Spacious 8-Bedroom Farmhouse with Pyrenees Views in Lacaugne, France

Listed on
https://storage.googleapis.com/homestra-images/property-image-c3f82f53-45e4-4c3c-9cbf-505ef8d5dcca-1745340896.jpg

31390 Lacaugne, France, Lacaugne (France)

8 Bedrooms · 3 Bathrooms · 292Floor area

€395,000

House

No parking

8 Bedrooms

3 Bathrooms

292m²

Garden

No pool

Not furnished

Description

Nestled in the picturesque village of Lacaugne, this expansive 8-bedroom farmhouse offers a unique blend of rustic charm and modern convenience. With a sprawling 292m² of living space, this property is perfect for those seeking a tranquil lifestyle amidst the stunning backdrop of the Pyrenees. Whether you're an expat looking for a serene retreat or an overseas buyer seeking a family home, this property promises a lifestyle of comfort and adventure.

A Glimpse into Life in Lacaugne


Lacaugne is a hidden gem in the heart of France, offering a peaceful escape from the hustle and bustle of city life. The village is surrounded by lush greenery and rolling hills, providing a perfect setting for outdoor enthusiasts. The climate here is mild, with warm summers and cool winters, making it ideal for year-round living.

The local community is warm and welcoming, with a mix of locals and expats who have chosen to call this charming village home. The nearby town of Carbonne, just a 5-minute drive away, offers all the amenities you need, including shops, restaurants, and a train station that connects you to the rest of France.

The Property: A Blend of Tradition and Modernity


This magnificent farmhouse is composed of two interconnected houses, each with its own unique character. The main house features a south-facing kitchen and dining area, perfect for enjoying meals with family and friends. The cozy living room, complete with a wood-burning stove, offers a warm and inviting space to relax.

Upstairs, you'll find three spacious bedrooms, a dressing room, and a storage room, providing ample space for a growing family. The attic, with its stunning roof structure, offers potential for further development, allowing you to customize the space to suit your needs.

The guest house is equally charming, with a large living room featuring a traditional fireplace, a well-equipped kitchen, and a comfortable bedroom. The upstairs area includes three additional bedrooms and a large attic room, offering plenty of space for guests or extended family.

Key Features and Amenities


- 8 Bedrooms: Spacious and versatile, perfect for family living or hosting guests.
- 3 Bathrooms: Modern and well-appointed, ensuring comfort and convenience.
- 292m² Living Space: Generous space for all your needs.
- Workshop: A 55m² space with a water point and wood stove, ideal for creative projects.
- Stunning Views: Enjoy breathtaking views of the Pyrenees from your doorstep.
- Large Plot: A 3909m² plot with mature trees, flowers, and a vegetable garden.
- Central Heating: Efficient heating system with a condensing gas boiler and boiler stove.
- Double Glazing: Installed in 2017 for improved insulation and energy efficiency.
- Solar Water Heater: Eco-friendly and cost-effective.
- Septic Tank: Non-compliant but functional, with potential for upgrades.
- Proximity to Carbonne: Just 5 minutes away, offering all necessary amenities.
- Easy Access to Toulouse: Only 40 minutes from Toulouse Airport, perfect for international travel.

A Story of Potential


Imagine waking up to the serene sounds of nature, sipping your morning coffee on the terrace as the sun rises over the Pyrenees. Spend your days exploring the local countryside, hiking through scenic trails, or visiting nearby vineyards. In the evenings, gather with loved ones around the fireplace, sharing stories and laughter.

This property is more than just a house; it's a lifestyle. Whether you're looking to create a family haven, a holiday retreat, or a bed and breakfast, this farmhouse offers endless possibilities. Embrace the charm of rural France and make this beautiful property your own.

Details

Amount of bedrooms
8
Size
292
Price per m²
€1,353
Garden size
3909
Has Garden
Yes
Has Parking
No
Has Basement
No
Condition
good
Amount of Bathrooms
3
Has swimming pool
No
Property type
House
Energy label

Unknown

Sign up to access location details

Similar properties

Picture this: it's a Tuesday morning in July, and the only sound reaching you through the open kitchen window is birdsong and the faint rustle of wind through the oak trees bordering your garden. No road noise. No neighbors. Just 140 square meters of 1800s Quercy stone, your swimming pool catching the early light, and absolutely nowhere you need to be. That's the daily reality at this four-bedroom farmhouse on the elevated plateau above Montaigu-de-Quercy — and once you've spent a morning here, the idea of going back to city life gets harder to justify. The house itself has been through a careful restoration that didn't sand away its soul. The original stone staircase is still there, worn smooth by two centuries of footsteps. Exposed oak beams cross the ceilings the way they were intended to — not as a design affectation, but because they're structural, honest, and genuinely beautiful in the way that only old things can be. The stone walls, thick enough to keep the interior cool through August without air conditioning, bear the marks of the craftsmen who laid them. This is a building with a geological patience to it. On the first floor, two generous double bedrooms look out across open countryside toward the rolling Tarn-et-Garonne patchwork of sunflower fields and walnut orchards — the view changes colour almost month by month. Downstairs, the country kitchen with its traditional terracotta-tiled floor is the kind of room that makes you want to cook slowly. A built-in wood-burning stove anchors the living room — and from November through March, when the Quercy plateau gets cold and clear and the stars over the garden are ridiculous, that stove becomes the centre of everything. The practical side has been handled pro ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Sunday morning in Saint-Groux moves at its own pace. The kitchen window is open, the smell of damp grass rising from the park, and somewhere beyond the barn a woodpigeon is calling. You pour a coffee, lean against the stone sill, and realize — genuinely realize — that this is what you came to France for. Saint-Groux sits in the Charente, one of those quietly magnificent corners of southwest France that hasn't been discovered by the tour buses and hasn't tried to be. The village is small, the roads narrow, the countryside rolling and thick with oak. But it's not remote — Mansle-les-Fontaines is five minutes by car, the N10 puts Angoulême within easy reach, and Poitiers is just over an hour north. This is the Poitou-Charentes region, famous for Cognac, Pineau, limestone villages, sunflowers in July, and some of the most affordable rural property left in France. The house itself is a proper characterful residence — 287 square metres of living space built when rooms were made to last, with thick walls that keep things cool in August and hold the warmth in February. Step through the entrance hall and you move into a layout that actually makes sense for family life or hosting: a dining room large enough for a long table and twelve people, a functional kitchen with a pantry behind it, a bright living room, and a separate office that has already served a hundred different purposes over the decades and will happily serve a hundred more. A hallway connects to a WC and shower room on the ground floor, keeping things practical for arrivals from the garden or the barn. Upstairs, a broad landing opens onto six spacious bedrooms — yes, six, though the listing counts five — and a dressing room, plus a former WC that could easily be c ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a Sunday morning in the Charente, you wake up to nothing. No traffic, no sirens — just the faint ticking of cooling stone walls as the sun climbs over the cypress trees lining the garden, and the smell of coffee drifting up from a kitchen that was clearly built for living rather than showing off. This is Paizay-Naudouin-Embourie. Small, unhurried, and quietly extraordinary. This four-bedroom stone farmhouse sits in a village that most people drive past on their way to somewhere louder. That's exactly the point. Set within the rolling Charente countryside of Poitou-Charentes, the property spans 201 square metres of thoughtfully renovated living space arranged around a generous gravel courtyard, with a heated pool, a private tennis court, and the kind of silence you actually have to travel to find. At €375,000, it's the sort of property that makes buyers wonder why they waited so long. Pull up through the wrought-iron electric gate and the first thing you notice is the scale of it. The main house commands the courtyard with the quiet confidence of a building that has stood through several centuries — original stonework, weathered and golden, contrasting with the crisp glazed facade that was added during renovation. Step inside and the 78-square-metre open-plan living space genuinely stops you in your tracks. Soaring ceilings, exposed timber beams, stone walls that stay cool even in August, and a wood-burning stove at the heart of it all. The room flows from lounge to dining area to kitchen without feeling like a floor plan exercise — it feels like someone actually thought about how a family moves through a space. A mezzanine overlooks it all from above, useful as a reading perch, a home office, or a sixth sleeping spo ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Some mornings you wake up to the distant sound of boots on gravel. Pilgrims passing through Bach on the Way of St. James, heading southwest toward Cahors before the long push to Spain. You pour a coffee, step out onto the south-facing terrace, and the Lot countryside does what it always does — sits there quietly, certain of itself, needing nothing from you. That's the rhythm of this place. Unhurried. Real. This is not one house. It's a small private hamlet: three independent dwellings sitting on nearly 9,000 square meters of flat, wooded land just 500 meters from the village center of Bach. At 210 square meters of combined living space, seven bedrooms, and six bathrooms spread across the buildings, the property works equally well as a multi-generational family retreat, a gîte operation, a bed-and-breakfast, or a combination of all three. Very few properties along the Lot offer this kind of structural flexibility at this price point. The heart of everything is the main house. Walk into the living room and you feel the scale immediately — generous ceiling height, thick stone walls that keep things cool through July and August, a fully equipped kitchen designed for actual cooking rather than show. Three bedrooms upstairs each have their own private shower room and toilet, which matters enormously if you're hosting guests who don't know each other well, or family members who do know each other too well. The covered south-facing terrace on the ground floor catches the afternoon light and becomes, without any effort, where everyone ends up after dinner. Then there's the dovecote. Not a decorative one — a real, working piece of Quercy architectural history, built from the pale limestone that defines this corner of France. Th ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Sunday morning in La Faye sounds like this: the distant chime of the church bell in Ruffec carrying across the fields, a coffee going cold on the kitchen windowsill because you got distracted watching a pair of hoopoes pick through the garden. That's the pace of life here, and once you've had a taste of it, it's very hard to go back. This five-bedroom stone house sits just outside the small village of La Faye in the Charente department of Poitou-Charentes — rural southwest France at its most quietly compelling. Five minutes by car puts you in Ruffec, a proper market town with a covered market, a decent boulangerie on the Rue du Marché, and a weekly Wednesday market where local producers bring in their chevre, walnuts, sunflowers, and duck confit in jars. It's not a tourist circuit. Real people live here, shop here, grow things here. That's exactly the point. The house itself is built in the classic Charentais style — solid stone walls that keep rooms cool through July and August without air conditioning, high ceilings that make every space feel unhurried. At 231 square metres across two floors, this isn't a weekend bolt-hole; it's a proper family base for extended stays. The ground floor was designed with genuine practicality in mind: a fitted kitchen with a utility room directly off it, a formal dining room that seats everyone comfortably, and a living room with enough light in the afternoons to make you forget you intended to do anything productive. There's also a master suite on the ground floor with its own private bathroom — a detail that matters enormously when you have teenagers upstairs and grandparents visiting. Head upstairs and you'll find four more bedrooms and a dedicated office. That office isn't an afte ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Saturday morning in Carcassonne starts with the smell of woodsmoke and fresh bread. You push open the south-facing kitchen window, coffee in hand, and the Aude River valley stretches out beyond the garden fence—quiet, golden, unhurried. This is not a weekend fantasy. It's just a regular Saturday when you own this four-bedroom house on the edge of one of France's most storied medieval cities. The house sits in a calm residential pocket close to the banks of the Aude, the kind of neighborhood where neighbors know each other's names and the streets empty out by nine in the evening. Surrounded by 1,353 square meters of enclosed garden, it manages something genuinely rare in this part of Languedoc: countryside air and city convenience at once. The weekly markets on the Place Carnot are a ten-minute drive. The UNESCO-listed Cité de Carcassonne, with its 52 towers and double ring of ramparts, is close enough that you can watch its illuminated silhouette appear from your terrace on a clear summer night. At 157 square meters of living space, the house has been thoughtfully renovated without stripping away its personality. The ground floor flows from an entrance hall—with proper built-in storage, which anyone who's holidayed in undersized French houses will immediately appreciate—through a laundry room and into a south-facing open-plan kitchen and living area. Natural light pours through from mid-morning well into the afternoon. The dining room sits adjacent, separate enough for proper sit-down dinners, connected enough that nobody misses the conversation. Upstairs, four bedrooms offer genuine flexibility: a master suite with its own en-suite shower room, three further bedrooms served by a shared bathroom, and a separate WC. Two ... click here to read more

Picture 1

The first thing you notice on a summer morning here is the silence. Not the absence of sound, but a different kind of sound altogether — wind moving through oak and chestnut, the distant call of a buzzard riding thermals above the Goul valley, the faint creak of old timber in the barn warming up in the sun. From the terrace beside the heated pool, the Aubrac plateau stretches out across the horizon like something from a geological fever dream. Volcanic, ancient, unhurried. This is Cantal — one of the least-populated departments in France — and this particular farm, just ten minutes outside the village of Montsalvy, might be one of the most quietly compelling properties to come onto the market in the region. Six bedrooms across three buildings. A 7m x 3.5m pool warmed by rooftop solar panels. Over eight hectares of woodland, old pasture, a spring, and a hiking path that cuts through your own land. Two fully fitted gîtes already generating — or ready to generate — rental income. This is a functioning small estate, not a project. The renovation work has been done. You're stepping into something operational. The main house centres on a ground-floor open-plan kitchen and dining-living space with a wood burner that earns its keep from October through to April. The layout is practical and honest — no unnecessary flourishes, just solid stone and sensible proportions. Upstairs, two bedrooms. On the lower level, a third bedroom and a bathroom with separate WC. It's the kind of house where you lose track of time reading beside the fire with a glass of Marcillac, the local red wine made from the Fer Servadou grape that almost nobody outside the Aveyron and Cantal border has ever tasted. Worth seeking out. The main gîte is the sho ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Walk out the front gate on a July morning and within ten minutes your feet are on the sand at Saint-Jean-le-Thomas, the Atlantic stretching west toward the Channel Islands, Mont Saint-Michel rising from the tidal flats less than twenty kilometres to the south. That's not a marketing line—that's the literal Tuesday morning reality of living in this five-bedroom house on the Normandy coast of the Manche. Built in the early 1900s and sitting on a generous plot of just under a quarter of an acre, the property carries the solidity you'd expect from that era—thick walls, high ceilings, a real sense of permanence—while the interior has been kept in good condition and is ready to use from day one. At 220 square metres of habitable space across three floors plus a full garden-level basement, there is room here for a large family, a rotating cast of guests, or a combination of both. Five double bedrooms. Two bathrooms. A heated swimming pool. A large garage. A mezzanine with its own shower off the sitting room, which opens up all kinds of possibilities for sleeping arrangements without anyone feeling like they've drawn the short straw. The ground floor sets the tone. The sitting room runs to just over thirty square metres, big enough to hold a crowd on a rainy October afternoon without anyone feeling hemmed in. The mezzanine above adds a quieter perch—somewhere to read while the noise of dinner prep drifts up from the kitchen. That kitchen opens onto an elevated terrace with a built-in BBQ, and from there, external steps descend to the garden below. On a warm evening, that terrace becomes the centre of everything: the smell of something grilling, a glass of Normandy cider on the railing, the light going golden over the garden as ... click here to read more

Photo 2

Picture waking up on a Saturday morning to absolute quiet — no traffic, no sirens, just the soft chorus of birds drifting through the timber-framed terrace doors and the smell of coffee rising from a kitchen that somehow manages to feel both industrial and utterly at home. That's a regular weekend at this former dairy in Firbeix, a small, unhurried village in the northern Dordogne where the pace of life is set by the seasons, not the clock. This is not a typical holiday home in France. Not even close. Over 300 square metres of converted space — once used to house cattle and process milk — has been rethought entirely, from the concrete floors to the soaring ceilings, into one of the most genuinely distinctive live-work properties in Aquitaine. The transformation took patience and a clear creative vision, and the result is something between a Manhattan loft, a Provençal farmhouse, and an artist's compound. Except it's in the Dordogne. And it has a pond. Walk through the electric gates into the private courtyard and you immediately understand that something different is happening here. The building's exterior — honest, solid, with that particular kind of French agricultural permanence — hints at the scale inside without quite preparing you for it. The ground floor alone covers around 130 square metres of open workshop and studio space, flooded with natural light through large glazed openings. Right now it functions as an artist's workspace and gallery. But it could just as easily become a furniture-making atelier, a ceramics studio, an architect's office, a design showroom, or — for those who simply want space — a garage, games room, and workshop rolled into one. The ground floor also holds two double bedrooms, an office, ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Picture this: a Sunday morning in late September, the air still warm enough to sit outside, a coffee in hand, the vines on the terrace just beginning to turn amber. From here you can hear absolutely nothing except birdsong and the faint clanking of tractors on neighboring plots. That's Duras. And once you've had a taste of it, the idea of going home starts to feel like a very poor decision. This 190-square-metre farmhouse sits at the heart of a working agricultural landscape in Lot-et-Garonne — one of the least-discovered corners of southwest France, and quietly, one of the most rewarding. The house is solid, full of original character, and in good condition throughout. No gut renovation required, no guesswork. You arrive, you unpack, and life in rural Aquitaine begins. Walk through the front door and the terracotta-tiled entrance hall immediately sets the mood — unhurried, warm, rooted in something real. The farmhouse-style kitchen and dining room is the room the whole house revolves around. An Aga-style wood pellet range cooker anchors one wall. But the feature that stops every visitor in their tracks is the original prune drying oven, still intact, built directly into the fabric of the kitchen. This part of Lot-et-Garonne has been producing Agen prunes — the pruneau d'Agen, with its own protected designation of origin — for centuries. Finding a domestic drying oven in this condition is genuinely rare. It's not decorative. It's a working piece of regional history embedded in your kitchen wall. The living room opens off the kitchen and has a different energy — slower, quieter. A Dovre log-burning stove sits at its center, and on a January evening when the temperature outside drops and the fields are silver with frost ... click here to read more

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

Stand at the kitchen window on a Tuesday morning and watch the mist lift off 1.4 hectares of your own land while the smell of fresh coffee fills a room that's been warmed by thick Norman stone walls for decades. That's not a fantasy — that's a Tuesday here in Gouffern-en-Auge, a quiet commune in the Orne department of Lower Normandy where time moves at a pace most of us have completely forgotten. This five-bedroom stone country house sits on a generous 14,440 square metres of open land with views across the rolling Normandy countryside that shift dramatically with every season. At 258 square metres of living space spread across two floors and a basement, this is a property with real breathing room — the kind of home that absorbs a large extended family during August school holidays and still offers every adult a corner to call their own. The ground floor does something rare: it functions. A fitted and equipped kitchen anchors daily life without fuss. Two separate living rooms mean you're not forcing everyone into the same space every evening. The dining room is the size that makes Sunday lunches stretch well into the afternoon, which in Normandy, they absolutely should. There's also an office — genuinely useful if you're working remotely or managing a rental calendar — plus a ground-floor bedroom and a full bathroom, which makes the house accessible for guests or family members who prefer to avoid stairs. Upstairs, four more bedrooms fan out around a living room, a dressing room, and both a shower room and a bathroom. The basement delivers a proper cellar and an outbuilding, the kind of space that becomes a wine store, a workshop, or a mud room depending on what your life actually needs. Stone construction in this par ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Stand on the covered terrace on a July evening, a glass of Buzet red in hand, and watch the last light of the day settle over a medieval village rooftops and rolling Gascon hills. Church bells drift up from the valley. The smell of wild thyme rises from the stone walls. This is not a fantasy — this is Tuesday night at this three-bedroom stone house perched above one of Lot-et-Garonne's most quietly captivating corners, just minutes from the royal town of Nérac. The house itself is the kind of place that takes a moment to fully comprehend. Walking through the entrance hall and into the main living room, your eye goes straight up — a genuine cathedral ceiling, double-height, with exposed oak beams crossing overhead. The wood-burning stove sits at one end of the room like it has always been there, because it has. Original fireplaces anchor two separate reception rooms, and the stonework throughout speaks to construction that predates most countries on earth. At 175 square metres spread across three distinct levels, this is a home you can spread out in, not just visit. The layout rewards the way families and groups actually use a holiday home. Ground floor offers two bedrooms, each with its own private shower room and WC — so two couples can share without negotiating bathroom schedules at 8am. The mezzanine level, currently a sun-filled home office with beautiful beam detailing, leads to the third bedroom with its own en suite. Three bedrooms, four bathrooms total. Privacy is built into the architecture. Down on the garden level — and this is where the property genuinely surprises — you find a fully equipped kitchen, a dining room with real character, a second sitting room with fireplace, and a bright veranda that the cur ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a Sunday morning in late spring, you open the French doors off the ground-floor bedroom and the smell of cut grass and warm stone drifts in from the south-facing terrace. Somewhere down the lane, a rooster is doing his thing. The kitchen is already flooding with light—it faces south too—and you're standing there with a coffee, looking out at the enclosed garden, thinking this might be the most at ease you've felt in years. That's the rhythm this place puts you in. This authentic 19th-century Touraine farmhouse sits just outside the village of La Croix en Touraine in the commune of Bléré, right in the heart of the Indre-et-Loire department. It's the kind of address that means nothing until you visit and then means everything. The Loire Valley isn't a backdrop here—it's your actual life on weekends and summers. The house itself is honest and well-kept. Roughly 149 square metres spread across the main building, with a layout that's been thoughtfully configured for real living rather than a developer's floor-plan fantasy. Step through the entrance hall and you're immediately in the thick of it: a large fitted kitchen that flows straight out to the terrace, a cathedral-ceilinged living and dining room of around 40 square metres with original exposed beams, stone walls, parquet floors, and a wood-burning stove that pulls its weight every autumn weekend. The proportions feel generous without being cavernous. In winter, that stove throws enough heat to make the whole ground floor feel like you pulled the house around you like a blanket. The ground floor also includes a bedroom with its own French doors—convenient for guests or for those mornings when you want to slip outside before anyone else is awake—plus an office, a ba ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a quiet Sunday morning in La Roche-Guyon, you open the east-facing garden doors and the silhouette of the medieval keep fills the frame. Coffee in hand, the Seine winds silver in the middle distance, and the only sound is the crunch of gravel as a cyclist rolls past on the riverside path below. That view — that exact view — comes with this house. La Roche-Guyon is one of those places that Parisians whisper about and then keep to themselves. Classified among Les Plus Beaux Villages de France, this compact riverside village sits where the Seine makes a wide, dramatic loop through chalk cliffs at the northern edge of the Vexin Normand natural park. It's only 70 kilometres from central Paris — less than an hour on a clear drive up the A13 and D913 — yet it feels like a different century. The Tour de France has passed through its single main street. Monet came here to paint. The Rochefoucauld family built their cliff-face château directly into the limestone bluff above town, and on summer evenings the floodlit castle walls turn the colour of warm honey. This 135-square-metre house sits right in the village centre, on 457 square metres of land, and it comes with something you simply cannot manufacture: three genuine troglodyte caves carved into the chalk cliff at the rear of the property. One functions as a proper wine cellar, cool and naturally humidity-controlled year-round — the chalk walls maintain a near-constant temperature that any serious wine collector will appreciate immediately. A second has been set up as a private party space, large enough for a long table and a crowd of friends on a summer evening. The third doubles as a garage, big enough for a car and everything else a second home accumulates over the year ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Pull up on a Tuesday morning and the only sound is a wood pigeon somewhere in the old oak at the far end of the garden. The Charente valley rolls away below the infinity pool in shades of green and gold, and the stone walls of the house are still cool from the night. This is what you came for. Not the TGV timetable, not the Bordeaux wine list — just this specific silence, in this specific corner of southwest France, that you simply cannot manufacture anywhere else. Dignac sits in the gentle hills of the Charente, a département that most international buyers overlook on their way to the Dordogne or the Basque Coast. That's their loss and your opportunity. The village itself is small and unassuming — a boulangerie that opens at seven, a butcher who knows his suppliers by name, a bar-tabac where the dominoes come out after lunch. Real life, in other words. And yet Angoulême is barely twenty minutes down the road, with a TGV station that puts you on the platform at Paris Montparnasse in under two hours, or in Bordeaux Saint-Jean in forty minutes. The combination of deep rural quiet and genuine transport connectivity is rarer than it sounds. The house is a proper Charentais stone property — the kind built to last centuries, which it has. Thick limestone walls keep the interior cool in July without air conditioning. The renovation has been done with the sort of restraint that takes real confidence: natural stone floors left exactly as they are, oak beams cleaned up but not sandblasted into submission, original oak doors rehung on new hardware. The current owners didn't strip the soul out of it chasing a minimalist aesthetic. Instead, every room feels like it earned its character. The living room fireplace is the honest centr ... click here to read more

Picture 1

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

Picture 1

Sunday morning in Issigeac: the weekly market on Place du Château is already buzzing by nine, the smell of roasting chicken drifting from the rôtisserie stall, the sound of French chatter rising above the medieval ramparts. You're a ten-minute drive away, standing at your kitchen window with a coffee, looking out across a valley that hasn't changed much in three centuries. That's the kind of morning this property delivers, week after week, season after season. This is a barn conversion done right — and that distinction matters. Too many conversions in the Périgord sacrifice either the soul or the practicality, stripping out the stone to insert plasterboard, or preserving the beams while ignoring the cold. Here, the balance actually works. Exposed stone walls and heavy oak beams anchor every room in something authentic, while underfloor heating on the ground floor, solar panels for hot water, double glazing throughout, and a rare energy rating of B mean your running costs won't eat you alive. For a property of this age and character, that B rating is genuinely exceptional — most stone farmhouses in the Dordogne struggle to break a D. The layout is generous at 250 square metres, and it doesn't waste space on corridors or awkward half-rooms. The kitchen and dining room is the kind you actually want to cook in — properly fitted, with room for a long table and still space to move around it. A wood-burning stove anchors one end. The adjoining living room has its own stove too, and on a January evening when mist sits in the valley and the fire is going, this room becomes the whole reason you bought in France. Beyond that, a utility room with pantry storage and a guest cloakroom handle the unglamorous logistics cleanly. Upsta ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Properties nearby

Welcome to the captivating countryside of Lacaugne in southern France, where history whispers through the rustling leaves and tranquility overhears the bustling hum of nearby Toulouse. Picture a life embraced by charm and comfort—a place where your family can truly breathe. I understand the toils of busy schedules, and as a globe-trotting real estate agent, I've come across many finds, but this one stands out in its warmth and versatility. Situated in the heart of the quaint French countryside, yet conveniently close to vibrant city lights, this property could very well be your next adored home. Nestled in the picturesque landscape of Lacaugne, this house offers unparalleled access to both natural beauty and urban convenience. Just 40 minutes’ drive from the bustling city of Toulouse, you can easily commute for work or leisure, tapping into a rich tapestry of culture, dining, and shopping. Meanwhile, the peacefulness of the rural setting lets you escape the daily grind. So let’s dive into the details of this generous 5-bedroom home, covering an impressive 250 square meters of living space. It's more than just dimensions—it's about spreading out, having room to grow and to explore your own pursuits. The house stands on a vast plot of over 10,750 square meters, dotted with mature trees that sway elegantly through each season, adding a natural buffer to your personal haven. Living here, you'll wake to the sweet chorus of birdsong and drift off in the quiet embrace of a starlit sky. As you step through the front door, you're greeted by an inviting entrance room that currently doubles as an office—imagine working with views of the scenic landscape, a treat for anyone weary of the urban jungle. Adjacent, the living room off ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque French countryside, this charming 4-bedroom house in Montesquieu-Volvestre offers a unique opportunity for those seeking a tranquil second home or a lucrative investment property. With its expansive 15-hectare estate, this property promises a lifestyle steeped in nature, comfort, and accessibility. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the sweet melody of birdsong, with the sun casting a warm glow over the lush greenery that surrounds your home. This is the daily reality for residents of Montesquieu-Volvestre, a quaint village that perfectly encapsulates the serene beauty of southern France. A Home Designed for Comfort and Convenience The house itself is a testament to thoughtful design and quality craftsmanship. Spanning 142 square meters over two levels, it offers ample space for family gatherings, entertaining guests, or simply enjoying a quiet evening by the fire. - Ground Floor: - A spacious 50m² living room, bathed in natural light, perfect for relaxation or hosting. - A separate 15.6m² kitchen, ideal for culinary adventures. - Three well-appointed bedrooms, providing comfort and privacy. - A large 14m² bathroom, designed for luxury and convenience. - A separate WC for added practicality. - Upper Floor: - A versatile fourth bedroom, which can be transformed into a home office or guest room. A Natural Haven with Modern Amenities The property's vast 15 hectares of land offer endless possibilities, whether you're dreaming of a private garden, a small vineyard, or simply a space to roam and explore. The presence of a well ensures a sustainable water supply, while the wood-burning heating system and double-glazed windows guarantee year-round comfo ... click here to read more

Picture 1

A Tranquil Retreat in the Heart of Midi-Pyrénées Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the soft chirping of birds in the serene countryside of Lézat-sur-Lèze. This beautifully renovated farmhouse, nestled amidst lush greenery, offers a perfect blend of rustic charm and modern comforts, making it an ideal vacation home or second residence for those seeking a peaceful escape. A Home Steeped in History and Comfort As you step into this 202m² farmhouse, you're greeted by a spacious living room that exudes warmth and hospitality. The open fireplace crackles invitingly, promising cozy evenings with family and friends. The adjoining dining area, bathed in natural light, is perfect for hosting intimate dinners or lively gatherings. The ground floor also features a well-appointed kitchen, complete with a pantry, where you can whip up culinary delights using fresh, local produce. Two bedrooms, each with its own shower room, offer privacy and comfort, while two additional bedrooms upstairs provide ample space for guests or a home office. Outdoor Living at Its Finest Step outside onto the expansive terrace, where you can savor your morning coffee while soaking in the breathtaking views of the surrounding countryside. The sparkling swimming pool beckons on warm summer days, offering a refreshing respite from the sun. With over 6,000m² of wooded grounds, there's plenty of space for outdoor activities, whether it's a leisurely stroll, a game of pétanque, or a picnic under the shade of ancient trees. A Gateway to the Rich Culture of Ariège Lézat-sur-Lèze is a charming village that offers a glimpse into the rich cultural tapestry of the Midi-Pyrénées region. Explore local markets brimming with artisanal goods, indu ... click here to read more

Picture 1

A Tranquil Retreat in the Heart of Ariège 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. Nestled in the picturesque village of Saint-Ybars, this charming 3-bedroom house offers a unique blend of tranquility and convenience, making it the perfect vacation home or second residence for those seeking a peaceful escape in the heart of the Midi-Pyrénées. A Home That Embraces Nature As you step inside, you're greeted by a spacious 44m² living room, where a cozy fireplace invites you to unwind with a good book or enjoy intimate gatherings with family and friends. The room seamlessly extends to a sheltered terrace, offering breathtaking views of the nearby lake—a perfect spot for al fresco dining or simply soaking in the serene surroundings. The 13m² kitchen, with its potential to open up to the living area, becomes a hub of culinary creativity, where you can whip up local delicacies using fresh produce from nearby markets. Adjacent to the kitchen, a summer lounge opens onto the lush garden, providing a seamless indoor-outdoor living experience. A Haven of Comfort and Style The night side of the house features three well-appointed bedrooms, each offering a peaceful retreat after a day of exploration. A bathroom with a bathtub and a separate toilet ensure convenience and privacy for all occupants. Outside, the property extends over 4,000m² of beautifully maintained grounds, where mature trees and vibrant flowers create a peaceful and green setting. The highlight is undoubtedly the 14x7m chlorine swimming pool, complete with a pool house equipped with a shower and toilet. Whether you're taking a re ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Attention all international homebuyers and expats seeking a slice of tranquility in the picturesque French countryside! Hello, I'm your dedicated real estate agent juggling multiple listings all over the region, and let me introduce you to a truly fascinating opportunity nestled in the heart of Saint-Ybars, France. Imagine living in a villa in this idyllic setting – yes, I'm talking about a 3-bedroom villa that rests on a sprawling 4970m² plot, offering you a canvas of potential amidst breathtaking views of the majestic Pyrenees. This 120m² single-storey property, located in a serene village, gives you a unique chance to immerse yourself in the local French lifestyle. Now, let's take a stroll inside the villa. Upon entering, the 4m² entrance introduces you to a spacious 48.5m² living room, where natural light streams in from the large windows, offering you unobstructed views while you sip your morning coffee. The untapped potential of the adjoining 11.8m² kitchen beckons you to transform it into the culinary space of your dreams, which conveniently opens up to a delightful 12.5m² covered terrace. Imagine endless weekend breakfasts or late-night stargazing right from your terrace. The property features three comfortable bedrooms, sized at 13m² and 15m², each providing a restful retreat. The larger bedroom includes a practical 4m² dressing room, a welcome feature for anyone seeking extra storage. There is also an 8m² office, perfect for remote work or as a cozy reading nook, and a 9.8m² shower room with ample space to be remodeled into a spa-like oasis, making sure you have all the essentials. Now, it's worth pointing out that this villa marks the beginning of an exciting journey of transformation. An update here and t ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Welcome to this inviting villa located in the heart of Saint-Ybars, France, a picturesque commune nestled in the stunning landscapes of the southern region of the country. This piece of real estate offers not just a home, but a lifestyle choice that embraces the tranquil and culturally rich essence of the French countryside. Spread across an impressive 152 square meters, this villa welcomes you with a thoughtfully designed layout that categorically speaks to comfort and functionality. With an asking price of €279,500, the property presents itself as a rather solid investment opportunity for those overseas buyers or expats longing for a piece of French elegance without the constraints of city life. The property stands on a generous plot of 1,200 square meters, providing ample space for outdoor living, which is one of the pure joys of owning a villa in this part of France. As you enter the villa, you’re introduced to a hallway stretching 3.5 square meters, offering convenient storage in the built-in cupboard. Moving ahead, you are greeted by the living room spreading over 36.3 square meters, featuring a cozy pellet stove that eases those cooler evenings. The ground floor promises an easy flow from the living room to the well-equipped kitchen spanning 18 square meters. Adjoining is the dining room, stretching over 10 square meters, which offers direct access to a large covered terrace. This terrace, paired with the outdoor garden, creates an ideal setting for enjoying meals outside or just soaking in the serene views of the encompassing greenery. Speaking of greenery, outside, the verdant plot primarily positioned at the rear enlightens you with a calm and tranquil ambiance. With ample space available, there's potential ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque village of Daumazan-sur-Arize, this delightful villa offers a unique opportunity to experience the serene beauty of southern France. Located within the prestigious Chateau Cazalères holiday park, this property combines the tranquility of rural living with the vibrant community atmosphere of a well-maintained estate. With its proximity to the majestic Pyrenees, this villa is a haven for those seeking a blend of relaxation and adventure. Imagine waking up to the gentle sounds of nature, with the sun casting a warm glow over the lush landscape. The villa, built between 1991 and 2000, stands proudly on a 380 m² plot, offering ample outdoor space for leisure and entertainment. The newly landscaped garden, redesigned in 2024, provides a perfect balance of sunny and shaded areas, ideal for enjoying the mild climate of the region. As you step inside, you're greeted by a welcoming hallway that leads into a bright and airy living room. The open-plan design seamlessly connects the indoor and outdoor spaces, with a new sliding door opening onto a spacious terrace. Here, you can host gatherings with friends and family, or simply unwind with a good book in the hammock, surrounded by the beauty of your private garden. The villa's interior is thoughtfully designed to cater to modern living. The living area features comfortable seating, including a sofa that converts into a chaise lounge, perfect for cozy evenings. The dining area, with its large table, is ideal for family meals or entertaining guests. The fully equipped kitchen boasts modern appliances, ensuring you have everything you need to prepare delicious meals. Upstairs, you'll find three spacious bedrooms, each offering a peaceful retr ... click here to read more

Photo 1 of Residence Chateau Cazaleres 134

Nestled in the charming village of Daumazan-sur-Arize, a mere stone's throw from the stunning landscapes of the Pyrenees, you'll discover a delightful villa that's just waiting for its next chapter. Sitting amidst the serene beauty of the south of France, this villa offers a unique opportunity for overseas buyers searching for a tranquil yet vibrant place to call home. Living here provides the perfect balance of relaxation and adventure, with plenty of things to do and explore in the local area. But before we dive into the details of the villa itself, let's paint you a picture of the surroundings and lifestyle that come with it. Daumazan-sur-Arize is a picturesque village with a rich history and a vibrant community. As you meander through its streets, you'll experience the lively bustle of weekly markets, where local vendors sell a plethora of fresh produce, artisan cheeses, and delicious pastries—a true feast for your senses. With the Pyrenees nearby, outdoor enthusiasts can immerse themselves in nature, whether it's hiking, biking, or skiing during the winter season. And the proximity to cities like Toulouse and Carcassonne means you're never far from urban adventures. Moreover, the climate here is typically mild, with warm summers and cool, cozy winters. This makes it an ideal spot for those looking to escape the harsh colds or the sweltering heat of other locales. The region is also famed for its delectable French cuisine, vineyards, and culinary festivals that offer a taste of the authentic southern French lifestyle. Now, about the property itself—this villa is a delightful home offering both comfort and potential. It's located in the expansive Résidence Château Cazalères, a renowned holiday park that's been a ch ... click here to read more

View of Residence Chateau Cazaleres 51

Nestled within the serene embrace of Daumazan-sur-Arize, a quaint town perched at the foot of the majestic Pyrenees in southern France, Villa Campagne 66 offers a unique and welcoming experience. This charming villa is ideally positioned within the treasured Résidence Château Cazalères, a sprawling 13-hectare holiday park that stands on the historic grounds of a château from 1890. Though it has modest beginnings, this picturesque villa is now available for €124,500, presenting an enticing opportunity for those seeking a slice of the laid-back lifestyle and beauty that southern France has to offer. Upon stepping into the villa, one is immediately struck by the simplicity and comfort of the decor. The living space, designed for relaxation, features a generous lounge area that comfortably accommodates a seating arrangement, TV unit, and a dining table suited for six. It’s a quaint escape where expats can unwind after a day of exploring the lush greenery surrounding the park. The air conditioning inverter present ensures the atmosphere remains pleasant throughout the year, keeping the space warm during chilly winter evenings and cool on sun-drenched summer days. The adjacent kitchen unfolds into view, with its array of modern appliances. These conveniences—ranging from a gas stove and oven/microwave combo to a dishwasher—cater to both simple and elaborate meal preparations. There is something uniquely French about cooking with produce sourced from local markets, filling the air with delightful aromas that mingle with the village’s natural scents. Access to the bedrooms is seamless, with the master bedroom conveniently located on the ground floor. This cozy space is ideal for restful nights, providing ample room for a size ... click here to read more

View of Residence Chateau Cazaleres 66

If you’re dreaming of owning a piece of the picturesque south of France, nestled at the edge of the Pyrenees, allow me to introduce you to Villa 86. This inviting villa is located in Daumazan-sur-Arize, a charming village that offers an idyllic blend of natural beauty and quiet, rural life. Situated within the Château Cazalères, an expansive holiday park, this villa presents a unique opportunity for potential homeowners looking for a tranquil retreat or a seasonal getaway. Daumazan-sur-Arize is a friendly, small village that reflects the warmth and cultural richness of southwestern France. With its pleasant climate, characterized by warm summers and mild winters, it's a haven for anyone looking to escape the hustle and bustle of urban life. Living here, one can enjoy the oak and pine-filled countryside, perfect for those who enjoy outdoor activities such as hiking or cycling. The region is blessed with stunning landscapes, from the rolling hills to the majestic peaks of the Pyrenees, providing a dreamlike setting all year round. The Château Cazalères holiday park, home to Villa 86, is a primary destination choice, especially favored by individuals from the Netherlands. The park, originally the site of an 1890s estate, spans a generous 13-hectares and houses 138 detached homes that benefit from both privacy and a sense of community. The property sits on a 260 square meter plot that features well-maintained gardens and offers panoramic views of the Pyrenees’ foothills – a serene backdrop that beautifully adds to your living experience. A significant allure of Villa 86 lies in its comprehensive layout and ease of use. The accommodation offers three bedrooms, all thoughtfully arranged to maximize space and function. On t ... click here to read more

View of Residence Chateau Cazaleres 86

Nestled in the picturesque village of Daumazan-sur-Arize, at the gentle foothills of the Pyrenees, this delightful villa awaits its new owners. Tucked away in the south of France, this abode isn't just a house, it's a lifestyle opportunity that welcomes families and individuals alike to embrace a slower, more peaceful way of living. I must say, us real estate agents never really have enough time, but making sure this gem finds its way to the right hands is worth a brief pause in my bustling schedule! Firstly, let's delve into the charm of Daumazan-sur-Arize itself. This quaint village is located conveniently close to the vibrant cities of Toulouse and Carcassonne, while the grandeur of the Pyrenees ensures the scenery is nothing short of spectacular. This region is known for its mild climate—pleasantly warm summers that are not overwhelmingly hot and winters that bring a light dusting of snow, perfect for those crisp evening walks. The surrounding area is an invitation to explore, with stunning hiking trails, local markets that nod to centuries of tradition, and vineyards that stretch as far as the eye can see. This villa is settled within the Château Cazalères residence, a welcoming holiday park that originated from an estate dating back to 1890. The park spans 13 hectares and boasts 138 detached homes, offering a family-friendly environment rich with activities for relaxation and recreation. Amongst these residences sits our 3-bedroom property, ready for you to move in. Perhaps you might wish to spend a sunny afternoon in the extensive garden that wraps nearly 540 square meters around the villa—it's ideal for children to play or for hosting those leisurely barbecues. The multiple terraces and added veranda offer pri ... click here to read more

View photo 1 of Residence Chateau Cazaleres 120

Picture this: a Saturday morning in late June, the air already warm by nine o'clock, the Pyrenees doing that thing they do where the peaks turn pink before the valley below even wakes up. You're sitting on your own terrace with a coffee, somewhere between Toulouse and the mountains, and you genuinely don't have a plan for the day. That's Daumazan-sur-Arize. That's Villa 133. This fully renovated, detached three-bedroom villa sits inside the established Château Cazalères holiday park on the edge of this quietly compelling village in the Ariège — a département that most of France still hasn't fully discovered, which is precisely the point. At 100 square metres on a 400 m² private plot, the property was stripped back and rebuilt to a high spec, and it shows. This isn't a cosmetic refresh. The bathrooms have underfloor heating and walk-in showers, the kitchen is fitted with modern appliances and enough workspace that someone who actually cooks will be happy, and the whole downstairs flows out to the garden through wide glass doors. Two additional separate WCs mean six guests can share the space without the morning shuffle. The living room catches the southern light from mid-morning onwards. In winter — and the Ariège gets real winters, which is part of its character — that warmth through the glass is something you'll appreciate. In summer, the garden terrace takes over. It's south-facing, properly private, and sized for a long lunch that drifts into aperitifs. There's a dedicated barbecue space, and the surrounding park greenery keeps it sheltered without hemming it in. Château Cazalères has been running long enough to have ironed out the things that matter. The pool complex is large — multiple pools, including a dedicate ... click here to read more

Front view of Villa 133 at Chateau Cazalères

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque Ariège region, this delightful 3-bedroom house in Daumazan-sur-Arize offers a unique opportunity to own a slice of French countryside charm. With its lush, wooded plot and spacious interiors, this property is perfect for those seeking a tranquil second home or a lucrative holiday rental investment. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the sweet melody of birdsong, as the sun filters through the trees surrounding your new home. This 130 m² house, set on a generous 6580 m² plot, is a haven of peace and privacy, yet conveniently located just an hour from Toulouse Airport, making it easily accessible for weekend getaways or extended stays. Property Highlights: - Spacious Living: The ground floor welcomes you with a bright and airy 42 m² living room, seamlessly connected to an open-plan kitchen, perfect for entertaining family and friends. - Comfortable Bedrooms: With three well-sized bedrooms, including a 12.5 m² room on the ground floor, this home offers ample space for guests or family members. - Modern Amenities: Equipped with central heating, a recent wood-burning stove, and air conditioning, ensuring comfort throughout the seasons. - Outdoor Living: Enjoy the expansive 20 m² covered terrace, ideal for al fresco dining or simply soaking in the serene surroundings. - Additional Spaces: A 40 m² garage accommodates two vehicles, while a 21 m² wooden outbuilding serves as a workshop and gym area. - Eco-Friendly Features: Double-glazed windows and roller shutters enhance energy efficiency, while a wood shed provides sustainable heating options. Local Lifestyle and Attractions: Daumazan-sur-Arize is a charming village that embodies the quintessential French rural lifes ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the sun-kissed south of France, Villa 16 at Residence Chateau Cazaleres offers a unique opportunity to own a slice of paradise. Located in Daumazan-sur-Arize, this charming villa is more than just a property; it's a gateway to a lifestyle filled with relaxation, adventure, and unforgettable memories. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the distant chirping of birds, as the morning sun filters through the lush greenery surrounding your private garden. This is the daily reality at Villa 16, where the serene environment and breathtaking views of the Pyrenees create a perfect backdrop for your second home. A Home Designed for Comfort and Convenience Upon entering the villa, you're greeted by a welcoming hallway that leads to a bright and airy living room. Large windows and a sliding glass door invite natural light to flood the space, creating a warm and inviting atmosphere. The open-plan design seamlessly connects the living area to a modern, fully-equipped kitchen, making it ideal for entertaining family and friends. The villa boasts three spacious bedrooms, each designed with comfort in mind. The ground-floor bedroom is perfect for those who prefer single-level living, while the two upstairs bedrooms offer ample space for guests or family members. A well-appointed bathroom on the ground floor, complete with a bathtub and separate shower, ensures convenience for all. Outdoor Living at Its Finest Step outside onto the expansive terrace, where you can enjoy al fresco dining or simply relax with a good book. The private garden offers a mix of sun and shade, providing the perfect setting for any time of day. Whether you're sipping your morning coffee or hosting an evening barbecue, ... click here to read more

Photo 1 of Residence Chateau Cazaleres Villa 16

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque south of France, Villa 76 at Residence Château Cazalères offers a unique opportunity to own a slice of paradise. This charming villa, located in Daumazan-sur-Arize, is the epitome of a perfect holiday home, combining tranquility, comfort, and accessibility. Whether you're seeking a serene retreat or a vibrant vacation hub, this property caters to all your desires. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the sweet melody of birdsong, as the sun peeks through the lush canopy surrounding your private garden. This villa, set against the tranquil backdrop of the park's forest edge, offers a serene outdoor living experience that is both relaxing and invigorating. The expansive garden, larger than the original plot size, is perfect for leisurely afternoons spent basking in the sun or hosting intimate gatherings with family and friends. The villa's location in the quieter, elevated section of the park ensures peace and seclusion, while still providing easy access to the extensive amenities of Château Cazalères. Properties on the park's edge are highly sought after due to their privacy and direct access to nature, making this villa a rare find. Step inside, and you'll be greeted by a warm and inviting atmosphere. The entrance leads into a hallway that provides access to a modern bathroom, featuring a walk-in rain shower and space for a washing machine. A separate, modern toilet is conveniently located adjacent to the bathroom. The master bedroom, located on the ground floor, is equipped with a large, gas-spring adjustable Auping bed, ensuring comfort and restful sleep. The second bedroom, also on the ground floor, contains a double bed, making it ideal for guests or family ... click here to read more

Photo 1 of Residence Chateau Cazaleres Villa 76

Picture this: a Saturday morning in late June, the Ariège valley still cool from the night before, swallows cutting low over the garden as you carry your first coffee out to the rear terrace. The Pyrenees are right there — not as a distant postcard, but close enough that you can read the ridgelines. That's morning life at this detached three-bedroom villa inside the gated Château Cazalères park, and it takes about forty-eight hours before the pace of Daumazan-sur-Arize starts to feel like the only reasonable way to live. This part of the Ariège department sits in one of France's most quietly compelling corners. Not the overtouristed lavender-and-rosé Provence of Instagram, and not the ski-resort bustle of the higher Alps. This is the authentic south — working villages, medieval bastides, rivers cold enough to make you gasp in August, and a cultural calendar that rewards those who show up curious. Foix, just 25 kilometres east along the N20, has a proper three-towered château rising straight from a rocky outcrop above the town centre — the kind of thing that makes you do a double take the first time you round the bend and see it. The Saturday market under those towers sells everything from raw-milk Tomme de Brebis to Ariège honey and fat garlic braids. Toulouse is about an hour by car, which means Michelin-starred restaurants, the Capitole opera house, and flights back to Amsterdam, London, or Brussels are all genuinely convenient rather than merely technically possible. The village of Daumazan-sur-Arize itself is small, honest, and friendly to outsiders in the unsentimental way that rural French villages tend to be. Boulangerie in the morning, a bar-tabac for a pastis in the evening, a cycle route that follows the Ariz ... click here to read more

Front view of Residence Chateau Cazaleres 109

On a clear morning in September, you slide open the terrace doors and the air hits you — cool from the Pyrenees, carrying the faint resin of pine and something faintly herby from the meadows beyond the hedge. The mountains are right there, enormous and unhurried, framing the garden like they've always been waiting to be noticed. This is Daumazan-sur-Arize, and once you've had a week here, the idea of not owning a piece of it starts to feel genuinely unreasonable. Situated within the well-established Château Cazalères holiday park in the Ariège département of southern France, this three-bedroom villa sits on its own 460 m² plot and offers a genuinely comfortable base for exploring one of the most underrated corners of the French countryside. Not a renovation project. Not a weekend fixer-upper. A fully furnished, move-in ready property at a price — €179,500 — that would barely buy you a studio in Toulouse, just 70 kilometres north up the A66. The villa runs to 100 m² across two floors and has been furnished with the kind of practical thought that actually serves a holiday home well. Ground floor living centres on a bright sitting room with a proper sofa, a pair of armchairs, and large sliding doors that dissolve the boundary between inside and garden. The dining table seats six comfortably — important when the extended family descends in August. The kitchen is fully equipped with a four-burner gas hob, electric oven, dishwasher, and a tall fridge-freezer. No hunting around for a corkscrew on arrival. Everything is here. The master bedroom sits on the ground floor, which matters more than people think — no stairs to navigate after a long day's hiking. Upstairs, two more double bedrooms each have their own storage, and on ... click here to read more

Photo 1 of Residence Chateau Cazaleres 121

Saturday morning in Daumazan-sur-Arize. The Pyrenees are right there on the horizon, close enough that you can pick out the snowline on the highest peaks, and the air coming through the tilt-and-turn kitchen window smells of cut grass and something faintly pine-scented drifting down from the hills. Coffee on the terrace, sunshade already tilted against the early light, and absolutely nowhere you need to be. That's the rhythm this place sets. And once you've felt it, it's hard to shake. Château Cazalères is a well-run holiday park set in the green folds of the Ariège valley, about 50 kilometres south of Toulouse. The Ariège is the kind of French department that doesn't feature on many postcard racks, which is precisely what makes it worth paying attention to. It's genuine, unspoiled, and quietly extraordinary. The village of Daumazan-sur-Arize sits along the Arize river, a slow-moving, trout-filled river that feeds into the wider landscape of the Plantaurel hills. On weekday mornings, you'll hear more birdsong than traffic. Villa 12 is a fully detached three-bedroom property on its own flat plot of 400 square metres. It's compact but intelligently laid out — 75 square metres of interior space that doesn't feel squeezed, thanks to a bright living room, a proper dining area big enough for six, and a kitchen that was fitted new in 2021 with a four-burner gas hob, dishwasher, refrigerator, and microwave. The previous owners didn't cut corners when they renovated. The bathroom is fully modernised with a walk-in shower and a towel radiator. The drainage system was replaced. New blackout curtains hang in both ground-floor bedrooms. Underfloor heating covers the ground floor, a radiator handles the upper level, and the central ... click here to read more

Front view of Residence Chateau Cazaleres 12