Escape to Tranquil French Living: Spacious 4-Bedroom Stone House with Extra Development Potential in Étouars, Aquitaine

Listed on
https://storage.googleapis.com/homestra-images/property-image-7a1c507e-7b4c-4ba8-89eb-da547a0cd675-1741293598.jpg

Étouars, Aquitaine, 24360, France, Étouars (France)

4 Bedrooms · 1 Bathrooms · 150Floor area

€152,600

House

No parking

4 Bedrooms

1 Bathrooms

150m²

Garden

No pool

Not furnished

Description

If you're seeking a serene slice of French life away from the bustle but with the convenience of nearby amenities, this quaint stone house in Étouars might be just what you’re searching for. Set in the picturesque Aquitaine region of France, this property combines rustic charm with modern potential for those wishing to embrace a tranquil lifestyle or invest in a second home. The property, positioned accessibly by a small private road, promises both privacy and the charming presence of French countryside living.

Embrace the unique ambience as you enter through the sturdy doors into the spacious ground floor. Exposed stone walls paired with a traditional fireplace in the large living room invite residents to imagine cozy nights filled with warmth and harmony. The accompanying kitchen remains functional, ideal for those keen to indulge in culinary adventures inspired by the rich local produce. The ground floor also houses one bedroom and a bathroom, ensuring convenience alongside comfort—perfect for guests or those preferring single-level living accommodation.

Upstairs, the charm continues with three additional bedrooms, each whispering potential. One of these rooms cleverly includes a water point, offering the budding interior designer within you an opportunity to craft a cozy en-suite or a functional office space. Another bathroom and convenient toilet add to the practicality of this floor, promising that the hectic morning routines run smoothly.

Now, let's step outside to unearth more exciting features. A small adjacent house, equipped with its own fireplace, could be a future gite—a charming retreat for visiting family and friends or perhaps an additional income stream for the entrepreneurial-minded. The necessary permissions and a touch of imagination could transform this structure into a cozy, inviting space.

As you wander the property grounds, discover a charming stone barn on the opposite side of the road. With a land size of 695 m² including this barn area, it’s in a constructible zone, providing tantalizing opportunities for expansion or new projects. Adjoining the main house is another barn that enhances the bucolic atmosphere—a place where storied pasts meet imagined futures.

A beautifully tree-lined garden envelopes the house, offering a touch of nature's serenity to your daily backdrop. Whether you envision lazy afternoons with a book, family gatherings, or even a small vegetable plot, the garden provides the perfect setting for dreams to blossom.

Living in Étouars, one can’t help but appreciate the blend of tranquility and community. It’s a place where the rhythm of life slows down, allowing residents to savor every moment. Nearby Piegut-Pluviers is just a 10-minute drive, providing access to some local necessities and amenities, without overwhelming city buzz. Local markets burst with fresh produce—a must-visit for any food enthusiast.

The climate in Aquitaine is characterized by pleasant, mild seasons. Summers are warm, encouraging days spent exploring the lush countryside or partaking in vineyard tours of the famous local wine regions. Winters are mild, making the indoor comforts of your stone house more inviting.

Home to a rich tapestry of culture and history, Aquitaine is not just a place to reside but to fully experience. Étouars itself offers an intimate community feel where you exchange friendly bonjours with neighbors or partake in local festivities that celebrate the charm of rural French life. For expatriates and foreign buyers, Étouars grants a genuine taste of France’s welcoming nature and endless cultural pursuits, all set amidst breathtaking landscapes and a region steeped in history.

Imagine weekends spent exploring rolling vineyards or going on scenic strolls through verdant hills. The area also facilitates fantastic hiking routes for invigorating outdoor activities that make you feel closely connected to nature.

Key features of the property include:
- Access via private road
- Large living room with exposed stone and fireplace
- Functional kitchen space
- Ground-floor bedroom and bathroom
- Three upstairs bedrooms, one with a water point
- Additional bathroom and separate toilet
- Small house with potential for use as a gîte (permission required)
- Charming stone barn suitable for development
- Garden and ample outdoor space
- Approx. 695 m² land within a constructible zone

Embracing this stone house in Étouars is more than acquiring a home; it's an invitation to be part of a tapestry rich in beauty, culture, and French rural heritage. For those willing to see potential where others see renovations, this property opens its doors to bespoke comfort and enduring hospitality.

Details

Amount of bedrooms
4
Size
150
Price per m²
€1,017
Garden size
1005
Has Garden
Yes
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

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

Front view of 24 Chabrol 0740

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

Photo 1

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

Picture 1

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

Photo 5

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

Saturday morning in La Bazouge-du-Désert sounds like this: a wood fire ticking quietly in the kitchen insert, the smell of coffee cutting through cool Breton air, and birdsong coming in through a window that looks out over 462 square metres of your own garden. No neighbours at your elbow. Just countryside, quiet, and the kind of unhurried morning that most people only manage once a year on holiday — except here, it would be yours whenever you wanted it. This compact stone country house sits in the northern Ille-et-Vilaine, the oldest corner of Brittany, in a rural commune that most visitors driving toward Saint-Malo never bother to slow down for. That's exactly the point. At €54,800, it's one of those rare entry points into genuine French rural property ownership — the kind of deal that doesn't appear often in a department where coastal prices have been climbing steadily and even inland villages are attracting more attention from buyers priced out of Normandy. The ground floor is functional and liveable right now. A kitchen with a wood-burning insert fireplace anchors the space — this is the room you'll be in most, and in October when the temperature drops and the trees turn, it earns its place. The living room flows from there, with one bedroom and a shower room/WC completing the footprint at around 60 square metres of living space. It's honest, not fussy. Good condition means you can move straight in, run it as a bolt-hole, rent it out short-term, or use it as a base while you plan what comes next. What comes next, potentially, is the attic. The first floor is an unconverted space of approximately 65 square metres — structurally there but requiring modifications to bring it into full use. That's a significant canvas ... click here to read more

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

Properties nearby

Nestled in the picturesque region of Dordogne in Aquitaine, France, lies the charming village of Étouars, where a delightful stone house awaits new owners. This 2-bedroom property presents a wonderful opportunity for those looking to immerse themselves in the tranquil pace of French rural life while embracing the charm of a home ripe for personalization. The house spans approximately 70 square meters and retains a rustic aesthetic, merging old-world charm with the comforts of modern living. The ground floor features three spacious living areas, each brimming with character, highlighted by traditional architectural elements. Upstairs, a cozy bedroom and a small, accessible attic provide comfortable private spaces, offering serene views of the surrounding nature. Adjacent to the main residence, a barn with a substantial 50 square meter floor area includes a mezzanine. This space holds potential for creative reimagining—perhaps as additional bedrooms or a workshop—subject to the necessary approvals. The south-facing terrace and a garden adorned with mature trees create an idyllic outdoor setting perfect for relaxing and entertaining. While the property is immediately habitable with double glazing, a wood stove, and efficient electric radiators in place, there are a few aspects where the new homeowners can add value. The septic tank requires updating to meet current standards, presenting a fantastic project for those looking to contribute their personal touch and add value to their investment. Living in Étouars offers a lifestyle steeped in tranquility away from the hustle of metropolitan chaos. The region is famed for its rolling landscapes, vineyards, and historical sites. Nearby, the town of Javerlhac, only a 6km driv ... click here to read more

Picture 1

One can't help but imagine the appeal and allure of residing in the charming countryside of Étouars, France. Nestled in the heart of Aquitaine, an idyllic region brimming with beautiful landscapes and rich history, is an exquisite four-bedroom stone house awaiting its new owners. This inviting domicile, distinguished by its authentic French country aesthetic, is accessible via a quiet, intimate road, ensuring the utmost privacy. A one-of-a-kind country home fashioned from stone, it boasts a ground area of 150 square meters, providing ample space for a comfortable and relaxing countryside life. Upon entering the abode, you are welcomed by a spacious living room that houses a stunning fireplace and is embellished with exposed stones, adding an elegant touch of rustic beauty to the place. Adjoining the living room is a well-equipped kitchen, ready to inspire delicious culinary creations. Privacy abounds with a bedroom on the ground floor, featuring a convenient bathroom nearby. Climbing up to the first floor, you will discover three more charming bedrooms. One of these rooms enjoys an attached water point, a luxury meant to encourage relaxation within its inviting proximity. Also located on this floor is a bathroom and a toilet. This decently-sized country home features additional structures that vastly increase its potential. Just outside the main house, you can find a small house outfitted with a fireplace. With some creativity and the necessary permissions, this space could be transformed into an attractive guesthouse. An adjoining barn enhances the property's charm. A small stone barn, all about 25 square meters, is set across the road, marking the start of the generous 695-square-meter garden. This outdoor space ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Welcome to a quaint and captivating house in Étouars, a serene commune in the Aquitaine region of Dordogne, France. This property, a former forge, offers an excellent opportunity for anyone looking to embark on a renovation project that promises not just a home but a slice of French historical charm. The house currently comprises two ground-floor rooms with a spacious attic above, which spans approximately 50 square meters. This attic space offers potential for conversion into two bedrooms and a bathroom, subject to the necessary permissions. The authenticity of the house is preserved with original features like the classic sink and a grand fireplace in the kitchen, hinting at the property’s rich past. A rear room opens to a private garden, offering views over tranquil fields, ideal for peaceful mornings. While the house beams with potential, it is a true fixer-upper with significant renovations required. The roof, in particular, needs attention with the main beam and structure necessitating replacement. An adjoining barn offers further opportunity for expansion, transforming this space into additional living quarters or perhaps a workshop, again subject to relevant permissions. The setting is equally enchanting, with a lovely private garden in the back and a traditional courtyard at the front, featuring a functioning well and various outbuildings that await restoration. The property is semi-detached, with a currently unoccupied neighboring house, ensuring privacy and tranquility. Located in a peaceful hamlet, the essence of countryside living can be genuinely appreciated here with numerous walking paths right at your doorstep, amidst lush natural landscapes. Despite its secluded feel, the house is merely a five-minu ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Ah, where to even begin with this exquisite opportunity? Let me paint a picture for you because there's quite a bit to think about with this unique estate. Tucked away in the idyllic commune of Le Bourdeix, nestled in the heart of southwestern France’s Dordogne department, stands a piece of history—a 13th-century chateau set on 12 hectares of diverse landscapes. Imagine waking up to the soothing whispers of the Périgord-Limousin Regional Natural Park, a paradise for anyone with a love for nature. Here, the vistas of rolling hills, dense woods, and gentle rivers create a harmonious backdrop for those seeking tranquility miles away from the frenzied pace of city life. This chateau is more than just a home; it’s an adventure waiting to unravel. A historical manor, it’s a property that pays homage to an era gone by, blending the charm of Romanesque, Gothic, and Renaissance styles while still accommodating today's necessities. Don't be fooled; while this place retains its historic vibe, it’s beautifully restored to offer the comforts you would expect from a place that cares about its legacy. - 8 spacious bedrooms - 5 well-appointed bathrooms - 405 square meters of living area - Set on 12 hectares of varied terrain - Includes 3 separate residences - Picturesque enclosed courtyard - Swimming pool for relaxation - Traditional barns for additional usage - Expansive woodlands surrounding the estate Understand that living in such a grand estate requires a knack for appreciating the finer things in life, and yes, there’s ample room for family gatherings, dream events or simply enjoying the vastness with your loved ones. While the grounds are extensive, they offer an opportunity for personalized landscaping projects or perhaps ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Welcome to Le Bourdeix, a quaint slice of paradise nestled in the picturesque Dordogne region of France. Here, where rustic meets serene, we have a property that's ripe for opportunity—a house that whispers stories of potential to those who are ready to listen. Now, for our valued overseas buyers and expats yearning to experience French provincial life, this isn't just any house—it's a lifestyle. Located in Aquitaine, specifically the peaceful area of Le Bourdeix, this home is a solid starting point for anyone looking to embrace country living with a touch of finesse. You see, Le Bourdeix is not just a place; it's a way of life. In the vicinity, charming villages and vast landscapes invite explorers to discover hidden gems, centuries-old history, and a community that seems untouched by the passage of time. Moving around to the property itself, we have a cleverly designed dual house setup. Imagine it: two cozy sanctuaries under one roof, yet utterly distinct till you wish them otherwise. Perhaps you see a family reunion in the making, or a blend of privacy and togetherness that allows for an imaginative living arrangement. Let's dive into the specifics. There are two sections to this lovely abode. The first, a warm 115m2 space, offers a snug living room perfect for inviting sunsets, an idyllic lounge, and a sleeping area upstairs complete with a bathroom and bedroom. The second house section blows you away with its bright ambiance and high ceilings, uses every inch of its 115m2 wisely with a welcoming living room, a mezzanine that doubles as an airy office space, and another inviting bedroom with its own bathroom. Outside, the grounds are vast and inviting—a 1500m2 area that practically begs for a garden full of fres ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the scenic region of Le Bourdeix, France, a little corner of paradise awaits you. This delightful house, located in the picturesque Dordogne area of Aquitaine, is truly a hidden gem. As you explore the prospect of owning a house in the midst of rural France, let me take you on a journey through this property that offers not only a place to reside, but a lifestyle to embrace. Imagine waking up to the serene sounds of the countryside and the delicate whisper of the wind through the lush trees surrounding your home. Situated in a small, quaint hamlet just a brief 8 kilometers from the charming town of Nontron, this property places you at the heart of an unspoiled French countryside rich with history and tranquility. The region is celebrated for its rolling landscapes, a lush tapestry of woods, farms, and vineyards, where life moves at a more leisurely pace. This house, with a total livable area of 219 square meters, is ideal for those seeking substantial space and a touch of versatility. It currently boasts two distinct living quarters, perfect for a variety of lifestyles. You may choose to enjoy them as separate spaces — perhaps a main family residence alongside an additional space for guests or generating rental income (provided you have the necessary permissions) — or unite them to create a beautiful expansive home enriched with history and character. The smaller of the two sections is a cozy 115 square meter abode featuring a plush living room and a bright lounge. Venture upstairs to discover a snug sleeping area, complete with a bedroom and bathroom. Next door, the other house offers a dynamic living space with high ceilings, a spacious living room, and a mezzanine office area if you need a quiet nook to ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Immerse yourself in the tranquillity of the charming French countryside with this gorgeous 12-bedroom residence, situated in the small village of Saint-Estèphe, Aquitaine, France. Notably, this bucolic destination rests within the scenic Dordogne region, renowned for its idyllic countryside, impressive castles, vineyards, and fantastic local markets offering local delicacies and fine wines. The property itself comprises a grand total of 490 m2 of livable space, spanning across three beautifully maintained stone-built dwellings. Should you choose to venture outside and nearby, you'll find yourself just 2 km away from a well-appreciated leisure lake, providing hues that add a perfect backdrop to your residence. Let's take a more profound look at what each dwelling holds: - The primary house is a model of traditional French living replete with modern amenities. It offers a grand living room adjoined by a kitchen and dining room, a study, a cozy living area, and a practical laundry room. For accommodation, it possesses 4 bedrooms, with one boasting its private shower room and dressing area and a bathroom and dressing room to complete the layout. - The amiably independent secondary dwelling offers a sense of warmth with its large living room featuring a welcoming fireplace. This property also encompasses a fitted kitchen, 5 bedrooms, two shower rooms, and an upstairs covered balcony delivering sweeping views of the encompassing countryside and nearby lake. - Last but certainly not least, the third dwelling is a quaint little haven offering a homey living room with a fireplace, equipped kitchen, three bedrooms, two bathrooms, and plenty of character. Each dwelling comes with its own private terrace where you can enjoy a ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled within the tranquility of the picturesque Périgordian countryside, this splendid country home offers a unique opportunity for those in search of a serene lifestyle. Located in the charming commune of Soudat, in the enchanting region of Aquitaine, Dordogne, this property provides a delightful retreat from the hustle and bustle of city life. To start your journey into this lovely abode, one is welcomed by the spacious kitchen and dining area. This warm and inviting space is ideal for family gatherings or hosting friends over a delicious meal prepared from the fresh produce available at nearby local markets. The cozy living room, which features a charming wood burner, serves as the perfect space for unwinding after a long day or sharing stories by the fire on cooler evenings. With its two well-proportioned bedrooms and a dressing room, this property ensures comfort and tranquility for its residents. The bathroom, conveniently located on the ground floor, adds to the practicality of the home. What really sets this country house apart is the large mezzanine space that spans over 30 square meters. This area could be transformed into a home office, studio, or even an additional guestroom, offering flexibility to suit your lifestyle needs. The outdoors is just as captivating with almost one hectare of wooded grounds enveloping the property. It is a haven for nature lovers, with several outbuildings, including a garage, a summer kitchen or cabin, and various garden sheds. These structures offer great potential for those with a penchant for gardening or creative outdoor projects. Living in Soudat offers a genuine taste of French rural life, catering well to those who value peace and space. The community, though small, ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Uncover the essence of peaceful rural living with this charming three-bedroom stone-built house in Teyjat, nestled within the scenic region of Aquitaine in Dordogne, France. This idyllic property offers a serene environment, surrounded by lush countryside vistas, and is complemented by a spacious barn that holds potential for conversion into additional living space, workshops, or secure parking for large vehicles—subject to relevant permits, offering a wealth of opportunities to tailor this space to your liking. Entering the property, you are welcomed by a generous courtyard that leads to a homely interior, which spans approximately 139 square meters. The house opens into a large farmhouse kitchen, the heart of daily life, complete with a central island for gatherings and a wood-burning stove that adds warmth and character. Adjacent utilities and a dedicated wood store provide practical space for everyday chores. The living room, bathed in natural light from triple-aspect windows and patio doors, promotes a cozy atmosphere, especially with its own wood-burning fire. An adjoining office space also generates the perfect remote-working environment, and a convenient cloakroom with a toilet completes the setup on this floor. On the upper level, three well-appointed bedrooms await, each designed as a tranquil retreat. The master suite boasts en-suite facilities and a dressing room, ensuring private and luxurious living quarters. The terraced style gardens attached to the property feature a vegetable garden and well-established fruit trees, nurturing a perfect hobby for those with a green thumb and a preference for sustainable living. Despite its rural charm, Teyjat remains well-connected with vital amenities nearby, such a ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Discover the charm of rural living with this captivating three-bedroom farmhouse located in the serene countryside of Teyjat, Aquitaine. Being set back from the quaint country lane, this stone-built property provides a unique combination of privacy and unspoiled scenic views, making it an ideal refuge for those who cherish tranquility. Boasting sturdy construction and good condition, this farmhouse presents an appealing setup for a renovation enthusiast to personalize or for a family ready to move right in. The spacious courtyard entrance to the property sets a welcoming tone, leading into a characterful home that melds rustic charm with practical living spaces. The ground floor of the farmhouse is the heart of the home, featuring a large kitchen with a central island and a warming wood-burning stove—perfect for family gatherings or baking sessions on cool evenings. Adjacent to this, a utility room and a wood store add to the practical elements of the home. The lounge, with its triple aspect windows and cozy wood-burning fireplace, serves as an ideal spot for relaxation while enjoying views of the surrounding landscape. This space is complemented by patio doors that open up to the attached terraced style gardens, an office space, and a handy cloakroom with a WC. The gardens are a true delight with a vegetable patch and an assortment of well-established fruit trees—promising delightful outdoor activities for gardening enthusiasts and a playground for children to explore. Additionally, the property features an enormous barn which holds potential for conversion into additional living space or for use as secure parking for a large camper van, subject to necessary permissions. On the upper level, the home offers three bed ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Begin your French lifestyle in the heart of the tranquil Dordogne region, where the aroma of fresh bread guides you straight to a bustling boulangerie, offering delectable pastries to gratify morning cravings. Enveloped within the village ambiance of Bussière-Badil, this detached stone-built cottage extends a warm welcome, brimming with an authentic French character. Nestled on the fringe of a quaint hamlet, this traditional cottage strikes a balance between ease and privacy. It's a relaxed stroll away from essential amenities, including a bakery, butcher's shop, and a vibrant bar/restaurant. A local post office further ensures convenient communication with the wider world. This radiant property offers a blank canvas for setting roots in France, be it as a haven for the holidays or a full-time residence. The cottage has recently undergone professional treatment for termites. With this in-depth maintenance work now completed, potential homeowners can put their own finishing touches to the space with peace of mind. Open kitchen and dining area invites the aroma of home-cooked feasts to waft through the ground floor. It's a charming, spacious area ideal for intimate family dinners or potluck gatherings with new neighbors. A separate WC is discreetly located on the ground floor for fuss-free meet-ups. A wooden staircase leads the way to the resting quarters upstairs, embodying the essence of traditional French architecture. Here, three bedrooms are tucked away, one of which includes an ensuite for that additional layer of privacy. A separate family bathroom caters to the morning routines of everyone else at home. Possibilities extend beyond the internal living area with an adjacent garage and hangar, which can make way ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the soft chirping of birds in the heart of the Périgord Vert Natural Park. This exquisite 4-bedroom house in Piégut-Pluviers, Dordogne, offers a unique blend of rustic charm and modern comfort, making it the perfect second home or holiday retreat. Nestled in the picturesque region of Aquitaine, this property is a haven for those seeking tranquility and a taste of authentic French countryside living. The house, in excellent condition, is a testament to the region's rich history, with its terracotta tiles, exposed stone walls, and magnificent wooden beams. A Home with Character and Comfort Upon entering, you're greeted by a bright glass roof that floods the space with natural light, creating a warm and inviting atmosphere. The living room, with its period fireplace, is perfect for cozy evenings with family and friends. The open-plan kitchen is fully equipped, making it ideal for preparing delicious meals with local produce from the nearby markets. Upstairs, three spacious bedrooms with dressing rooms offer ample space for relaxation and rest. A large bathroom completes the upper floor, providing modern amenities while maintaining the home's traditional charm. A Separate Living Area for Guests The property also features a separate living area with a kitchenette, bathroom, and bedroom, offering privacy for guests or the potential for rental income. This space is perfect for hosting family, friends, or even tourists looking to explore the beauty of Dordogne. Outdoor Oasis The house is set within a walled, wooded, and flowered garden, complete with a well fed by a natural spring. This serene outdoor space is perfect for leisurely afternoons or entertaining guests. A ... click here to read more

Picture 1

A Hidden Gem in the Heart of Périgord Vert Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the sweet scent of blooming flowers in the heart of the Périgord Vert Natural Park. This enchanting 4-bedroom stone house in Piégut-Pluviers, France, offers a unique blend of rustic charm and modern comfort, making it the perfect retreat for those seeking a tranquil vacation home or a second residence. A Story of Timeless Elegance and Modern Comfort As you step through the bright glass roof entrance, you're greeted by a warm and inviting living space. The open-plan kitchen, equipped with modern appliances, seamlessly flows into the living room, where a period fireplace stands as a testament to the home's rich history. Terracotta tiles underfoot and exposed stone walls whisper stories of the past, while magnificent wooden beams add a touch of rustic elegance. Upstairs, three spacious bedrooms await, each with its own dressing room, offering ample storage for your seasonal wardrobe. A large, sunlit bathroom completes the upper floor, providing a serene space to unwind after a day of exploring the Dordogne countryside. A Private Sanctuary for Guests and Family The property also features a separate living area, complete with a cozy living room, kitchenette, bathroom, and bedroom. This private space is perfect for hosting family, friends, or even guests, ensuring everyone enjoys their own slice of paradise. Outdoor Living at Its Finest Step outside into a walled, wooded garden, a true oasis of tranquility. Here, a natural spring-fed well and a variety of flowering plants create a serene environment, perfect for leisurely afternoons spent reading or enjoying a glass of local wine. A large barn, outbuilding with a woodshed, a ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque Dordogne region, this delightful 3-bedroom house in Piégut-Pluviers offers an idyllic retreat for those seeking a second home in France. With its rich history, vibrant local culture, and stunning natural landscapes, Piégut-Pluviers is a hidden gem in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, perfect for overseas buyers and expats looking to immerse themselves in the quintessential French lifestyle. A Glimpse into Piégut-Pluviers Piégut-Pluviers is renowned for its charming weekly market, where locals and visitors alike gather to enjoy fresh produce, artisanal goods, and the warm community spirit. The town is surrounded by lush forests, rolling hills, and serene lakes, making it a haven for nature lovers and outdoor enthusiasts. Whether you're exploring the scenic hiking trails, enjoying a leisurely bike ride, or indulging in a picnic by the lake, there's no shortage of activities to enjoy. The Property This well-maintained house offers 82 square meters of comfortable living space, thoughtfully designed to cater to the needs of a second home owner. The property is in good condition, ensuring a hassle-free move-in experience. - Spacious Living Room: The open-plan living area features a cozy fireplace with a fitted wood burner, perfect for relaxing evenings. - Conservatory: A bright and airy conservatory with tiled floors offers a tranquil space to unwind while enjoying views of the garden. - Fitted Kitchen: The kitchen is equipped with modern amenities, making meal preparation a breeze. - Three Double Bedrooms: Ample space for family and guests, each room is designed for comfort and relaxation. - Family Bathroom: A well-appointed bathroom with all necessary facilities. Outdoor Living The property b ... click here to read more

Photo 1

A Hidden Gem in the Heart of Dordogne's Enchanting Forests Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the soft chirping of birds, as the morning sun filters through the dense canopy of trees surrounding your secluded stone house. Nestled in the serene hamlet of Piégut-Pluviers, this 4-bedroom property offers a unique opportunity to immerse yourself in the tranquil beauty of the Dordogne region, a place where time seems to stand still. A Canvas for Your Vision This charming stone house, set on nearly 5 hectares of lush, wooded land, is a blank canvas awaiting your creative touch. With its rustic charm and potential for transformation, it invites you to reimagine its spaces and breathe new life into its historic walls. The adjoining outbuildings, ripe for restoration, offer additional possibilities for expansion or conversion into guest accommodations, studios, or workshops. Nature's Playground at Your Doorstep The property is a gateway to the Périgord Limousin Natural Park, a haven for nature enthusiasts and outdoor adventurers. Picture yourself embarking on leisurely walks through the forest trails, discovering hidden clearings, and perhaps even spotting local wildlife. The property's centerpiece, a 2,500 m² pond, beckons with the promise of serene afternoons spent fishing or simply enjoying the reflections of the surrounding trees on its surface. A Lifestyle of Tranquility and Exploration Living in Piégut-Pluviers means embracing a lifestyle that balances tranquility with exploration. The nearby village, just 2 km away, offers a taste of local life with its weekly markets, where you can savor regional delicacies and fresh produce. The Dordogne region is renowned for its rich culinary heritage, and you'l ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled amid the picturesque landscapes of Busserolles in Aquitaine, France, this inviting farmhouse offers an opportunity to immerse yourself in the tranquil countryside lifestyle. With an expansive area of 204 square meters, this property, priced at €349,800, is a true gem for those seeking solace in nature without sacrificing the comforts of home. Located in the peaceful village of Busserolles, this spacious farmhouse has five well-proportioned bedrooms and two bathrooms, making it an ideal haven for a family or those who often host guests. Whether you're looking for a vacation retreat or a permanent residence, this farmhouse presents a versatile living space that's ready for immediate occupancy. Unlike some of the typical city properties, this farmhouse provides an atmosphere where time seems to slow down just enough for you to savor the simple pleasures of life. The farmhouse is situated on a substantial 20,000 square meter plot, offering commendable privacy with no neighboring structures in sight. This is particularly appealing for nature lovers who appreciate solitude and the beauty of untouched landscapes. A vivid highlight of this property is the beautiful living room that opens up to a terrace, boasting a panoramic view over your own private pond. Imagine sipping your morning coffee while taking in the serene views and listening to the gentle rustle of the leaves in the breeze – a perfect start to any day. Here are some features that make this farmhouse distinctive: - Size: 204m² of living space - Bedrooms: Five bedrooms - Bathrooms: Two bathrooms - Location: In the peaceful region of Busserolles, Aquitaine - Land area: Huge 20,000m² plot - Unique Feature: Your very own private pond - Outdoor space: Spaci ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Step into a rustic, yet refined 5-bedroom stone house nestled in the serene countryside of Busserolles, in the heart of Aquitaine, France. This traditional family home has been carefully restored to preserve numerous original features, offering a perfect blend of old-world charm and modern conveniences. Spanning an impressive 320 square meters, this property is perfectly positioned in a tranquil hamlet, promising a peaceful lifestyle amidst the beautiful landscapes of north Dordogne. The stone house features a thoughtful layout tailored for family living. On the ground floor, a well-equipped modern kitchen serves as the heart of the home, complemented by a spacious, cozy living room perfect for family gatherings. The stunning double-height dining room becomes a focal point of the property with its open, airy ambiance, ideal for hosting dinners and celebrations. An additional living room leads out to a covered terrace, providing seamless access to the in-ground pool area—perfect for enjoying the sunny days that the Aquitaine region is known for. This home comprises five well-appointed bedrooms, ensuring ample space for each family member and guests. Two of the bedrooms are exceptionally generous in size and come complete with en-suite facilities, offering privacy and convenience. The remaining three bedrooms are accessible from the mezzanines above the dining area and share a well-maintained family bathroom. For those who appreciate outdoor living and nature, the property does not disappoint. It includes a paddock adjacent to the house, ideal for equestrian enthusiasts or for cultivating a family garden. Additionally, there are two outbuildings offering storage solutions or the potential for additional living space or ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the picturesque region of Aquitaine, France, this farmhouse in Busserolles awaits its new owners with open arms. Perfect for those who dream of a peaceful life surrounded by the breathtaking beauty of nature, this property is a true sanctuary, offering both tranquility and the simplicity of countryside living. As an agent with a global real estate network, I’ve had the pleasure of introducing numerous international clients to this charming corner of the world. Thank you for taking the time during what might be a busy schedule to learn more about what could be your dream home. First, let’s step into the heart of this farmhouse—a large, inviting living room that flows seamlessly out onto a terrace. Imagine enjoying your morning coffee here, listening to the peaceful sounds of nature, and overlooking your own private pond. The views are nothing short of spectacular and offer a soothing escape from the hustle and bustle of everyday life. The space is well-furnished, though of course conditions apply, offering an immediate sense of home. This property is more than just a structure; it is an entire lifestyle shift. The farmhouse comprises five spacious bedrooms and two well-sized bathrooms, accommodating family, friends, or simply providing ample personal space. Each room offers its own unique view of the lush surroundings, allowing each day to begin with a glimpse of the serene countryside. Now, let’s talk about Busserolles. Located in the Aquitaine region, this village places you in the heart of one of France’s most idyllic landscapes. Known for its temperate climate, the area experiences mild winters and warm summers, making it perfect for enjoying the outdoors year-round. As a busy professional myself, I ofte ... click here to read more

Picture 1