery around it is dense and genuinely peaceful — but the boulangerie and the pharmacy and the small épicerie are on your doorstep. International buyers often underestimate how much this matters day-to-day when a property is used across long stretches of the year rather than just a single summer fortnight. The sheepfold itself is the real draw. Stone construction of this age and character is increasingly hard to find in good condition in the Var at this ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a still morning in the Aude, before the cicadas get going and while the dew is still on the orchard grass, you can stand on the terrace of this estate and watch the Pyrenees catch the first light. The mountains sit low and blue on the southern horizon, the Canal du Midi is just a few minutes' drive away, and Castelnaudary — the undisputed world capital of cassoulet — is twelve minutes down the road. This is southwest France at its most unhurried and most real. The property itself is substantial. 567 square metres of living space spread across a main house, a second large dwelling, and two fully independent cottages, all sitting within landscaped grounds that include a 10x5 metre swimming pool, a mature orchard, two stone wells, and covered outdoor areas shaded by trees that have been growing here for decades. An adjoining barn, stone garages, and a workshop round things out. This is not a weekend retreat — it's a full estate, and it has the bones to become something genuinely exceptional. The main house runs to 164 square metres: a generous living room, a kitchen, three bedrooms, and two shower rooms. The original exposed stonework and timber beams are still intact, the kind of architectural detail that takes centuries to accumulate and can't be replicated with a renovation budget. The second dwelling — 236 square metres — connects to the main house or operates as a completely separate unit. Four guest bedrooms, each with its own en-suite bathroom, a lounge, a dining room, a kitchen, and a private terrace. The two additional cottages are fully equipped and ready to receive guests. That's four separate accommodation units on a single property, which matters enormously if you're thinking about income. And you probabl ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a still Tuesday morning in late June, the only sound you'll hear from the wisteria-draped terrace is the distant clang of a church bell from Lauzerte's hilltop and, if you're lucky, the unhurried creak of a tractor moving through a sunflower field far below. This is the pace of life in the Quercy Blanc — slow, deliberate, and quietly addictive. The stone farmhouse sitting just a short walk from one of France's officially designated Most Beautiful Villages doesn't shout for attention. It doesn't need to. Built around 1880 as a working duck farm — the kind of history you can actually feel in the thick limestone walls and worn original staircase — the property has been brought into the present with real care. The renovation is thorough without being sterile. Exposed stone walls meet a properly fitted kitchen with integrated appliances. Original ceiling beams frame the living room where a wood-burning stove inside a substantial fireplace becomes the social anchor on October evenings when the Tarn-et-Garonne hillsides shift from green to rust and amber. Tiled floors run underfoot with the kind of patina that only comes with a century of use. Three bedrooms, three bathrooms — including a master suite with its own dressing room and en-suite — give the house room to breathe without sprawling unnecessarily. A large attic sits above it all, unconverted and full of potential, the kind of space that could become a fourth bedroom, a studio, or a reading room depending on who moves in. At 230 square metres, the interior is generous. But in high summer, you'll spend most of your time outside. The pool terrace is serious. A high-quality swimming pool with an electric cover and a proper wooden deck isn't an afterthought here — it's ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Stand in the kitchen of this 270-square-metre stone water mill on a Tuesday morning in late September and you'll hear the channel running beneath the house before you see it. The sound is constant — not loud, just present — like the building itself is quietly breathing. Light comes through the south-facing windows in long pale strips. The stone walls hold the cool of the night well into afternoon. This is Nonards, deep in the Corrèze, and once you've spent a week here, most other places feel faintly over-stimulated. The Corrèze doesn't get the same traffic as Dordogne or the Lot. That's precisely the point. The département sits in the northern reaches of the Nouvelle-Aquitaine, spilling into the high plateau country of the Massif Central, and the landscape here has a particular quality — wide river valleys, dense oak and chestnut forests, medieval villages perched above the Dordogne gorges that barely appear on the tourist maps. Nonards itself is a commune of a few hundred people, surrounded by working farmland and nature reserves. The nearest town of any size is Beaulieu-sur-Dordogne, about twelve minutes by car — a genuine market town with a Saturday morning market that runs along the riverfront and draws producers from across the region. You can be back at the mill with fresh walnuts, a wheel of Cantal, and a bunch of dried lavender before 10am. The mill sits on approximately one hectare of land, enclosed and private, with no neighbouring properties overlooking the plot. A stone-lined water channel — the original mill race — runs directly beneath the building and emerges through the garden in a wide, slow-moving stream shaded by mature trees. In summer, children wade in it. In autumn, it runs amber with tannins from ... click here to read more

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

Some mornings in the Périgord Noir you wake up to nothing. No traffic, no alarms — just wood pigeons calling from the oak canopy and the faint smell of damp stone warming in early sun. That's the rhythm of life at this five-bedroom stone property in Cénac-et-Saint-Julien, a village that sits quietly above the Dordogne River, close enough to Sarlat-la-Canéda that you can be browsing the Saturday market stalls within fifteen minutes, far enough away that you'd never know it. Set on 2.7 hectares — a mix of open lawn, mature woodland, and garden — the house has the solidity of a building that has outlasted several generations and been thoughtfully brought forward rather than stripped of character. The stone walls are original. The renovation, however, is recent and thorough: new electrical panel, updated plumbing, two hot water tanks, and a kitchen installed from scratch that opens directly into a 39-square-metre living and dining area flooded with afternoon light. It's the kind of space where a summer lunch stretches comfortably into the early evening without anyone thinking to move. The main house holds four bedrooms — two of them full suites with private shower rooms — and those room sizes (22, 23, 15 and 12 square metres) are generous by French rural standards. The primary suite is on the ground floor, which matters more than people expect: after a long day walking the Beynac cliffs or cycling the Vézère valley trail, the last thing you want is stairs. The layout is practical in all the ways that count for a family who actually intends to use a second home, not just own one. What makes this property genuinely unusual is the second, fully independent building. It has its own living room, kitchen, and shower room, with ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a quiet morning in the Gironde, before the tourist coaches arrive in the village and the church bells of Saint-Émilion's monolithic abbey start marking the hour, you can stand at the kitchen door of this 1860s chateau and look out across a landscape that has been producing some of the world's most celebrated wine for over a thousand years. The vineyards run almost to your garden wall. The air smells faintly of warm earth and cut grass. This is not a postcard. This is Tuesday. Built in 1860 and extended in the decades that followed, this nine-bedroom chateau and manor house sits in more than an acre of grounds just a short drive from the celebrated village of Saint-Émilion, in the heart of one of France's most revered wine-growing appellations. At 280 square metres of interior space across the main residence and a separate guest house, there is real breathing room here — room for a large family, room for friends who stay too long and don't apologise for it, room to think about what you actually want this place to become. The building's history shows itself in the right ways. Walk through the entrance hall and the proportions feel considered, unhurried — the way older houses do when they were built for people who planned to stay. A classic reception salon sits off the hall, the kind of room that works for a winter dinner party with candles on the table just as well as it does for lazy Sunday lunches spilling out into the garden. A separate dining room, a study, and a family kitchen that opens directly onto the grounds complete the ground floor picture. Wooden double-glazed windows throughout manage the neat trick of preserving the original character while keeping things genuinely comfortable across all four seasons. ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Step outside on a Tuesday morning and the only sound is the cuckoo somewhere deep in the oak woods behind the meadow. No traffic. No neighbours visible. Just the smell of damp grass, a light mist burning off the valley below, and the knowledge that you have six hectares of Périgord countryside entirely to yourself. That is the daily reality of this place — a 318-square-metre stone estate at the end of a quiet cul-de-sac on the edge of a tiny hamlet near Saint-Aubin-de-Lanquais, and it is the kind of property that makes people stop scrolling. The main house is authentically Périgord — golden limestone walls, exposed oak beams on the upper floor, and a sense of solidity that only three centuries of craftsmanship can produce. The ground floor flows generously: a 45-square-metre open living and dining room fills with southern light through most of the day, connecting directly to a 13-square-metre kitchen that opens onto the same space, making it genuinely social. There is also a private ground-floor bedroom with its own dressing room and ensuite shower — ideal for guests who prefer not to climb stairs, or for the owners themselves. A dedicated 30-square-metre office sits apart from the living areas, which matters if you work remotely or plan to manage the gîte business from the property. Upstairs, two further bedrooms — 23 and 15 square metres respectively — have the kind of exposed ceiling beams that interior designers try to recreate and never quite nail. Now, the part that sets this property apart from the typical Dordogne holiday home: it comes with two fully functional gîtes. The smaller one sleeps four across 62 square metres, with its own living room, two bedrooms, and a secluded garden that gives guests genuine pri ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a still Tuesday morning in Thénac, the only sounds are birdsong, the occasional bell from the nearby Plum Village monastery drifting across the fields, and the soft creak of walnut branches in the breeze. You're standing on the terrace with a coffee, looking out over an unbroken panorama of Périgord countryside. No cars. No noise. Just space, light, and a 423-square-metre longère that's been quietly absorbing centuries of Dordogne life since the 1600s. This is not a typical French farmhouse renovation story. What you get here is rare: a genuinely large, genuinely versatile property that was substantially refurbished in 2021, sitting on around 5,400 square metres of landscaped grounds with a natural spring-fed pond, mature orchard trees — apple, walnut, cherry, plum, pear — and a private swimming pool tucked behind a thick hedgerow so that no one can see in. The pool terrace feels like your own private world, shielded from everything. Step inside through the main entrance hall, which is wide enough to function as a proper reception room, with doors opening to both the front and rear of the house. It sets the tone immediately. Stone walls. Thick, solid materials. A sense of permanence you don't find in new builds. The kitchen pulls you in further — organic and unhurried in its design, with wooden units, natural stone flooring, and walls that have absorbed three hundred years of cooking smells and family meals. This is the kind of kitchen where you actually want to spend time, not just pass through. The main lounge takes the drama up a level. A cathedral ceiling rising two full storeys gives the room a scale that feels theatrical without being cold, and a mezzanine level above adds an intimate counterpoint to all that ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Picture this: it's a Tuesday morning in July, the kind that only happens in the Béarn. You've pushed open the tall shutters of the first-floor landing, and the garden below is already alive — bees working the lavender, the pool catching the early light, the Pyrenean foothills just visible through a soft summer haze on the horizon. Downstairs, someone has put a baguette on the kitchen table. The nearest boulangerie is five minutes away, and by now you know exactly which one to use. This is what owning a château actually feels like, and this particular one — a three-storey, 468m² stone manor built in 1898, set on 4.16 hectares of its own grounds in a tiny hilltop hamlet near Salies-de-Béarn — makes that morning feel entirely possible. The château sits at the end of a winding country lane, approached by a private drive that curves around to a small parking area in front of the house. Stone steps rise to the front door and open into an entrance hall that stops first-time visitors mid-sentence. The double staircase that dominates the hall — symmetrical, unhurried, built for making an impression — sets the tone for everything that follows. A matching pair of stone exterior steps at the rear mirror the interior staircase and lead straight down to the grounds, the 12m x 4m pool, and the tennis court beyond. The ground floor arranges itself logically around that central hall: a sitting room of 30m², a dining room of equal size with an open fireplace that earns its keep through autumn and into the Pyrenean winter, a library-study-office of 23m², and a kitchen. The spaces are generous without being cavernous, which matters more than people expect when a property like this becomes a real family base rather than a weekend curiosity ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Stand on the upstairs balcony on a clear morning and the Seine Valley rolls out in front of you like something you'd stop to photograph on a road trip—except this is just Tuesday, and you own it. That 49m² master suite behind you, the smell of coffee drifting up from the kitchen below, the garden still dewy and quiet at that hour. This is the kind of house that doesn't announce itself loudly. It earns you over, slowly, room by room. Boissise-le-Roi sits in the Seine-et-Marne département, tucked into a green loop of the river about 40 kilometres south of Paris. It's not a name you'll find on tourist maps, and that's exactly the point. This is a residential village where people actually live—where the boulangerie on Rue de la Fontaine knows its regulars, where the school run and the Sunday walk along the Seine riverbank are the defining rhythms of the week. For a second home buyer, that's rare. You get the proximity to Paris without the noise, the price inflation, or the sense that you're always surrounded by other visitors. The house itself sits on a landscaped plot of 2,600 square metres—generous by any standard, genuinely rare this close to the capital. The garden has been thought about: terracing that runs to roughly 63 square metres of outdoor living space, a covered parking area for two vehicles, a garden shed, and a well with rainwater recovery that keeps the green looking like this in August without sending the water bill through the roof. On warm evenings, this terrace is where dinner happens. There's no competition from traffic noise, no neighbours pressed close on either side. Just the garden, the view down toward the valley, and the kind of stillness that city dwellers come a long way to find. Inside, the gr ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Step onto the south-facing terrace on a clear October morning and there it is—Najac Castle, perched on its narrow rocky spur, the Gorges de l'Aveyron rolling away beneath it in every direction. The mist hasn't fully lifted yet. The wood-burning stove inside is still warm from last night. This is the kind of morning people drive across France to find, and here it comes with your breakfast. Najac sits on the edge of the Aveyron valley like something a medieval cartographer drew on a good day. Frequently counted among the most striking villages in the whole of southern France—it made the official "Plus Beaux Villages de France" list and earns that distinction honestly—it draws visitors from across Europe every summer, yet somehow manages to stay genuinely local. The weekly market runs on Sundays along the main strip, where farmers from the surrounding causse sell raw-milk tomme, walnut oil pressed just up the road, and slabs of aligot mix you'll argue about all the way home. There's a butcher who still knows the name of every farm his beef comes from. That's Najac. This house sits on five hectares of land on the edge of that village, close enough to walk to the boulangerie for a croissant, far enough that you won't hear your neighbours through the wall. You don't have any immediate neighbours. The land wraps around you—nearly four hectares of it contiguous—and the countryside absorbs whatever noise the world is making. In July the evenings smell of dry grass and lavender drifting up from the lower meadows. In November it's woodsmoke and wet earth. Both are worth coming for. The house itself was rebuilt stone by stone from the original structure. That matters here. The builders didn't pretend to add old-world character wi ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Stand at the tall windows of the first-floor salon on a Tuesday morning and you'll understand immediately why people have been coveting this address for centuries. The Charente River slides past below, catching the light in that particular way it does in late spring—silver and slow—while the bell tower of the Abbaye aux Dames marks the half-hour with a sound that drifts through the open glass and settles into the room like it belongs there. This is the Saint-Pierre quarter of Saintes, one of the most quietly distinguished addresses in southwest France, and this five-bedroom Hôtel Particulier has occupied its corner of it with serious, unhurried confidence for generations. The property spans 471 square metres across a generous footprint that reveals itself gradually—you push through the courtyard gate, cross the stone-flagged entrance, and only then begin to understand the scale of what you're dealing with. Rooms that are genuinely large, not estate-agent large. Ceiling heights that make you stand up straighter. The kind of proportions that were built when space wasn't a luxury but an expectation. The original features are extraordinary in their survival. Wood panelling—the real thing, full height, painted in the muted tones of old French interiors—lines the principal reception rooms. Ceiling roses of elaborate plasterwork crown each main space. The spiral staircase at the heart of the house is the sort of architectural gesture that stops people mid-sentence when they first see it; tight, precise, built from stone that has worn smooth in exactly the right places. Herringbone parquet runs through the upper floors; period encaustic tiles handle the ground level. None of this is reproduction. None of it has been ripped out ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a quiet morning in the Dordogne, you open the shutters of a stone farmhouse and the garden hits you all at once — the scent of cut grass still damp from overnight rain, the faint sound of a church bell drifting in from Eymet's medieval bastide, a swallow darting low over the saltwater pool. This is what owning this three-gite complex outside Eymet actually feels like. Not a hotel. Not a rental investment spreadsheet. A real place, with thick stone walls and oak beams worn smooth over centuries, that happens to pay for itself when you're back home. The property comprises three fully renovated and individually furnished dwellings — a one-bedroom, a two-bedroom, and a three-to-four-bedroom cottage — set across half an acre of mature walled gardens. Each one has its own kitchen, living and dining space, and bathroom, so you can host a multigenerational family gathering without anyone tripping over each other, or rent out two units while you stay in the third. That flexibility is genuinely rare, and in this corner of southwest France, it's worth a lot. The renovation work is thorough and thoughtful. Stone walls have been kept where they belong — on full display, not plastered over. Exposed beams run the length of the ceilings. But there's nothing rustic-to-a-fault about the practicality: electric radiators and wood-burning stoves mean the season stretches well beyond July and August, double glazing keeps heating bills honest, and a newly installed fosse septique (October 2023) means one major infrastructure cost is already behind you. The pool liner was replaced in June 2025. This is a property someone has been maintaining properly, not parking and hoping for the best. That 10m x 5m saltwater pool is the centre of summe ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a still Tuesday morning in the Charente countryside, you open the French doors off the kitchen and the smell of damp grass and woodsmoke drifts in from the garden. There's coffee on the go, the pool is catching the early light, and your guests are still asleep in the gîte across the courtyard. This is not a fantasy — this is an ordinary morning at this property, five kilometers outside Barbezieux-Saint-Hilaire, on a 4,147-square-meter plot that somehow manages to feel both completely private and reassuringly close to real life. The main house is 225 square meters, approached through gates and along a private driveway that announces clearly: you've left the road behind. The ground floor moves logically from a proper entrance hall into a study — useful if you work remotely or need a quiet corner during longer stays — and then opens into the kitchen and living-dining room. The fireplace and wood burner at the heart of the space are not decorative. On a January evening when the Charente temperatures drop to single figures, they earn their keep completely. French doors push the room outward onto the terraces, where a built-in barbecue waits for the kind of long summer dinners that drift into the dark. Three ground-floor bedrooms handle the family or friends situation comfortably. Two separate toilets mean the morning routine doesn't become a negotiation. The shower room is thoughtfully arranged — private to the master bedroom but also corridor-accessible when needed. Practical in the way that only houses designed for actual living tend to be. Then there's the tower. A stone staircase from the main entrance climbs to a private suite — bedroom and its own shower room — tucked away from everything else. It's the room teena ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Push open the old iron gate in the high stone wall and the world outside disappears completely. That's the first thing you notice—the silence, punctuated only by birdsong and the faint rustle of the linden trees lining the garden path. You're standing in front of a house that has been here since the 1400s, its medieval stone-framed windows still intact, its bread oven still capable of baking a full loaf. This isn't a renovation project dressed up in period details. It's the real thing, sitting on nearly three hectares of private grounds just outside Ansac-sur-Vienne in the heart of the Charente, offered to the market at a price that would barely buy a two-bedroom flat in Paris. The scale of what's here takes a moment to register. A seven-bedroom main residence with double-height ceilings and exposed oak beams. Two self-contained gîtes, both renovated and generating rental income. A 150-square-metre barn. A cottage that still needs work. A 15th-century pigeonry that stops every visitor in their tracks. And over 7.5 acres of walled land, watered by the estate's own spring. For buyers searching for a genuinely viable income-producing holiday property in southwest France, or a private family compound with space for multiple generations, estates with this combination of features simply don't come to market often. Step inside the main house through the arched entrance and you walk into a wide hallway anchored by an oak staircase that climbs to a mezzanine gallery above. The main room below is cathedral-like—double height, flooded with light from three large glass doorways that open directly onto the terrace and walled garden. A log burner sits at one end. On a January morning with frost on the garden and a fire going, this r ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Stand at the edge of the limestone plateau on a clear October morning and you can hear absolutely nothing. No traffic, no machinery, no neighbors. Just a kestrel working the thermals above the Causses and the faint whisper of wind through the oak scrub. That kind of silence is not incidental here — it's the whole point. This is Marcilhac-sur-Célé, a village in the Lot department of southwestern France where the river carves through pale cliffs and the pace of life hasn't changed much in a century. And this property — a complete rural estate comprising the majority of an ancient hamlet, two substantial stone houses, two large farm buildings, and 92 unbroken hectares of land — is about as rare as the silence itself. Let's start with the land, because it's what makes everything else possible. The 92 hectares come in one piece, which matters enormously. No fragmented parcels, no tenant farmers, no complicated lease agreements to unpick. Seventeen hectares are meadows and mixed woodland down in the valley; the remaining 75-plus are fully fenced limestone plateau — the wild, scrubby Causses terrain that defines the character of this entire region. Walk it for an afternoon and you'll find old stone cazelles, those dry-stone shepherd's huts that dot the plateau like punctuation marks from another era, plus a small barn still waiting for someone with a vision. The fencing is already in place, which is a significant practical detail: under France's 2023 loi clôture, that enclosure can be maintained for agricultural activities, horse breeding, or hunting dog training grounds, among other permitted uses. The land supports animals, market gardening, rural tourism, or simply the luxury of having a private wilderness on your doorstep. ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Properties nearby

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque Aquitaine region, this charming timber-frame house in Biron offers an idyllic retreat for those seeking a second home in France. With its serene countryside setting, this property is a haven for relaxation and a gateway to the rich cultural tapestry of the Dordogne. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the soft chirping of birds, as the morning sun filters through the lush greenery surrounding your home. This is the daily reality for those fortunate enough to own this delightful property. Built in 2021, the house seamlessly blends modern comforts with the rustic charm of its natural surroundings, making it an ideal vacation home for families, couples, or solo adventurers. A Gateway to French Countryside Living Located just a stone's throw from the historic Chateau de Gavaudun, this home is perfectly positioned for exploring the rich history and culture of the region. The nearby village of Lacapelle-Biron offers quaint local shops and amenities, while the bustling town of Fumel is just a short drive away. For those traveling from afar, Bergerac airport is conveniently located within a 45-minute drive, ensuring easy access for international visitors. A Home Designed for Comfort and Style Step inside to discover a thoughtfully designed interior that prioritizes comfort and style. The ground floor features a welcoming entrance, a spacious bedroom, and a bright kitchen that opens onto a dining area warmed by a hybrid wood-burning stove. The cozy living room invites you to unwind after a day of exploring the countryside. Upstairs, a versatile landing area can be transformed into a home office or reading nook, leading to two generous bedrooms. One of these bedrooms ... click here to read more

Picture 1

This charming, four-bedroom house located in Biron, Aquitaine, France, is a delightful discovery nestled amid lush surroundings, providing a taste of idyllic and peaceful living. As you step into this delightful abode, you are greeted by the spacious first-floor living room, which hosts a warm, inviting fireplace; the perfect setting for intimate family times during the colder months. Adjoining the living room is a sunny 25m² terrace; a versatile space for entertaining guests, a private reading nook, or simply a quiet place to enjoy your morning cup of coffee. The modern kitchen, stylishly built in 2019, is fully-equipped and seamlessly opens up to the dining area, creating a harmonious flow that is ideal for hosting dinner parties and other gatherings. The first floor also boasts three ample-sized bedrooms, a luxurious bathroom adorned with a contemporary-style shower and bathtub, and a separate toilet, ensuring optimal convenience. The expansive basement level can be easily accessed through an internal staircase, and presents itself as an independent studio. It consists of a cosy living room, kitchenette, bedroom and a shower room, that open onto a picturesque small garden with private access. This makes it versatile and suitable to accommodate visitors, or could be transformed into an office or leisure space. The basement also houses generous utility spaces comprising garages, a utility room, and a workshop. Complementing the main house is a stone and wood outbuilding that could conveniently serve as additional garage or carport space. Property features: - 156m² living space - 4 spacious bedrooms - Fully-equipped kitchen - Separate dining area - Large living room with fireplace - Sunny terrace - Utility room and ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Introducing a beautiful four-bedroom house for sale, located in picturesque Aquitaine, Dordogne, Biron, France. Nestled amidst a lush verdant environment, this home is imbued with a soothing blend of tranquility and charm. It offers a comfortable lifestyle coolly nestled in a warm community, where tradition meets the joy of French living. Designed with roomy interiors, this property spans two well-thought-out levels. On the first floor, find yourself welcomed by a large living room that houses an inviting fireplace - perfect for cozying up during the winter months while sharing a warm drink and stories. Adjoining this space is a sunny 25m² terrace overlooking the sprawling terrace, ideal for basking and perhaps painting in the summer months, or hosting an intimate dinner under the stars. The bright and modern kitchen, remodeled in 2019, opens into a splendid dining area that could easily accommodate a lively feast or a quiet family dinner. A hall extends to three spacious bedrooms offering ample scope for personalization, a contemporary bathroom equipped with a contemporary shower and bathtub for a spa-like relaxation, and a separate toilet. The ground floor, accessible via an internal staircase, houses an independent studio that consists of a living room, a kitchenette, a bedroom, and a shower room that opens to a small, private garden—an absolute haven for guests seeking a retreat, teens demanding their space, or setting up a home studio/workshop. Supplemental to the house, there is a stone and wood outbuilding, which can be efficiently used as a garage or carport, reinforcing practicality. This house is enhanced with double glazing, aerothermal heating optioned in 2021, two air conditioning units, and a modern se ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled amid the captivating French countryside, this resilient perigourdine-style country home offers a unique chance to live in harmony with nature while being anchored in history and culture. It sits comfortably in a scenic riverside location in Monpazier, Dordogne, a region well-known for its breathtaking landscapes, historic villages, and vibrant culture. Infused with both tradition and contemporary comfort, this home is perfectly situated amidst lush greenery, on a sprawling 1.2 hectares of mature gardens and pasture. The picturesque setting is merely a backdrop to this residence's appeal, as it invites you to imagine a lifestyle abundant with tranquility and opportunities for exploration. With 130 square meters spread over two floors, this home gives the ideal living space for those who long for a place that embodies both charm and practicality. Constructed in 1975, it comes fully renovated to suit modern sensibilities. The renovation efforts have taken care of updating the electrics, plumbing, flooring, and insulation, ensuring a more energy-effective and pleasant living atmosphere. You'll find yourself welcomed into the upper ground floor by an entrance porch that opens into a hall enveloped in rich oak flooring and adorned with exposed beams that whisper stories of the past. A spacious living room, echoing comfort, features oak flooring and a recently installed wood-burner. This setup promises cozy evenings. From here, step onto a rear balcony, or seamlessly transition into the adjoining dining room and kitchen space. The kitchen, crafted with a newly installed island and tasteful travertine flooring, is a haven for meal prep or exploration of the culinary arts. Moving up to the first floor, a landing leads ... click here to read more

Immaculately presented perigourdine style house with 1.2ha near Monpazier, Dordogne

Nestled in the delightful area of Monpazier, Aquitaine, this charming villa offers a picturesque setting for those looking to immerse themselves in French village life. Famed for its historical bastides and vibrant local culture, Monpazier is a harmonious blend of past and present, making it an ideal location for expats and overseas buyers who treasure both tranquility and community spirit. The villa itself, well-maintained and inviting, sits proudly in this serene village, presenting an enticing opportunity for those wishing to own a property with character and comfort. Spanning 198 square meters, this home features four generously-sized bedrooms and two well-appointed bathrooms, providing ample space for family living or welcoming guests. On the ground floor, a spacious hallway introduces you to an open-plan living area bathed in natural light, where the adjoining kitchen and dining spaces boast modern fitted appliances, ideal for family meals and entertaining friends. The living area is further enhanced by a comforting woodburning stove, perfect for cozy evenings. Additionally, the ground floor hosts a substantial principal bedroom complete with an en-suite shower room styled in contemporary Italian design and an adjacent dressing area. Moving upstairs, the layout continues to impress with three double bedrooms, two of which include private dressing areas, offering plenty of storage and personal space. A family bathroom and separate toilet are also conveniently placed on this floor. The entire villa is equipped with double-glazed windows, ensuring energy efficiency, and a ground floor heat pump for heating and hot water, underlining the home's blend of traditional charm and modern convenience. Outdoors, the proper ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Picture yourself ascending worn stone steps to your very own fortified house, its thick walls dating back to 1450, standing as they have for nearly six centuries in a peaceful Dordogne hamlet. This is where history becomes home—where you wake to birdsong in the Périgord countryside, where your morning coffee tastes better in a room warmed by a 15th-century stone fireplace, and where every weekend becomes an exploration of medieval bastides, riverside markets, and gastronomic traditions that have barely changed since the Renaissance. This 170-square-meter stone residence between Monpazier and Beaumont-du-Périgord offers an extraordinary opportunity to own a piece of French history while enjoying the vibrant vacation lifestyle of the Dordogne, one of Europe's most captivating regions for second-home ownership. The residence occupies a serene hamlet location that delivers the quintessential French countryside experience—complete silence broken only by church bells from nearby villages, yet positioned just minutes from two of France's Plus Beaux Villages. This balance defines the Dordogne vacation experience: authentic rural tranquility with immediate access to cultural richness, weekly markets overflowing with foie gras and walnuts, and restaurants where three-course lunches remain an art form. Your ownership journey begins as you approach this former fortified house, its honey-colored stone glowing in the afternoon light. The original stone staircase leads to an entrance that opens into a welcoming kitchen flowing into the main living space—a room that tells centuries of stories. Two monumental stone fireplaces anchor this space, one from the 15th century, another from the 16th, both testaments to the craftsmanship of medi ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Discover the essence of French living in the heart of Dordogne, in the picturesque village of Monpazier, Aquitaine. This charming 4-bedroom townhouse stands as a testament to the rich history and culture of the region, offering a unique blend of period features, character, and modern comfort. Wrapped in the stunning beauty of the French countryside, Monpazier is not just a place to live but an experience, promising a serene lifestyle steeped in history. Property Overview: Nestled within high stone walls lies a hidden gem awaiting its next chapter. The property is a beautiful representation of local architecture, boasting a stone façade that immediately captures the eye. Upon entering, guests are welcomed into a spacious hallway that sets the tone for the rest of this inviting home. The house spans 187sqm of living space, thoughtfully distributed across two floors. On the ground level, a light-filled lounge and dining room promise cozy gatherings and memorable meals. The fully equipped kitchen, complete with access to a quaint courtyard garden, makes outdoor summer dining a delightful affair. The presence of a rear kitchen and utility room adds a layer of practicality, while the large cellar-stock room presents endless possibilities for storage, hobbies, or even a personal wine collection. As we venture upstairs, the property boasts four en-suite bedrooms, each with its own unique character and charm. These rooms offer flexibility for various lifestyles, whether you’re envisioning a bustling family home or considering operating a chambre d'hôtes (bed and breakfast), tapping into the area’s thriving tourism. Features at a Glance: - Spacious 187sqm layout - 4 en-suite bedrooms - Fully equipped kitchen with courtyard acc ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Situated in the picturesque Lot valley heartland, within the 20 hectares of lush pasture and verdant woodland, this country home radiates a blend of charm and practicality. The property is comfortably nestled in vibrant Monpazier, Dordogne, providing a serene yet enriched rural French lifestyle. Featuring seven bedrooms spread across a spacious 530 sqm, the estate offers a harmonious balance of luxury and rustic aesthetics. The main residence boasts an expansive 350 sqm of lavish living space that seamlessly combines comfort with elegance. A comprehensive 120 sqm secondary house, typecast for guest accommodation, adds functional flexibility to this estate, comprising a kitchen, lounge, three bedrooms, and a bathroom. The construction quality and maintenance of the property are of a premium standard, testifying to its pristine condition. The estate is a haven for equestrian enthusiasts, illustrated by the superior equestrian facilities including a stable block with nine stalls, a hay barn, a 28 sqm tack room, and a comprehensive range of riding schools equipped with quartz lighting and water jets, supported by an environmentally friendly rainwater harvesting system. Outdoor living is enhanced by a variety of charming terraces offering tranquil spots for relaxation, accompanied by sweeping views of the meticulous gardens and surrounding woodlands. The central feature, a curved swimming pool, invites leisurely days soaking up the sun. Monpazier, a short distance from the property, is a historically rich bastide town famed for its well-preserved architecture and vibrant cultural scene. It offers a delightful array of shops, cafes, and restaurants. The weekly market brings community and regional flavor to life, making it ... click here to read more

Photo 5

This charming four-bedroom house in Aquitaine, Dordogne, nestled in the scenic village close to Monpazier, offers a unique mix of comfort and potential that is ideal for both a primary residence or a delightful holiday home. Positioned in a region famed for its vibrant green landscapes and traditional French villages, this property boasts both an appealing setting and a practical layout fit for family life or seasonal stays. The house presents a well-maintained stone facade typical of the area's architectural style, leading to a bright and welcoming interior. The ground floor is equipped with a spacious, open-plan living area that includes a kitchen with fitted appliances, and a dining space perfect for family meals or entertaining guests. The large windows ensure the room is bathed in natural light, enhancing the sense of space. The principal bedroom on this level includes an en-suite, Italian-styled shower room and a convenient dressing area, providing a private retreat within the home. Above, the first floor comprises three additional double bedrooms; two feature private dressing areas, catering to the needs of a growing family or visiting guests. There is also a well-appointed family bathroom and a separate toilet, ensuring functionality and privacy for residents and guests alike. The thoughtful layout is complemented by modern essentials such as full double-glazing, a ground-floor heating system powered by a heat pump, hot water provision, and a cozy wood-burning stove in the lounge for those cooler evenings. Outdoor space includes a generous workshop and a wood store, alongside a beautifully maintained garden framed with mature hedging and plants, offering a serene spot for relaxation or outdoor dining. The hou ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque Dordogne region, this expansive 7-bedroom house in Monpazier offers a unique blend of rustic charm and modern comfort, making it an ideal second home or holiday retreat. Located in the serene village of Marsalès, this property is a mere 2km from the vibrant bastide town of Monpazier, renowned for its medieval architecture, bustling markets, and lively cultural scene. Imagine waking up to the gentle sounds of nature, sipping your morning coffee on a private terrace, and planning your day around the myriad of activities that the Dordogne has to offer. Whether you're seeking a peaceful escape or an active lifestyle, this property caters to all your desires. Property Highlights: - Spacious Living: With 297 square meters of living space, this house offers ample room for family gatherings and entertaining guests. - Bedrooms & Bathrooms: Seven well-appointed bedrooms and six bathrooms ensure comfort and privacy for all. - Renovated Farmhouse: The main house retains its rustic charm with exposed beams and stonework, while offering modern amenities. - Studio Apartment: A versatile space that can serve as a guest suite or a rental unit, complete with its own entrance and outdoor seating area. - Three Gîtes: Housed in a converted barn, these charming units feature industrial-style windows, concrete floors, and solar-heated water systems, perfect for summer rentals. - Outdoor Living: Multiple seating areas for alfresco dining, a swimming pool with a sun-drenched terrace, and 4.6 hectares of land for outdoor activities. - Equestrian Facilities: Pasture and woodland areas, along with access to a bridleway, make this property ideal for horse enthusiasts. - Income Potential: The gîtes offer a l ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a Tuesday morning in late June, the hamlet of Marsalès is almost too quiet to believe. A rooster somewhere down the lane. The smell of warm stone. Your coffee cooling on the covered terrace while the Dordogne countryside rolls out in every direction — golden fields, oak woods, church spires poking through the haze. This is not a postcard. This is a Tuesday. And this is what owning a second home here actually feels like. This three-bedroom stone cottage sits in an elevated position in the hamlet of Marsalès, in the southern Dordogne département — one of the most consistently sought-after pockets of rural France among British, Dutch, Belgian, and North American buyers. The elevation matters more than you might think. From the terrace, you get an uninterrupted sweep of the Périgord Pourpre landscape, the kind of view that stops mid-conversation. No neighbors directly in your sightline. No road noise. Just the countryside doing its thing. The property itself is in good condition — solid, liveable, and full of the kind of quiet character that comes from old stone walls and good proportions. Three bedrooms gives you enough room for a couple with visiting family, or a group of friends splitting the cost of a summer week. The fitted kitchen is functional and practical, the living room is genuinely warm in the way only thick-walled stone houses can be in winter. This is not a gut-renovation project. You could be here with a suitcase and a bottle of Bergerac red within weeks of completion. Outside, the swimming pool changes everything. It turns the garden from a nice feature into the center of daily life during July and August. Lunch by the water. Evening swims after the heat breaks around seven. The covered terrace runs alo ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the serene village of Marsalès, near the enchanting town of Monpazier, France, this charming stone cottage is a delightful blend of comfort and potential, offering a unique living experience in the heart of Aquitaine, Dordogne. Ideal for overseas buyers seeking a slice of French countryside, this residence provides a hospitable atmosphere, replete with the rustic elegance that characterizes the region. Property Features: - Condition: Good, with a welcoming tone for those interested in adding personal touches to create their dream home. - Bedrooms: 4 spacious bedrooms, including a ground floor principal bedroom with an en-suite Italian styled shower room and dressing area. - Bathrooms: 2 well-appointed bathrooms, ensuring convenience for family and guests alike. - Size: A comfortable 198 sqm of living space, perfect for family living or entertaining guests. - Heating & Cooling: Equipped with double-glazed windows, a ground floor heat pump for heating and hot water, and a cozy wood-burning stove in the lounge for those chilly evenings. - Outdoor Space: The property boasts a generous workshop, a wood store, and well-maintained gardens with mature hedging and planting, creating a serene outdoor seating area. Amenities: - Fitted kitchen with appliances, ideal for those who love to cook. - Utility space in the garage, offering additional storage solutions. - Easy access to Bergerac airport and timely train connections for international travel. - Proximity to local shops, restaurants, and bars, just 4 km away, blending convenience with the tranquility of countryside living. Local Area Insights: Marsalès, situated in the picturesque Dordogne region, is a treasure trove of history, culture, and natural beauty. L ... click here to read more

Picture 1

This charming three-bedroom house located in the serene Dordogne region of Aquitaine, near the picturesque town of Monpazier, presents a perfect blend of comfort and potential. With a price tag of €380,000, this property offers a quintessentially French living experience, ideal for those looking to immerse themselves into the tranquil lifestyle of rural France or for overseas buyers seeking a peaceful retreat. Property Features: - Bedrooms: 3 Double Bedrooms - Bathrooms: 2 (1 Full Bathroom, 1 Separate Toilet, additional WC) - Living Area: Spacious open-plan living and dining area with ample natural light - Kitchen: Fully fitted and functional - Size: 100 square meters - Additional Spaces: Large downstairs area with potential for conversion (subject to necessary permissions), double garage for extra storage or vehicle security - Outdoor Area: Extensive outdoor space with stunning views and a large swimming pool, perfect for relaxation or entertaining guests during the warmer months. Amenities: - Travertine tiling throughout the house - Plenty of storage space - Potential for additional living space conversion - Large outdoor swimming pool - Close proximity to local shops, restaurants, and historical sites Living in Marsalès near Monpazier allows you to enjoy the best of both worlds: the peacefulness of the countryside and the vibrancy of a historic bastide town. Monpazier, a 20-minute walk from the property, is acclaimed as one of the most beautiful towns in France. It offers a variety of shops, weekly local markets selling fresh produce, and numerous cultural events throughout the year that reflect the rich heritage of the region. The local area is steeped in history, with many castles, vineyards, and traditional mar ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a quiet morning in the Périgord Noir, you open the kitchen window and catch the faint scent of woodsmoke drifting over the tree line. No traffic, no neighbors in sight—just the low hum of bees working the garden and, if you time it right, the bells of Monpazier's 13th-century church tower rolling across the fields. That's the reality of life at this single-level bungalow just outside one of France's most celebrated medieval bastide towns. This isn't a fixer-upper project or a compromise buy. The house is in good condition, built in 1996, sitting on just over half an acre of land thick with mature trees that keep the garden cool even in July. At 75 square metres of living space on one level, everything is practical and liveable from day one. An entrance hall leads into a generous living and dining room, a separate kitchen, two bedrooms, a shower room, and WC. No stairs to navigate, no awkward layout decisions. Downstairs, a full basement stretches to approximately 70 square metres—housing a garage and a bonus room that, while unheated, offers real potential as a workshop, studio, or extra storage. The Dordogne valley deserves more credit than it usually gets from the international property press. People talk about Provence and Tuscany, but the Périgord has been quietly doing its own thing for centuries: limestone cliffs dropping into the Vézère river, prehistoric cave paintings at Lascaux just over an hour's drive north, truffle markets in Sarlat every Saturday morning from November through March. The weekly market at Monpazier itself—held every Thursday on the arcaded central square, the Place des Cornières—is the kind of thing you start structuring your week around. Local producers set up stalls selling foie gras, ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Step into a world where history meets tranquility in the heart of the Dordogne. This enchanting 18th-century cottage, nestled in the picturesque village of Monpazier, offers a unique blend of rustic charm and modern comfort. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the soft chirping of birds, as the morning sun filters through the lush canopy of your private woodland. A Day in the Life: Start your day with a leisurely breakfast on one of the two expansive dining terraces, surrounded by over 2000m² of meticulously maintained gardens. The scent of fresh lavender fills the air, mingling with the aroma of freshly brewed coffee. As you sip your morning cup, the view of the rolling Dordogne countryside stretches out before you, a living canvas of greens and golds. The Cottage Experience: Inside, the cottage exudes warmth and character. The ground floor's open-plan living area is a harmonious blend of traditional and contemporary elements. Exposed beams and a wood-burning stove create a cozy ambiance, while the tiled floors and double-glazed windows ensure comfort throughout the seasons. The kitchen, with its rustic charm, invites culinary exploration, perfect for preparing local delicacies sourced from nearby markets. Seasonal Rhythms and Local Delights: As the seasons change, so too does the landscape. Spring brings a burst of color with wildflowers carpeting the fields, while summer offers long, sun-drenched days perfect for exploring the nearby bastide village of Monpazier, just a five-minute drive away. Here, history comes alive with its medieval architecture, bustling markets, and vibrant cultural events. Autumn paints the region in hues of amber and gold, a perfect backdrop for leisurely walks through ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Enchanting 4-Bedroom Stone Cottage in Monpazier, Dordogne Set within the picturesque scenery of Monpazier within the Dordogne department, this charming stone cottage presents a unique opportunity for a fixer-upper aficionado. This property is nestled in a tranquil village, just a short distance from the historic bastide town of Monpazier, renowned for its medieval charm and vibrant local life. House Overview: The house spans across 198 square meters and consists of two levels. On entering, a spacious hallway welcomes you, leading directly into a luminous open-plan living area, which integrates the kitchen—complete with modern fitted appliances—and dining space. This area is perfect for both family gatherings and casual entertaining. On the ground floor, the principal bedroom serves as a serene retreat, equipped with an en-suite Italian-styled shower room and a separate dressing area. Adding to the functionality of the ground level is a garage that includes utility space and additional storage overhead. The journey upstairs reveals a large landing that transitions into three double bedrooms, two of which boast private dressing areas. This floor is also serviced by a family bathroom and a separate toilet, ensuring ample facilities for residents and guests alike. Features: - Total size: 198 sqm - Bedrooms: 4 - Bathrooms: 2 - Fully double-glazed windows - Heat pump for ground floor heating and hot water - Woodburning stove in the lounge External Amenities: - Generous workshop - Wood store - Low-maintenance garden with mature hedging and plantings - Comfortable seating area Local Area and Climate: Monpazier, located in Aquitaine, Dordogne, sits in an area rich with history and natural beauty. The town itself, one ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the picturesque village of Monpazier, in the heart of the Dordogne region, this enchanting stone house offers a perfect blend of rustic charm and modern comfort. With its rich history and vibrant local culture, Monpazier is a quintessential French village that promises a serene escape from the hustle and bustle of everyday life. This property is not just a house; it's a gateway to a lifestyle filled with relaxation, exploration, and unforgettable memories. Imagine waking up to the gentle sounds of the French countryside, the sun casting a warm glow over the rolling hills and vineyards that stretch as far as the eye can see. This is the daily reality for those fortunate enough to call this charming stone house their second home. With two spacious bedrooms and two well-appointed bathrooms, this property is perfectly suited for family getaways or romantic retreats. The house itself is a testament to traditional French architecture, with its stone façade and beamed ceilings. Step inside, and you'll find a cozy living room that invites you to unwind with a good book or enjoy a glass of local wine by the fireplace. The fitted kitchen is a culinary enthusiast's dream, offering ample space to prepare meals using fresh ingredients sourced from the local markets. One of the standout features of this property is the expansive covered terrace, which overlooks a private pool and offers breathtaking views of the surrounding countryside. It's the perfect spot for al fresco dining, morning coffees, or simply soaking up the sun. And for those cooler evenings, the hot tub provides a touch of luxury and relaxation. Monpazier itself is a treasure trove of history and culture. As one of the best-preserved bastide towns in Fran ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled within the picturesque landscapes of Aquitaine, Dordogne, in the charming village of Capdrot, lies an inviting 1960s family house awaiting its next chapter. Positioned peacefully in a quiet hamlet, this property grants an opportunity to live in tranquility while staying close to the historic town of Monpazier. Here in the heart of France, the scenery and lifestyle blend seamlessly for those seeking both serenity and a touch of local culture. This home is constructed upon a generous 2,500 square meter enclosed plot, offering ample space for outdoor activities or future landscaping projects. It’s a property that benefits from good overall condition but could certainly be personalized to reflect the unique tastes of its new owner. With a well-built structure, the possibilities to enhance and make this space your own are as expansive as the land it sits on. Arriving at the house, you are welcomed by a living area spanning 122 square meters. The layout is airy and efficient, featuring four beautifully sized bedrooms ranging between 12 to 13 square meters. Perfect for families, each room provides a cozy retreat after lively days spent exploring the local area. Additionally, with two bathrooms, mornings will be a breeze even on the busiest of days. • Living area of 122 m² • Peaceful location near Monpazier • 4 sizable bedrooms • Large kitchen of 18.39 m² • Living room of 22.29 m² • Bright veranda of 10.35 m² • Separate shower room and WC • Expansive 96.67 m² garage in basement • 14.21 m² cellar • Additional rooms of 12.72 m² and 10.11 m² in basement • Spacious garden of 2,500 m² Imagine mornings in your spacious kitchen, a canvas ready for your culinary experiments, or evenings spent in the liv ... click here to read more

Picture 1