Idyllic Country Home in Knivsta: Your Perfect Swedish Second Home Retreat

Listed on
https://storage.googleapis.com/homestra-images/property-image-11ce0c2e-dd8f-49f5-a41e-f7d88d53868f-1752002004.jpg

Astervägen 228 (Lott 228), Tuna Backar, 75336 Uppsala, Sweden, Knivsta (Sweden)

1 Bedrooms · 1 Bathrooms · 40Floor area

€110,000

Country home

No parking

1 Bedrooms

1 Bathrooms

40m²

Garden

No pool

Not furnished

Description

Nestled in the serene enclave of Tuna Backar, Uppsala, Astervägen 228 offers a unique opportunity to own a charming country home that perfectly balances tranquility with accessibility. This delightful property, located in the heart of Sweden, is an ideal second home for those seeking a peaceful retreat without sacrificing the conveniences of city life.

Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the sweet chirping of birds, with the crisp Scandinavian air invigorating your senses. This is the everyday reality at Astervägen 228, a property that promises not just a home, but a lifestyle.

A Cozy Haven in the Heart of Nature

This well-maintained country home spans 40 square meters, offering a cozy yet functional living space. The bright and airy living room, flooded with natural light, serves as the heart of the home. It's a space where you can unwind with a good book, entertain guests, or simply enjoy the serene surroundings.

The adjoining kitchen is both practical and charming, equipped with modern appliances including a refrigerator/freezer, stove, and oven. Whether you're preparing a simple breakfast or hosting a dinner party, this kitchen caters to all your culinary needs.

The versatile bedroom area is cleverly designed to maximize space, offering a restful sanctuary after a day of exploring the beautiful Swedish countryside. The modern incineration toilet in the WC adds a touch of sustainability to this eco-friendly home.

Outdoor Living at Its Best

Step outside to discover a beautifully maintained 405 square meter plot, perfect for those who love the outdoors. The flat lawn is ideal for picnics or playing games, while the raised garden beds invite you to cultivate your own herbs and vegetables. A spacious deck at the rear of the cottage is perfect for al fresco dining or simply soaking up the sun.

A practical storage shed ensures that your outdoor space remains tidy and organized, allowing you to fully enjoy the natural beauty that surrounds you.

A Community Like No Other

Tunakolonin is more than just a location; it's a community. Managed by an active association, residents have access to shared facilities including a community house with showers, toilets, a sauna, and a gathering hall. The association promotes ecological gardening practices, fostering a sustainable and harmonious environment.

The nearby Fyrisån river offers a communal jetty and swimming area, perfect for leisurely afternoons spent by the water. This natural setting enhances the sense of relaxation and connection to nature, making it an ideal spot for both recreation and reflection.

Accessibility and Investment Potential

Despite its tranquil setting, Astervägen 228 is conveniently located just a short drive from Uppsala city center, offering easy access to shops, restaurants, and cultural attractions. The property is also well-connected to major transport links, making it an ideal base for exploring the wider region.

As a second home, this property offers excellent investment potential. The growing demand for holiday homes in Sweden, coupled with the unique appeal of Tunakolonin, ensures that this property will retain its value for years to come.

Key Features:

- 40 square meter country home in good condition
- Bright living room with abundant natural light
- Well-equipped kitchen with modern appliances
- Versatile bedroom area for restful nights
- Modern incineration toilet for sustainability
- 405 square meter plot with flat lawn and garden beds
- Spacious deck for outdoor dining and relaxation
- Practical storage shed for garden tools and essentials
- Access to community facilities including sauna and gathering hall
- Proximity to Fyrisån river with communal jetty and swimming area
- Easy access to Uppsala city center and transport links
- Excellent investment potential in a sought-after location

Astervägen 228 is more than just a property; it's a gateway to a lifestyle that combines the best of nature and city living. Whether you're seeking a peaceful sanctuary, a place to indulge your gardening passion, or a welcoming environment to gather with friends and family, this country home delivers on all fronts. Embrace the opportunity to become part of the vibrant Tunakolonin community and create your dream getaway in the heart of Sweden.

Details

Amount of bedrooms
1
Size
40
Price per m²
€2,750
Garden size
405
Has Garden
Yes
Has Parking
No
Has Basement
No
Condition
good
Amount of Bathrooms
1
Has swimming pool
No
Property type
Country home
Energy label

Unknown

Sign up to access location details

Similar properties

Picture waking up on a frost-sharp October morning, the tiled stove already ticking with warmth, steam rising from a mug of coffee as you look out through the glazed conservatory at the still water of the Ljungan River catching the first pale Scandinavian light. The horses are already at the fence. This is not a weekend fantasy — it is a Tuesday in Nedansjö, and it can be yours. Hemgraven 128 sits in the Ljungan valley about 25 minutes west of Sundsvall, in a corner of central Sweden that most international buyers haven't discovered yet — which is precisely why it matters. The property is large, genuinely versatile, and soaked in the kind of regional history that no developer can manufacture. It started life as the steward's house on the estate built by industrialist Bünsow in the late 19th century, the same man who financed the railway between Sundsvall and Torpshammar, established an ironworks and a pulp mill at Hemgraven, and essentially built an entire self-sustaining community from scratch, complete with shops, workers' housing, and even a toy factory. The area was enclosed — outsiders had to ask permission to enter. Today that same sense of a world unto itself is what makes the property so compelling. At 146 square metres, the main house gives you five rooms and a kitchen arranged with the practical logic that Swedish country homes developed over generations. Two classic tiled stoves — kakelugnar, if you want the Swedish word — anchor the principal rooms. They work. They radiate a dry, even heat that a radiator simply cannot replicate, and they look the way old things should look: solid, slightly imposing, quietly beautiful. The geothermal heat pump handles the bulk of winter heating with minimal running costs, s ... click here to read more

Front view of the main house and grounds

You wake up before anyone else in the house. The sun is already high — it's July, and this far north of the Arctic Circle, it barely dips below the horizon. You pull on a fleece, step outside onto the lot, and walk the forty-odd meters down to the edge of Lake Kusträsket. The water is glass. A pike rolls near the reeds. You have nowhere to be. That's the reality of owning a place at Kusträsk 34. This 60-square-meter timber holiday home sits on a generous 2,190 square meter plot in the Boden municipality of Norrbotten County, built in 2007 from solid log construction that keeps the interior cool in summer and retainable-warm through the brutally cold Swedish winters. Two bedrooms, one bathroom, a separate hygiene cottage with a traditional sauna, and fiber-optic broadband that runs fast enough to handle a video call or a Netflix evening when the weather turns. It's the kind of property that covers every real need without overcomplicating anything. The open-plan living and dining area is the social core of the cabin. Wide windows face the forest and the lake — not a curated view through a narrow frame, but a proper wide look at the spruce canopy and the water beyond. The natural pine interior does something good to the light in here; everything takes on a warm amber tone by late afternoon. Cook, eat, play cards at the table, watch the weather roll in across the lake. The kitchen is set up for proper cooking, not just reheating — and after a morning out on the water pulling in perch, that matters. Local anglers smoke their catch over alder wood, a tradition worth learning quickly. The sauna is the detail that separates a Swedish cabin from every other rural property in Europe. This one sits in its own separate structure ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the timber holiday home

Early on a Saturday morning in late August, you step outside with a coffee and the air smells of pine resin and wet grass. The fruit trees at the far end of the garden are heavy with apples. Nobody else is awake yet. That's the kind of quiet that Sunnersbol 72 delivers — not the forced stillness of a spa weekend, but the genuine, unhurried pace of Swedish countryside life. Sitting in Uppsala kommun, roughly halfway between the university city of Uppsala and the small market town of Alunda, this 1976-built country home sits on a plot of nearly 3,000 square meters — almost three-quarters of an acre — that gives you room to breathe in a way that most European second homes simply can't match at this price point. At 149,500 SEK, this is one of the more accessible entry points into Swedish rural property ownership you'll find, and the combination of move-in condition, outbuildings with genuine conversion potential, and that sweeping plot makes it worth a very serious look. The house itself is compact and honest — 50 square meters of classic Swedish timber construction, painted in the kind of deep, earthy tones you see on farmhouses all across Uppland. Wooden floors run through the main rooms, the kitchen is functional and well-maintained, and large windows pull in light from multiple angles throughout the day. In a building this size, light matters enormously, and whoever designed this one got that right. The flexible internal layout — three to four rooms plus kitchen — means a couple can spread out comfortably, or a small family can make it work through the summer months with the bedrooms and living space reconfigured to suit. What makes this property genuinely interesting, though, is what sits outside the main house. Ther ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the holiday home and garden

Early July on Vätö, and the light never quite leaves the sky. By nine in the evening it's still pale gold through the birch trees, and from the south-facing deck at Svartträskvägen 19 you can hear absolutely nothing except the occasional woodpecker working through the pines. That specific silence — no traffic, no neighbors' televisions, no city hum — is what people drive two hours north from Stockholm to find. This is it. Vätö is one of those places that Stockholmers tend to keep quietly to themselves. Technically an island in the northern Stockholm archipelago within Norrtälje municipality, it's connected by road so you arrive without any ferry anxiety, yet the moment you cross onto the island the pace genuinely shifts. The air smells different — pine resin and lake water — and the roads narrow into single tracks flanked by wildflowers that locals pick for their midsommar wreaths every June. The Sörgården area where this property sits is among the quieter pockets of the island, which is saying something. The house itself was built in 1977 and sits on a 2,323 square metre plot that's been left largely natural — mature trees, mossy ground cover, that particular Swedish woodland character you can't manufacture. It's not manicured and it's better for it. The lot gives you genuine privacy, room for a kitchen garden if you want one, and space to add a sauna cabin down the line (many neighbours have done exactly that). At 55 square metres the house is compact but considered: an open kitchen and living area that work together rather than against each other, two bedrooms, one bathroom with shower and toilet, and a wood-burning stove that transforms the entire place on a cool September evening when the archipelago light turns a ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the holiday home

On a still July morning in Långvreten, the first thing you notice is the silence. Not the absence of sound, but the right kind of sound — wood pigeons in the birch canopy, a distant lawnmower two plots over, the soft creak of a garden chair. By eight o'clock, the sun has already been up for hours. That's the Swedish summer for you. Jädravägen 10 sits on a 2,828-square-metre plot in Bro, Upplands-Bro municipality, about 40 kilometres northwest of Stockholm. It's a 1969 timber cottage that one family has quietly looked after for over five decades. Three bedrooms, one bathroom, 48 square metres of living space inside — and then a vast, tree-lined garden that does most of the real living for you. This is the kind of Swedish vacation home that doesn't exist in brochures because families hold onto them for generations. When one finally comes available, you pay attention. The interior keeps its original bones intact. Low ceilings. Wood-panel walls in that particular warm ochre that 1960s Swedish cottages seem to own. A fireplace in the living room that becomes the social centre of the house the moment September arrives and the evenings cool fast. The kitchen is compact and functional — there's a rhythm to cooking here, the way you plan meals around what's at the local shop in Kungsängen rather than having everything delivered to your door. It changes how you eat, and usually for the better. Three bedrooms means room for kids, grandparents, or that one friend who always lingers into the following week. A note worth knowing upfront: the bathroom currently has a composting toilet and no running water connection to the mains. This is common in older Swedish fritidshus and entirely manageable as a warm-season property, which is p ... click here to read more

Front view of the holiday home

The ferry from Näsbyviken takes about four minutes. Four minutes, and the mainland's noise is already somewhere else — behind you, irrelevant. You step onto Ringsö carrying nothing but a bag of groceries and whatever you couldn't leave at the office, and by the time you've walked the pine-lined path up to the red-painted house at Ringsöringen 175, the second thing has already dissolved too. That's the honest sell for this place. Not the square footage, not the buzzwords. It's that specific, almost unfair feeling of arriving somewhere that immediately makes your shoulders drop. Ringsö sits in Lake Mälaren, Sweden's third-largest lake and one of Scandinavia's most underrated waterways. The island belongs to Strängnäs municipality, and if you're approaching from Stockholm, you're looking at roughly an hour by car — take the E20 west and follow signs toward Strängnäs, then wind down through Stallarholmen to catch the water crossing. Strängnäs itself is worth knowing: a cathedral town with roots in the Viking age, a medieval old quarter, and the kind of weekly Saturday market on Rådhustorget where you can stock up on fresh-smoked fish, cloudberry jam, and sourdough before heading back to the island. The town is genuinely liveable, not just a tourist backdrop. The property sits on a 2,252 square metre plot — generous by any measure for an island setting. The main house comes in at 36 square metres on the ground floor, which sounds compact until you're inside and realise how well the space has been thought through. A proper kitchen, a living room with windows that pull in long Swedish afternoon light, one bedroom, a bathroom with shower and an eco-friendly Separett composting toilet. Above, a sleeping loft adds another 10 sq ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the holiday home

Picture this: it's six in the morning, the mist is still sitting low over Lake Immen, and you're walking barefoot across cool wooden floors to put the kettle on the range cooker. The kitchen smells faintly of yesterday's wood smoke. Outside the west-facing veranda, a blackbird is going absolutely wild in the currant bushes. This is what a Tuesday looks like here — and that's before the weekend even starts. Immen Sörgården 563 is a 1939-built Swedish country home on the edge of Karlskoga municipality, sitting on just under 2,000 square meters of established garden with direct trail access to Lake Immen's swimming spots. It's the kind of place that takes roughly four minutes to make you forget you ever owned a laptop. The house itself runs to about 70 square meters across three main rooms, a kitchen, and a small additional bedroom that was originally used as a storage nook — which tells you something useful about the bones of the place. Swedish farmhouses from the 1930s were built to last, and this one has been kept in good condition without losing what makes it worth keeping. The wooden floors throughout are the real thing, not a renovation gesture, and the kitchen's white-waxed boards give the whole room a clean, light quality even on grey autumn days. The wood-burning stove in the kitchen is fully functional and very much in use — not a decorative relic. When the temperature drops in October, it earns its place. There's also a range cooker for proper cooking, and the kitchen layout is generous enough for a table, which matters enormously if you've ever tried to host six people in a cramped holiday kitchen. The living spaces carry that particular Swedish quality of being simultaneously unfussy and deeply comfortable. ... click here to read more

Front view of the cottage and garden

Step outside on a September morning and the air smells like pine resin and cold water. The birches have just turned gold, and from the southwest-facing windows of this solid little house in Matsdal, the light hits the tree line at an angle that makes everything look almost unreally vivid. This is Västerbotten, deep in Swedish Lapland, and once you've had a few days here, the idea of leaving feels genuinely inconvenient. The property sits at Matsdal 115, a quiet village address just outside Dikanäs in the Vilhelmina municipality. It's a 60-square-meter country home in genuinely good condition — two bedrooms, one bathroom, a wood-burning stove, and a fireplace that you'll use from October through April. The rooms are generous for the footprint. Scandinavian country homes from this era were built to be practical, not theatrical, and that's exactly what you get: well-proportioned spaces, natural light from multiple aspects, and an interior that's warm without trying too hard. The kitchen works. The living area is big enough for a proper family gathering. Nothing here needs to be torn out and started over. What really sets this place apart, though, is everything surrounding the house itself. The lot runs to 2.2 hectares — 22,000 square meters of mixed forest and open ground that's entirely yours. No shared access, no overlooking neighbors. The treeline wraps around the property in a way that creates natural enclosure without making it feel closed off. You're in the village, but the village gives you space. The wood-fired sauna is 15 square meters and positioned right beside a mountain brook. That detail matters more than it might sound. After a day on the snowmobile trails — which connect directly to the extensive Dikanäs ... click here to read more

Exterior view of Matsdal 115

Step outside on a July morning and the air smells of warm pine resin and cut grass. The apple trees are heavy. A woodpecker is working somewhere deeper in the trees, and the only traffic you'll hear all day is the distant hum of a tractor on the municipal road half a kilometer away. This is Eriksbacken 5 — a genuine Swedish stuga on a 2,752-square-meter plot in Finnerödja, Laxå, and it feels exactly like what the word "escape" is supposed to mean. The cottage itself sits comfortably at 75 square meters — not sprawling, but well-proportioned. Two bedrooms, a tiled bathroom with underfloor heating, a kitchen that handles everything from a quick fika to a full midsommar spread, and a living room generous enough that a family of four won't be climbing over each other on rainy afternoons. The bathroom was renovated in 2012 and includes both a washing machine and tumble dryer, which matters more than you'd think when you're planning to stay for three weeks in August rather than a weekend. The whole place has been adapted for accessibility too, with ramps and wider clearances — a thoughtful detail that opens the property up to grandparents, guests with mobility needs, or just anyone who's tired of holiday homes that weren't designed with real people in mind. The large south-facing wooden deck is the property's social center from May through September. On a clear summer's day, sunlight sits on this side of the house for roughly ten hours. That's not marketing language — that's the reward for the orientation of this plot. You'll develop opinions about which chair gets the best afternoon light. Beyond the main cottage, there's a separate guest cottage and a 20-square-meter storage building. The guest cottage changes how you thi ... click here to read more

Front view of Eriksbacken 5

The first thing you notice on a summer morning at Näreby 160 is the silence. Not the hollow silence of nowhere, but the full, layered quiet of the Swedish west coast countryside — a wood pigeon somewhere in the birches, wind brushing through the grass, and somewhere over the ridge, faintly, the smell of salt water drifting in from the Gullmarsfjord. This 1881 cottage on the island of Skaftö sits on over two hectares of open land, exposed granite bedrock, and stone-walled meadows that feel unchanged for generations. If what you're after is a genuine Bohuslän retreat — not a sanitized holiday apartment, but a place with actual history under its feet — this is one of the rare ones left. Built in 1881 and still wearing much of its original character, the cottage at Näreby 160 is the kind of property that photographs poorly and rewards in person. The entrance porch opens directly into a kitchen that has been the heart of the ground floor for well over a century. Three separate rooms on the ground level give you breathing room, and one of them holds a tiled kakelugn stove — the tall, elegant Swedish kind — that the chimney sweep has recently certified still in working order. On a grey October evening, that stove changes everything about how the cottage feels. Upstairs, two bedrooms and a bathroom provide the essentials. The layout is compact and honest: 66 square meters of living space, no more, no less. It's not the size that makes this property worth serious attention. It's the 20,363 square meters surrounding it. Step outside and the scale of what's here becomes clear. Grassy areas practical enough for a game of kubb or a hammock between the birches. Traditional dry-stone walls that thread across the property like somethi ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the country cottage and garden

Step outside on a Tuesday morning in Fägrilt and the loudest thing you'll hear is a wood pigeon calling from one of the old oaks. No traffic hum, no sirens, nothing but wind moving through the fields and the faint creak of a barn door. This is the kind of quiet that city people drive hours to find — and here, it's just the Tuesday morning soundtrack. Set on roughly 9,200 square meters of open Swedish countryside in Laholms kommun, this 120-square-meter country home sits elevated above a patchwork of fields and forest edges in the hamlet of Fägrilt, just outside Våxtorp. The land feels generous. The mature oaks that frame the property have been here longer than anyone can remember, and in summer they throw deep shade across the gravel driveway, turning the approach to the house into something from a Vilhelm Moberg novel. In autumn, that same driveway is ankle-deep in copper leaves. The house itself has been kept in good condition and updated where it counts. A modern heat pump handles heating efficiently year-round — a real practical consideration for anyone buying in Sweden, where winters in Halland can be grey and raw from November through February. The roof has been replaced recently, the sewage system modernized, and fiber internet runs to the property, which matters enormously if you plan to work remotely or simply want to stream a film after a day outside without fighting a patchy signal. These aren't glamorous upgrades, but they're the ones that prevent a country retreat from becoming a money pit. Inside, the layout is open and functional. Large windows pull in the countryside views — on clear days you're looking out over fields that stretch toward the forest line — and the light shifts beautifully across the in ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the country home and grounds

The first thing you notice on a July morning at Odensåker 20 is the light. Swedish summer light, low and golden even at seven a.m., sliding through the birch canopy and landing on the wooden deck where yesterday's coffee cup still sits. Then the smell — warm pine resin, damp moss, water nearby. You don't have to see Lake Glan from here to know it's close. Fifty meters through the trees, its presence is something you feel before you arrive at the shoreline. This is a small property in the best possible sense. Thirty-five square meters of main living space on a generous 1,000 square meter plot in Norrköping Municipality, about an hour and a half south of Stockholm by road. Two separate buildings. One kitchen, one full shower bathroom, one bedroom with built-in storage — and more space to breathe than most city apartments three times this size. For anyone hunting a genuine Swedish countryside retreat, a vacation home in Östergötland, or a low-maintenance second home in Scandinavia, this is the kind of place that ends the search. The main cottage is built for the way Swedes actually spend summer: half inside, half out. The kitchen-dining area is compact but functional, and the living room gets afternoon sun that makes reading there feel like a small ceremony. The enclosed veranda is the real workhorse of this building — a glass-fronted space that stretches the usable season from a cold April into October, long past when the open deck would have you reaching for a fleece. On rainy days it fills with the sound of drops on the roof glass, and on clear evenings it holds warmth well into the night. It's where guests drift after dinner and where you'll find yourself lingering longer than you planned. The second building adds a ... click here to read more

Main cottage and garden view

Step outside on a July morning at Såghyttevägen 14 and you'll hear it before you see it — the absolute quiet of Mellantjärnen lake, broken only by the soft lap of water against the shore less than fifty meters from your door. The birch trees are still. The coffee is on. And somehow, even though Falun's city center is just minutes away by car, it feels like the rest of the world has agreed to leave you alone for a while. That's the particular magic of this corner of Dalarna, and this property captures it in a way that's hard to manufacture. Three separate buildings sit on a generous 7,570 square meter lot — a main house, a guest cottage with an open fireplace, and a compact little outbuilding the previous owners called the "dollhouse." It's the kind of setup that rarely comes up for sale, and when it does, it goes quickly. The main house is 36 square meters — honest, compact, and well-considered. A small entrance hall opens into the layout, with a bedroom to one side and a combined kitchen, dining, and living space that makes the most of every centimeter. The wood-burning stove at the center of that room earns its keep on cool Dalarna evenings in September, when the temperatures drop and the maples turn amber outside the large windows. Those windows matter. They frame the lake and the tree line in a way that makes the interior feel much more open than the footprint suggests — you're always aware of the water, always connected to the landscape outside. The kitchen is set up for exactly what this kind of retreat demands: a refrigerator, a hotplate, a sink. Nothing excessive. Enough to put together a proper Swedish fika spread, fry up the perch you caught that morning, or heat soup after a long ski. The guest cottage add ... click here to read more

Main house and lakeside view

Step out onto the rear deck just after seven on a July morning. The meadows stretch out in every direction, still wet with dew, and the only sound is birdsong cutting through air that smells faintly of pine and grass. This is Barkö — a quiet hamlet tucked into the Swedish countryside outside Östhammar, where summer feels unhurried and deliberately slow in the best possible way. Set on a generous 2,411 square metre plot along Barkö 121, this red-and-white Swedish country home from 1975 has spent its entire life in one family's hands. That kind of continuity shows. The garden is mature and deeply considered — not manicured to within an inch of its life, but layered: open lawn rolling into shade from established trees, with space carved out naturally for a kitchen garden if you want one, a greenhouse if you've been meaning to start one, or simply a hammock strung between two birches. The lot is large enough to feel private, small enough to manage on a weekend without it becoming a chore. Inside, 50 square metres is used sensibly. The living room anchors the house around a wood-burning stove that does serious work on cool September evenings when the nights start turning. Large windows pull the outside in — you get a long view over meadows and pastures that changes character entirely depending on the light and the season. The kitchen connects without fuss, practical and well-positioned for someone cooking for a table of six after a day out on the water. Two bedrooms, one bathroom with shower and WC, and a covered entrance veranda where your morning coffee goes cold because you keep stopping to watch whatever is happening in the garden. The sea is 3.2 kilometres away. That's a ten-minute bike ride on flat terrain, the kind ... click here to read more

Front view of the summer cottage

Six o'clock on a July morning and the only sound is a woodpecker somewhere in the pines behind the garden. You pull open the conservatory door, coffee in hand, and the cool air carries the faint smell of resin and wet grass. This is what Ekedals byväg 66 feels like before the rest of the world wakes up — and honestly, that alone is worth the price of admission. This is a proper Swedish sommarstuga, the kind that gets passed between families who actually use it. Two bedrooms, a renovated kitchen, a conservatory big enough for a long table of eight, and a flat garden that begs for a game of kubb before dinner. Fifty square metres of well-considered space that never feels tight because the ceiling in the main living room shoots all the way up to the ridge, doubling the sense of volume. The generous windows pull the treeline inside, so the forest is always in your peripheral vision whether you're cooking, reading, or just sitting still. The current owners renovated with a clear-eyed focus on practicality — not cosmetic staging. The kitchen is genuinely functional: full-size stove, fridge-freezer, proper worktop space. No fussy finishes that scuff easily, no open shelving that looks great in photos and collects dust in real life. The loft above the living area sleeps two more, which makes spontaneous visits from friends or children's cousins entirely manageable rather than logistically painful. The bathroom has a shower cabin, sink, and a separett composting toilet — a standard and well-proven setup in Swedish leisure properties where conventional sewage connection isn't available. Off the main living room, the conservatory deserves its own paragraph. This is where summer actually happens. Long breakfasts that drift into l ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the summer house

On a still Tuesday morning in late August, the light through the west-facing terrace at Vikavägen 6 lands differently than anywhere else. It's that particular Nordic gold—low, long, almost amber—that turns an ordinary cup of coffee into something you want to remember. The lilacs have finished blooming, the garden smells of warm grass, and somewhere about a kilometer down the road, the morning boat to Arholma is leaving Simpnäs harbor with a low churn of engine and the cry of a few opportunistic gulls. This is Björkö. And once you've spent a summer here, it becomes very hard to spend one anywhere else. Vikavägen 6 is a year-round holiday home on the island of Björkö in Norrtälje municipality, sitting in the outer reach of the Stockholm archipelago where the Åland Sea opens up and the islands thin out into something wilder and less visited than the tourist-heavy inner archipelago. The property dates to 1909, and you can feel that history in the weight of the walls and the way the three buildings frame a courtyard garden that has clearly been lived in and loved across many generations. At the same time, this is not a restoration project. The main house is in good condition, with a kitchen renovated in 2019, a modern shower room, and proper water and sewage connections that make year-round use genuinely comfortable rather than just technically possible. The main house is single-story, 84 square meters, and the layout makes intelligent use of every one of them. The kitchen has kept its rustic character after the renovation—there's a wood-burning stove in there that does double duty, heating the space and making the room smell like every Swedish winter weekend you've ever imagined. It opens into a dining room that functions ... click here to read more

Main house and garden

Saturday morning. You pull open the heavy wooden door of the sauna house, and the birch-scented steam rolls out across the rocky knoll while the Stockholm archipelago sits quiet and silver through the trees. The wood-fired hot tub is still warm from the night before. Nobody else is awake yet. This is Vätö — and once you've had a morning like that, it's almost impossible to go back to ordinary weekends. Krokusstigen 10 sits on the island of Vätö in Norrtälje municipality, about 90 kilometres north of Stockholm, connected to the mainland by a bridge that makes this feel accessible without ever feeling crowded. The property is a classic Swedish sommarstuga in spirit — built in 1956, with all the soul that comes from a house that has absorbed decades of long evenings and midsummer celebrations — but the practical side has been kept firmly in the present. This is not a project. It's move-in ready and waiting. The main house runs to 60 square metres, which sounds compact until you step out onto the large wooden terraces and realise the living space effectively doubles in summer. Swedes know how to design for the outdoors, and this house is proof. The terraces wrap around the property in a way that catches light at different hours of the day — morning coffee on one side, evening wine on the other as the sun drops low over the pines. Inside, the living room is anchored by a masonry open fireplace with a Roslag insert, the kind of cast-iron fitting that's been keeping archipelago families warm for generations. Light a fire in September, crack a window, and listen to the first autumn wind move through the birch trees outside. That fireplace earns its keep from August through to May. The layout is honest and well-proportioned. A ... click here to read more

Front view of the holiday home

The first thing you notice on a summer morning at Litsnäset 130 is the sound of the Indalsälven moving past the garden — a low, steady current that replaces whatever city noise you carried here. The boathouse is twenty steps from the kitchen door. The fishing rod is already rigged. Coffee's on. This compact one-bedroom holiday home in Lit, Jämtland sits on a 1,150-square-metre riverside plot in the small community of Litsnäset, roughly ten minutes by car from the town of Lit and about forty minutes from Östersund. At 20 square metres, it's deliberately simple. That's not a limitation — it's the point. This kind of cabin demands very little of you. You spend your time outside. The main house pulls off something that bigger properties often fail at: everything is in its right place. A wood-burning stove anchors the living area, which doubles as a sleeping space with a sofa corner and bunk bed. When you light the fire on an October evening and the river mist rolls across the plot, the whole room feels genuinely warm rather than just heated. The kitchen is compact but practical, with its own separate entrance opening directly onto the garden — meaning you can carry plates straight to the terrace table without threading through the living space. Small detail. Big difference in daily use. The partly covered terrace is where most of the daylight hours happen in summer. It faces the water. The sun in Jämtland in July doesn't set until past ten, and from the terrace you watch the light go gold on the Indalsälven for what feels like hours. The property's own stretch of riverfront is directly accessible — you walk across your garden and you're at the water's edge. Swimming, fishing from the bank, pushing a kayak in. No shared ac ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the holiday home and garden

Properties nearby

Nestled in the serene landscape of Vassunda, Knivsta, this enchanting country home offers a unique opportunity to own a slice of Swedish paradise. With its three distinct dwellings set amidst a sprawling 4,400 square meter plot, this property is a haven for those seeking a tranquil second home or a delightful holiday retreat. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the sweet scent of lilacs wafting through the air. This is Ulrikadal, a cherished estate that has been a family sanctuary for generations. Here, you can experience the quintessential Swedish lifestyle, surrounded by lush meadows, whispering woodlands, and open farmland. A Trio of Charming Dwellings - Main Cottage: The heart of Ulrikadal, this winterized torp exudes classic Swedish charm. With a cozy living room featuring a fireplace, a well-equipped kitchen, and two inviting bedrooms, it’s perfect for year-round living. - Summer House: Painted in traditional red with a blue door, this delightful abode offers a spacious living area, a compact kitchen, and a cozy upstairs bedroom. Ideal for summer stays or guest accommodation. - Modern Guest Cabin: Built in 2011, this bright and airy cabin boasts a high ceiling, a practical sleeping loft, and a decked entrance, making it a contemporary addition to the estate. A Garden of Eden The grounds of Ulrikadal are a gardener's dream. Mature apple, plum, and cherry trees stand alongside lilacs and currant bushes, offering a bounty of seasonal delights. Whether you wish to cultivate your own vegetable garden or simply enjoy the beauty of the landscape, the possibilities are endless. - Outdoor Living: Multiple seating areas, a stone-paved patio with a built-in grill, and a large furnished balcony provide a ... click here to read more

Main house and garden

Picture yourself sipping morning coffee on your porch as horses graze peacefully in wooden-fenced paddocks, the early Swedish sun casting golden light across your private riding arena. Just ten minutes from historic Sigtuna and fifteen minutes from Arlanda Airport, this 2019-built equestrian property at Skråmsta 322 offers the rare combination of serious horse-keeping facilities and metropolitan accessibility that international buyers seeking a Swedish vacation home rarely find in a single package. This 145-square-meter country home anchors a thoughtfully designed 6,532-square-meter estate where turn-of-the-century architectural details meet modern energy efficiency. The property speaks to those who understand that authentic Swedish country living doesn't require sacrificing contemporary comfort or convenience. From the moment you turn into the courtyard, the horizontal and vertical wood paneling and classic mullioned windows signal a home built with both aesthetic integrity and practical durability in mind. The main residence flows seamlessly from an open-plan kitchen and dining area into a welcoming living room where family and friends naturally gather. Adjacent to these social spaces sits a quiet library that serves equally well as a home office for those who work remotely while enjoying extended stays at their Swedish holiday property. Three spacious bedrooms provide comfortable sleeping quarters, while two modern bathrooms eliminate the morning queue that plagues many vacation homes. The dedicated laundry room proves invaluable for families spending weeks at a time in the Swedish countryside. What truly distinguishes this property from typical second homes is the self-contained Attefall house forming a wing to th ... click here to read more

Front view of the property and main house

Nestled at the end of Greskars väg in Skokloster, there's a unique country home waiting to be discovered by the discerning buyer. This quaint home, built in 1886, speaks to those who dream of experiencing life in the tranquil Swedish countryside. With its rich history and picturesque setting, this eight-room dwelling makes waiting at Skokloster Bay memorable, where every sunrise awakens with the promise of a new day. As a busy real estate agent with experience working with international clients, I've seen the intrigue of properties that quietly whisper stories of the past while holding the potential for the future. The first glimpse of this home reveals its enduring character, featuring the original tiled stoves and single-pane windows with muntins. Even though it proudly upholds its historical identity, this property offers room for contemporary enhancements to cater to modern preferences. - Address: Greskars väg 6, Skokloster - Gräskarsvik, Håbo kommun - Year Built: 1886 - Plot Size: 3,845 sqm - Living Area: 123 sqm - Rooms: 8, including large gathering spaces - Bedrooms: 8 - Kitchens: 1 - Bathrooms: 0 - Stoves: Original tiled - Windows: Single-pane with muntins - Water: Municipal at plot boundary - Sewage: Municipal at plot boundary Living at this property is much more than just inhabiting a place—it’s about embracing a lifestyle that cherishes nature, heritage, and the serene beauty Skokloster has to offer. Residents will find themselves surrounded by splendid views, from the tranquil waters of Skokloster Bay to the distinctive silhouette of Skokloster Castle in the distance. Skokloster isn’t just about picturesque landscapes, though; it’s a community that welcomes foreign buyers and expats with open arms. Loca ... click here to read more

Front view of the property

Nestled in the enchanting landscapes of the Lärjeheds Leisure Area, this delightful holiday home is a hidden gem waiting for someone with an eye for tranquility and nature's embrace. Located in the modest yet inviting town of Knivsta, in the south of a captivating Nordic country known for its forests and lakes, this cabin on Lärjeheds Fritidsområde, stuga nr 114 represents an ideal escape for those weary of the ceaseless rush of urban life. It combines the appeal of a cozy retreat with a unique touch of potential for personal touches and enhancements. With an area of 50 square meters, this cabin offers a snug and intimate environment. The layout is straightforward yet effective, designed to make the most of every square inch. It consists of a single bedroom, ideally suited for a couple or even a small family. This rustic sanctuary is an ideal place for overseas buyers and expats looking to find solace away from the chaos, offering a unique lifestyle choice that's all about peace and reflection. Living in Knivsta allows one the unique experience of connecting with nature while still being relatively close to the hustle of larger cities. The small but vibrant community of Knivsta offers all the charm and tranquillity one would expect from a picturesque Swedish town. Here, the pace of life slows down, allowing residents and visitors to genuinely soak in the beauty of the surroundings. Outdoor enthusiasts will find themselves spoiled for choice with the endless recreational opportunities that the area affords. Whether it’s venturing on long hikes through the sprawling, evergreen forests, cycling along scenic routes, or just enjoying a leisurely stroll, the options are endless. The cabin itself facilitates a laid-back life ... click here to read more

Cottage exterior view

Welcome to the tranquil embrace of Blåsippsvägen 14 in the charming village of Sigtuna. This country home, enveloped in lush greenery and overlooking the serene meadows and shimmering waters of Lake Mälaren, presents a rare opportunity to own an idyllic oasis. It's a place that combines natural beauty with the charm of rustic living, making it an ideal home for overseas buyers and expats looking to immerse themselves in the Swedish countryside. Sigtuna, one of Sweden's oldest towns, charms visitors with its cobblestone streets and rich history. Living here, you'll enjoy a blend of timeless traditions and modern comforts. The town square is often bustling with local markets and festivals. The climate here is typically Scandinavian, with cold, crisp winters filled with snow and long summer days where the sun barely sets. Such a climate offers a diverse living experience, ranging from winter sports to summer boating on Lake Mälaren. Stepping into this countryscape home, you're greeted by a scene straight from a storybook. The main dwelling, a genuine log cabin, is a symphony of light and space, with white-painted wood panels and visible beams, offering an airy and open atmosphere. The rustic charm is complemented by single-strip oak parquet and beautiful pine floors, creating a warm environment conducive to both family gatherings and tranquil solitude. The heart of the house, the spacious kitchen, is simply a cook's dream. Painted in a pristine white and equipped with all the necessary appliances, it inspires the preparation of unforgettable meals. Adjacent to the kitchen is a sun-drenched living room, featuring windows on three sides. It's the perfect spot to watch the seasons change while staying warm by the centrally ... click here to read more

Front view of the cottage

A Symphony of Nature and Modern Living in Dalby-Viggeby Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the distant call of a songbird, as the first rays of sunlight filter through expansive floor-to-ceiling windows. This is not just a home; it's a sanctuary where modern design meets the timeless beauty of nature. Nestled in the heart of Dalby-Viggeby, just a stone's throw from the vibrant city of Uppsala, this country estate offers a lifestyle that is both serene and invigorating. A Home Designed for Living Built in 2021, the main residence spans 180 square meters and is a testament to contemporary architecture. Its open-plan design seamlessly integrates indoor and outdoor spaces, allowing you to enjoy panoramic views of the surrounding landscape from every room. The living area, with its airy ambiance, is perfect for both intimate family gatherings and lively social events. The master bedroom, a true retreat, offers sweeping views in three directions, ensuring you wake up to a new masterpiece every morning. A Canvas of Possibilities The estate is more than just a home; it's a canvas for your dreams. Spread across 6.4 hectares, the land is a harmonious blend of arable fields, lush woodland, and meticulously landscaped gardens. Whether you're an avid gardener, a nature enthusiast, or someone who simply enjoys the tranquility of the countryside, this property offers endless possibilities. Local Lifestyle and Activities Dalby-Viggeby is a haven for those who cherish the great outdoors. The proximity to Lake Mälaren means you can indulge in boating, fishing, or a refreshing swim on a warm summer's day. The surrounding forests are a playground for hiking, cycling, and wildlife observation, offering a new adventur ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the main house and landscape

A Tranquil Escape Just Outside Stockholm Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the soft chirping of birds, as the morning sun filters through the lush canopy surrounding your secluded country home. Nestled in the serene landscape of Bro, Sweden, this charming property offers a unique blend of rustic allure and modern convenience, making it the perfect vacation retreat or second home. A Home Steeped in History and Comfort Affectionately known as "Stenröset," this property is more than just a house; it's a piece of local history. Built in 1960, the main house features an L-shaped layout that seamlessly integrates the kitchen, dining, and living areas into a spacious, inviting communal space. Large windows flood the interior with natural light, offering picturesque views of the surrounding greenery. The cozy bedroom promises restful nights, while the modern air-source heat pump and two fireplaces ensure year-round comfort. A Garden of Endless Possibilities Spanning over 2,100 square meters, the expansive garden is a true highlight. Whether you're an avid gardener, a nature enthusiast, or simply seeking a private oasis, this plot offers endless possibilities. The current owners have already laid the groundwork for a swimming pool, inviting you to continue the project and create your own personal paradise. Surrounded by mature trees and natural vegetation, the garden is a haven for wildlife and a perfect spot for picking blueberries and mushrooms. Versatile Outbuildings for Every Need In addition to the main house, the property includes several outbuildings that enhance its functionality and appeal. A 22-square-meter utility building, an 8-square-meter guest cottage, a 9-square-meter storage shed, and a ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the holiday home and garden

A Tranquil Retreat in the Heart of Sweden's Natural Beauty Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the soft chirping of birds, as the morning sun filters through the trees, casting a warm glow over your private sanctuary. Welcome to Skrindvägen 3, a charming country home nestled in the serene landscape of Bro, Upplands-Bro kommun, Sweden. This property offers not just a home, but a lifestyle steeped in tranquility and natural beauty. A Cozy Haven with Modern Comforts Built in 1959, the main house spans 38 square meters, thoughtfully designed to maximize space and comfort. The heart of the home is a cozy living room, where an open fireplace invites you to unwind with a good book or share stories with loved ones. The room's layout accommodates both a seating area and a dining table, perfect for intimate family dinners or lively gatherings with friends. Adjacent to the living room, the kitchen is a blend of practicality and style. Recently updated with new tiled flooring and underfloor electric heating, it offers a warm and inviting space for culinary adventures. Ample storage and workspace make meal preparation a breeze, whether you're crafting a simple breakfast or a gourmet feast. The main house also features a well-proportioned bedroom, a peaceful retreat for restful nights, and a functional bathroom that caters to both residents and guests. A Versatile Guest House for Endless Possibilities Adding to the property's allure is a separate guest house, measuring approximately 18 square meters. This additional space includes a living room and a bedroom, offering flexibility for overnight guests, extended family, or even as a private retreat for teenagers. The guest house enhances the property's usability, ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the main house and garden

Nestled in the heart of Sweden's picturesque countryside, this delightful country home at Jädravägen 10, Bro, offers a unique opportunity for those seeking a tranquil escape from the hustle and bustle of city life. Located in the serene Mariedal area of Upplands-Bro, this property is a haven for nature lovers and those yearning for a peaceful retreat. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the melodic chirping of birds, with the scent of pine trees wafting through the air. This is the everyday reality at this charming country home, where the natural beauty of the Swedish landscape is your constant companion. A Home with Character and Potential Built in 1969, this well-preserved home exudes a cozy, rustic charm that invites you to unwind and relax. The property spans a generous 2,828 square meters, offering ample space for outdoor activities, gardening, or simply soaking in the serene surroundings. The mature trees surrounding the property provide a sense of seclusion and privacy, making it an ideal spot for a second home. Inside, the home features a thoughtful layout with three bedrooms, a spacious living room, a functional kitchen, and a bathroom equipped with a modern composting toilet. The living room's fireplace is the perfect spot for cozy evenings, creating a warm and inviting atmosphere. A Lifestyle of Leisure and Adventure Owning this country home means embracing a lifestyle rich in leisure and adventure. The surrounding area offers a plethora of outdoor activities, from hiking and berry picking in the nearby forests to swimming and boating on the tranquil Lejondalssjön. The community pier allows for easy access to water activities, with the option to secure a boat berth for your rowing or ... click here to read more

Front view of the holiday home

On a still July morning in Långvreten, the first thing you notice is the silence. Not the absence of sound, but the right kind of sound — wood pigeons in the birch canopy, a distant lawnmower two plots over, the soft creak of a garden chair. By eight o'clock, the sun has already been up for hours. That's the Swedish summer for you. Jädravägen 10 sits on a 2,828-square-metre plot in Bro, Upplands-Bro municipality, about 40 kilometres northwest of Stockholm. It's a 1969 timber cottage that one family has quietly looked after for over five decades. Three bedrooms, one bathroom, 48 square metres of living space inside — and then a vast, tree-lined garden that does most of the real living for you. This is the kind of Swedish vacation home that doesn't exist in brochures because families hold onto them for generations. When one finally comes available, you pay attention. The interior keeps its original bones intact. Low ceilings. Wood-panel walls in that particular warm ochre that 1960s Swedish cottages seem to own. A fireplace in the living room that becomes the social centre of the house the moment September arrives and the evenings cool fast. The kitchen is compact and functional — there's a rhythm to cooking here, the way you plan meals around what's at the local shop in Kungsängen rather than having everything delivered to your door. It changes how you eat, and usually for the better. Three bedrooms means room for kids, grandparents, or that one friend who always lingers into the following week. A note worth knowing upfront: the bathroom currently has a composting toilet and no running water connection to the mains. This is common in older Swedish fritidshus and entirely manageable as a warm-season property, which is p ... click here to read more

Front view of the holiday home

Allright, so let’s walk you through this place, I have to say, as a busy estate agent, I come across a lot of properties in Uppsala, but this one here at Bellisvägen 238 in Tunabackar stands out if you're looking to try life in Sweden, especially if you're an overseas buyer or an expat dreaming about that little house with a big garden. And before I get too busy with my next viewing, here’s the real story about this cottage: what you see is what you get, no extra polish, no glamour, but loads of genuine Swedish allotment-living potential. So, this is a cozy allotment house, about 30 square meters, so we're not talking about a large villa, but a snug place maybe for a single person, a couple, or even someone with a young child who wants that proper garden life. It's not a modern city flat; it's a real house, built in 1948, has its years, but it's been kept up by people who cared for it. The price, SEK 69,500, reflects both the unique lifestyle and the fact you’re buying into a community and a bit of Swedish summer life, not just four walls. When you first enter, you walk up a traditional veranda—a Swedish "punch veranda", small but enough that you want to kick off your boots and leave the worries of the city behind. It gets good sunlight through the windows, which is always a big plus here when winter sometimes seems a bit too long. Inside, you've got a living room that doesn’t try to pretend it’s grander than it is. It’s open, with a fireplace—a really nice touch, but you'll need to get that inspected if you want to use it. I’ve got to be honest, this isn’t a place for big dinner parties, but it’s just right for quiet evenings in. The kitchen is pretty functional, with a fridge/freezer, stove, oven, good cabinets. You ... click here to read more

Front view of the cottage and garden

Nestled in the serene embrace of Skölsta, Uppsala, Halmbyboda 8B offers a unique opportunity to own a piece of Swedish history. This charming country home, dating back to 1819, is more than just a property; it's a gateway to a lifestyle steeped in tranquility, nature, and cultural richness. As a prospective second home buyer, you'll find this property to be a perfect blend of rustic charm and modern potential. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the sweet melody of birdsong. Your mornings could start with a leisurely stroll through your expansive 2,595 square meter garden, where mature trees and lush greenery create a private oasis. Whether you're an avid gardener or simply enjoy the outdoors, this space offers endless possibilities for relaxation and recreation. The main cottage, a classic Swedish torp, exudes authenticity with its original woodwork and historical details. With 24 square meters of living space, it provides a cozy retreat that can be tailored to your needs. The interior, though compact, is filled with potential. Picture yourself sipping coffee by the window, surrounded by the warmth of traditional architecture. Key Features: - Historic Charm: A rare opportunity to own a piece of Swedish heritage. - Expansive Garden: 2,595 square meters of lush, private outdoor space. - Flexible Living Space: Two rooms that can be configured to suit your lifestyle. - Outbuilding & Root Cellar: Practical storage and potential for additional living space. - Scenic Location: Surrounded by nature, yet close to Uppsala's amenities. - Investment Potential: Opportunity to restore or expand, enhancing value. - Proximity to Water: Viltvattnet nearby for outdoor activities. - Community Feel: Skölsta offers a pea ... click here to read more

Exterior view of the cottage and garden

On a still July morning, you step off the wooden deck in bare feet, coffee in hand, and walk 350 meters through birch trees to the private sandy beach at Lejondalssjön. The lake is glassy and cold and yours. Nobody else is up yet. This is what owning a country home in Stentorp, Upplands-Bro actually feels like. Svärdsvägen 4 is a 1955 red-painted cottage that sits on 2,275 square meters of private garden in one of the most quietly coveted lake communities within striking distance of Stockholm. At 34 square meters, the main house is compact by any standard — but the Swedish tradition of small, well-planned living spaces was never better applied. Every square meter works hard. The living room centers on a wood-burning stove that keeps things genuinely warm during October evenings when the colors outside turn amber and rust. Large windows frame that garden and the tree line beyond it, so even on grey November days there's a sense of being inside a landscape painting rather than a house. The kitchen is straightforward and functional — enough counter space to cook a proper meal, enough room to not bump into whoever's doing the dishes. The single bedroom is calm and quiet, the kind of sleep you don't get in the city. Outside, the oversized deck is where life really happens in summer. Long dinners that drift into long evenings. Books abandoned after three pages. The garden behind it is half-wild, half-cultivated — mature trees providing canopy, open patches of lawn inviting a hammock or a kitchen garden if you're inclined. What separates this property from most Swedish country cottages is the additional infrastructure already in place. The separate guest cottage comes with its own bathroom, which means visitors are comfortab ... click here to read more

Front view of the cottage and garden

Nestled within the serene landscape of Bro, near the tranquil shores of Lejondalssjön, this 5-bedroom country home on Bondmorans väg 32 beckons those looking for a retreat from the hustle and bustle of city life without forsaking access to modern conveniences. Ideal for both a heartwarming family vacation haven and a full-time residence, this property delicately balances seclusion with accessibility, offering a quality living experience that caters to a variety of needs. Upon setting foot in this admirable country home, one is greeted by its decent condition, holding promise and potential for those looking to infuse personal touches or slight renovations to make it truly their own. The dwelling stands on a generous plot, providing a canvas ripe for landscaping dreams—from a vibrant flower garden buzzing with life to a cozy barbecue zone perfect for gatherings amid nature. As for the property, its five well-sized bedrooms suggest ample space for family living or hosting guests comfortably. The single bathroom provokes thoughts of customization, where the new owners could consider modern updates to enhance comfort and functionality. The living space, enveloped by nature's calm, offers a peaceful backdrop for daily activities and relaxation. For expats or overseas buyers, the allure of Bro includes its ease of connection to urban centers. Though it feels worlds away from the clamor of city life, the location is just a short drive or a convenient train ride away from Stockholm via nearby Kungsängen or Bro stations. The available shortcut over Svea Livgarde to Kungsängen also makes commuting or spontaneous trips to the city expedient. For those who cherish an active lifestyle or seek leisurely pursuits, living by Lejondal ... click here to read more

Front view of the property

Nestled in the heart of Sweden, in the picturesque locale of Häggeby, lies a remarkable opportunity for those eager to escape the hustle and bustle of city life. Located on Badvägen 6, this cozy country home offers a sanctuary for those looking to enjoy tranquility surrounded by nature. With a location as idyllic as this, about an hour from Stockholm, you’ll find the peace you’ve been longing for, paired side by side with the comfort of a well-maintained property. This country abode comes with a spacious open living arrangement that includes a bedroom, a fresh bathroom, and an inviting kitchen that freely flows into the living area. Though compact at 42 square meters, the use of space here is impressive, making it an ideal retreat, especially for singles or couples. The house itself is in fine condition, meticulously upgraded with features such as additional insulation to stay cozy during those chilly Scandinavian nights. Modern windows and a sturdy metal roof mean less maintenance and more time enjoying the surroundings. Step outside, and you’re greeted by a generous plot of land sprawling over 1,751 square meters. A newly planted Tuija hedge acts as a natural barrier, ensuring your privacy within this serene environment. Here, you also have a delightful terrace constructed in 2023, partly glazed and roofed, ideal for enjoying your morning coffee or an evening glass of wine regardless of the weather. It makes a wonderful space for entertaining guests or simply soaking in the sunsets that Sweden is famed for. Focusing on the possibilities, the plot also accommodates a charming insulated guesthouse, measuring 10 square meters. With electricity already set up, it provides an additional retreat for visitors, a quiet home ... click here to read more

Front view of the house

If you're seeking a blend of rural tranquility with practical proximity to urban centers, Älgesta 415 in Märsta, Sweden, offers an exceptional opportunity for a home away from home. Nestled in the heart of Sigtuna, a historic area renowned for its lush landscapes and rich history, this farmhouse truly embodies the spirit of Swedish countrysides. This sprawling estate extends over a generous 27 hectares, featuring scenic views that captivate every corner of the property. Living here, you would start your day with the peacefulness of nature surrounding you, while the bustling life of Stockholm is just a short drive away. The farm's strategic location near a motorway entrance makes commuting straightforward, just 40 kilometers from Stockholm and a mere 7 kilometers from Arlanda Airport, ensuring you’re never too far from city life. The farmhouse itself is robust and spacious, offering 200 square meters of living space. The house includes notable features like a pool area perfect for those warmer summer days, and a dedicated pool house, offering a space for both entertainment and relaxation. Imagine hosting summer gatherings with friends and family, creating lasting memories amidst the serene backdrop. For those who often have visitors, the property benefits from a charming guest house, which is smaller in size but provides ample comfort for extending stays. If you're passionate about equestrian pursuits, you’ll appreciate the stable with four boxes ready for your horses and exceptional riding trails found throughout the property. The property's arable and pasture lands, approximately 14 hectares, are partially fenced for horse grazing, aligning perfectly with pastoral life. Here are some of the property features: - 305 ... click here to read more

Main house exterior

Amidst the idyll of Sweden, in the tranquil outskirts of Knivsta Municipality, you’ll find a quaint country home that's not just a house, but a potential haven for those yearning to merge countryside peace with contemporary living. At Eda bergsväg 19, Lagga, lies a sustainable abode that invites one to experience the lyrical beauty of rural Sweden each day. At its heart, this home is not overly opulent or remodeled to the latest trend, yet it holds its own, offering a simple but fulfilling space that might just be right for you and your loved ones. The house itself welcomes you with a cozy framework of two bedrooms and a solitary bathroom perfect for a small family or perhaps a couple looking for an escape from city life. The living space, filled with light and air through spacious, unassuming windows, offers an undisturbed vista over a sprawling garden and lush, encompassing forest. The kitchen, though not overtly lavish, is understatedly modern and functional — recently updated, it's purpose-built for creating sumptuous meals, laden with all necessities a busy household might need. Let’s step outside, where you not only have the space by the meter (2,027 square meters, to be exact) but an open invitation to endless possibilities. With that much room, outdoor gardening, kids’ play, or even contemplating life’s little miracles amid untouched nature might just become your new hobbies. The winters in Knivsta bring a quaint sort of stillness, with the chilled winds and snow-covered grounds providing a perfect backdrop for cozy indoor evenings, perhaps near the glow of your heating system that's both efficient and environment-friendly. Thanks to both the air-to-water heat pump and a versatile air-to-air system, the interna ... click here to read more

Front view of the vacation home

Ah, hello there, hope you're having a great day! I must say, I'm quite busy these days, hustling around showing properties, but let me take a moment to paint a picture for you of a lovely country home nestled in the serene beauty of Sweden. Allow me to introduce Brunkullavägen 1, located in the picturesque village of Bro in Storhogna, Bergs kommun. It's a truly charming holiday home offering an authentic slice of Swedish country life. Trust me when I say, this property is a hidden gem, situated in the heart of natural beauty, amidst rolling mountains and endless sky. Let’s start with the property features, before I delve into the numerous activities this area offers: • 4 cozy bedrooms • 1 spacious bathroom • An inviting living room & kitchen with open plan • Dedicated technical/laundry room • Sunny and bright location • Garage with ample space • Convenience to skiing & snowmobile tracks • Lovely mountain views Boasting a size of 117 square meters, this property is perfect for a family or those looking for a peaceful retreat. Located not too far from the slopes, you have unparalleled views of the magnificent Storhogna mountain. The air is crisp and clean, filling your lungs with fresh vitality every time you step outside. Now, picture yourself living here. Imagine waking up every morning, drawing the curtains to behold the majestic mountain vistas. This house radiates warmth and comfort. Especially during chilly Swedish winters, the open plan kitchen and living room become the hub of cozy evenings. Whether you're cooking, entertaining, or simply relaxing by the crackling fire, this space easily transforms to suit your needs. The garage is a practical feature, ideal for accommodating all sorts of outdoor gear. Here ... click here to read more

5 room holiday home at Brunkullavägen 1 Storhogna Bergs municipality