Spacious Neo-Bearnaise Home in Scenic Sauveterre-de-Béarn with Pyrenean Views, Wine Cave, and Expansive Garden

Listed on
https://storage.googleapis.com/homestra-images/property-image-b80834ae-bb58-4c79-9fa5-4d963a1605ce-1738266458.jpg

Aquitaine, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, Sauveterre-de-Béarn, France, Sauveterre-de-Béarn (France)

4 Bedrooms · 2 Bathrooms · 107Floor area

€349,000

House

No parking

4 Bedrooms

2 Bathrooms

107m²

Garden

Pool

Not furnished

Description

Nestled in the heart of Aquitaine, in the picturesque town of Sauveterre-de-Béarn, is a property that promises the ideal retreat for those seeking a serene slice of French countryside. This Neo-Bearnaise style house sits comfortably within half an acre of a beautiful mature garden, offering breathtaking views of the legendary Pyrenean mountains. As you drive through the scenic routes of Pyrénées-Atlantiques, the tranquility of the area gently embraces you, promising a lifestyle both peaceful and invigorating.

Let's embark on a journey through this home that spans two floors, with a generous total area of 107 square meters. As you step through the entrance hall, you’re welcomed into a spacious living and dining area, perfect for hosting gatherings or simply enjoying a quiet evening. The warmth of a wood-burning stove beckons you on cooler days, while the reversible air-conditioning provides comfort year-round. Moreover, the kitchen, thoughtfully integrated into this space, becomes a family hub, where culinary dreams can be realized.

Downstairs, the accommodation is rounded off by a conveniently placed bedroom and a bathroom with WC, lending a touch of practicality for guests or as a comfortable spot for those who prefer to avoid stairs. On the upper floor, you'll find three additional bedrooms, each a haven of rest and relaxation. Accompanied by a bathroom and a separate WC, these spaces are poised for customization—whether creating a cozy bedroom or a creative workspace.

The home’s south-facing terrace is an absolute treat, connecting both the kitchen and living room to the expansive outdoor space. Here you can savor your morning coffee or unwind with a glass of wine, savoring the endless views and ensuring no sunset goes unappreciated.

But that’s not all. Underneath the living quarters, a substantial basement expands the property’s utility, featuring a large garage and a unique wine cave. This additional space is a treasure trove for anyone who values storage or seeks a private retreat to curate and cherish a wine collection.

For the busy global life-seeker, the location couldn’t be more practical. The quaint town of Sauveterre, bursting with local culture and history, is a mere five minutes away by car. For more adventurous escapades, both the coast and the mountainous regions are accessible within an hour, offering options for day trips and exploration.

Let me guide you through some of the appealing amenities that this property includes:

- 4 Bedrooms, ideal for family or guest accommodation
- 2 Bathrooms plus an additional WC
- Spacious living/dining room
- Fully-equipped kitchen with modern appliances
- Wood-burning stove and reversible air-conditioning for year-round comfort
- Expansive basement with garage and wine cave
- South-facing terrace and large garden
- Optical Fibre Internet for modern connectivity
- Panoramic mountain views
- Garage providing ample parking space
- Prime location with easy access to local attractions

Sauveterre-de-Béarn itself is a gem in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques region. Living here offers a balanced blend of rural charm and accessibility to urban amenities. The town is rich with medieval architecture, standing proudly near the Gave d'Oloron river. Local markets brim with fresh produce, while cozy cafes offer delightful spots to meet with neighbors or watch the world go by.

For the active lifestyle, the surroundings offer various outdoor activities. Hiking and cycling are favorite pastimes among locals, as are fishing and kayaking, courtesy of the nearby river. The climate here is temperate, characterized by warm summers and mild winters, making it comfortable year-round. This balance of natural beauty and leisure ensures there’s always something new to discover.

While the property stands in good condition, the real potential lies in personalizing each space to echo your own style. For those inclined towards renovation, possibilities loom large, embodying the chance to create not just a house, but a home.

In Sauveterre-de-Béarn, life moves at a different pace—one that promises calmness yet never shies away from the vibrancy of a closely-knit community. Here, the whispers of history and nature blend into everyday life, casting the perfect backdrop for your next adventure or your lifelong retreat. Whether you're seeking a quiet refuge or a strategic base to explore the marvels of southwestern France, this property presents a compelling opportunity.

Details

Amount of bedrooms
4
Size
107
Price per m²
€3,262
Garden size
1930
Has Garden
Yes
Has Parking
No
Has Basement
Yes
Condition
good
Amount of Bathrooms
2
Has swimming pool
Yes
Property type
House
Energy label

Unknown

Sign up to access location details

Similar properties

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

Picture 1
New

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
New

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
New

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

Stand at the back of this house on a quiet Tuesday morning in October and watch the Orne River catch the light through the tree line. The mist lifts slowly off the water. A heron lands on the far bank without a sound. That's the pace of life here, and once you've felt it, a weekend in the city starts to feel like a poor trade. Noron-l'Abbaye sits within the Suisse Normande — a stretch of Normandy that surprises people. They come expecting flat wheat fields and leave talking about the gorges, the river bends, and the ridgeline walks above Clécy. The nickname "Swiss Normande" wasn't given ironically. The Orne carves through ancient rock here, creating cliffs and forests that feel genuinely wild, just a couple of hours from Paris on the A13. This four-bedroom character house occupies a 2,425 square metre plot directly on the banks of the Orne. The setting alone would justify a detour. But what you're actually getting is a property with serious bones — a living room anchored by an original stone fireplace, a fully fitted and equipped kitchen, a dedicated office space, two bathrooms, and a 105-square-metre attic that's ready for conversion. That attic is worth thinking about carefully. Opened up properly, it could become the kind of master suite or open studio that you'd never find in a new-build, all with exposed timber and river views. The plot comes with a secondary house in need of renovation, plus a collection of outbuildings: cellar, garage, workshop, and carport. For buyers who've been burned by properties with no storage or no room to grow, this is the kind of compound that rewards forward planning. Convert the secondary house as a rental unit or a guest cottage for family visits, and suddenly you've got a self-sup ... click here to read more

Picture 1

On a still Tuesday morning in the commune of Pers, just outside Sauzé-Vaussais, the air smells of cut grass and warm stone. A rooster somewhere across the fields. The kitchen window frames a stretch of open Deux-Sèvres countryside that hasn't changed much in a century. This is what 288 square metres of authentic French rural life feels like — and it's waiting for someone with vision. This is a serious property. Not a weekend renovation fantasy, but a genuine multi-building complex in good condition, sitting on approximately 6,763 m² of garden and land, with 13 rooms across three separate structures. Two independent houses and a studio. Seven bedrooms total. A family could move in tomorrow, or an investor could start generating gîte income within a season. Few properties in this price range in Poitou-Charentes offer this kind of immediate flexibility. The main house grounds you from the moment you step inside. The living room has the kind of proportions that make you want to leave the furniture where it is and just sit for a while. The eat-in kitchen is genuinely spacious — not the architectural lie of most listings — with room enough for a long Sunday lunch with extended family. Three bedrooms on this side of the property, two bathrooms, a separate WC, and a utility room that takes the practicality of country living seriously. Cross the garden and you're in a fully independent second house. Four more bedrooms, its own living room, kitchen, dining room, and two bathrooms with WC. The layout is exactly what you'd want if you're running a gîte operation, hosting friends from London or Amsterdam who want their own front door, or eventually housing adult children who need space but want to stay close. The separation is rea ... 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

You set your glass of Pineau des Charentes on the stone ledge, look out past the mulberry tree toward fields turning amber in the late afternoon, and feel your shoulders drop about three inches. That's the moment this house gets you. It happened to everyone who walked through before you, and it'll happen to you too. This maison de maître sits in a quiet hamlet in north Charente, the kind of village where the Sunday morning air smells of woodsmoke and someone's always got a baguette tucked under their arm heading home from Ruffec. It's not the France of Instagram postcards — it's the real thing. Slow roads, big skies, neighbours who actually wave. The house itself has generous bones. At 189 square metres, it breathes. Previous owners renovated it with obvious affection rather than a quick cosmetic flip — you can feel the difference the moment you step onto the travertine floors and look up at the exposed beams. Light tracks through the rooms from east to west across the day, and the house seems to understand this, with windows positioned so you're always chasing a patch of warmth or shade depending on the season. The open-plan kitchen anchors daily life here. It opens directly onto a courtyard — flagged, sheltered, sized for a table that seats ten without anyone knocking elbows. This is where the long lunches happen. The ones that start at one and end somewhere around six when someone finally puts a lid on the rosé. From the kitchen you move into a very large reception room dominated by a fireplace, the kind of proportions that handle both a family Christmas and a quiet Tuesday evening with equal ease. A sage-panelled study sits off the ground floor, calm and book-lined in your mind already, and there's a near self-con ... 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

The kitchen window faces east, and on a clear morning in Civray, the light comes in low and golden across terracotta floors that have been worn smooth over generations. There's a particular stillness to this corner of the Vienne — not emptiness, but the kind of quiet you have to actively seek out and rarely find. This is that place. The house is a stone longère, which is the long, low farmhouse form that defines rural Poitou-Charentes. These buildings were built to last, and this one has. Thick limestone walls keep the interior cool in July when the sunflower fields along the D1 are baking in 30-degree heat, and warm in February when morning frost whitens the lawn. At 243 square metres, the proportions are genuinely generous — you feel it the moment you step through the entrance hall and realize this isn't a weekend cottage stretched thin across too many rooms, but a proper family house with room to breathe. The heart of everything is the dining room. Cathedral ceilings, exposed oak beams, a fireplace wide enough to stand in, and a mezzanine gallery above that catches afternoon light beautifully. This is the room that will make your guests go quiet for a moment when they first see it. It's the room where Christmas happens, where Sunday lunches run until four in the afternoon, where the kids eventually claim the mezzanine as their own private territory. The country kitchen sits adjacent — practical, substantial, with a dining area and a large utility room behind it that serious cooks and rural living both demand. There's also a sitting room with a wood-burning stove and a quieter room that works perfectly as a study or reading space, the kind you actually use rather than just photograph. A ground-floor bedroom with its ... 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

Step outside on a clear October morning and the entire Pyrenees range is just sitting there, spread across the horizon like a wall of silver and slate. Not glimpsed between rooftops. Not partially obscured by trees. The full panorama, uninterrupted, from the flat land that wraps around this single-story farmhouse in Marignac-Lasclares, a small village tucked into the rolling countryside of Haute-Garonne. It stops you mid-coffee, every time. This is the kind of property that doesn't announce itself loudly. No grand gates, no ostentatious facade. What you get instead is a completely renovated, 133 square meter stone farmhouse that works — genuinely works — as a home. Solid. Functional. Lived-in in the best possible sense. The renovation has been done with care, preserving the honest character of the original structure while making everything inside comfortable and ready to use from day one. No peeling plaster to address, no outdated wiring to budget for. You arrive, you unpack, and you're home. The property sits on flat, fully fenced land. For families with young children or anyone who's ever tried to garden on a slope, that matters more than it sounds. There's real usable outdoor space here — room for a terrace table long enough to seat everyone, a kitchen garden if you want one, or simply a stretch of lawn where nothing in particular happens except relaxation. Three bedrooms give the layout genuine flexibility. A couple using this as a second home in the French southwest will find the extra rooms genuinely useful — one for guests, one as a workspace or reading room for those weeks when you're not quite on holiday but not quite at the office either. Families will appreciate the spread. The single bathroom is well-appoi ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Properties nearby

Nestled in the picturesque town of Sauveterre-de-Béarn, this exquisite villa offers a unique blend of tranquility and accessibility, making it an ideal choice for those seeking a serene lifestyle without sacrificing modern conveniences. With its breathtaking views of the Pyrenean mountain range, this property is a true gem in the heart of Aquitaine. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the distant chirping of birds, as the sun casts a warm glow over the lush 1930m² garden. This villa, designed in the charming Neo-Bearnaise style, is more than just a home; it's a gateway to a lifestyle steeped in natural beauty and cultural richness. A Day in the Life Start your day with a leisurely breakfast on the south-facing terrace, where the panoramic views of the Pyrenees serve as a stunning backdrop. The villa's open-plan living and dining area, complete with a cozy wood-burning stove and reversible air-conditioning, provides a comfortable space for both relaxation and entertainment. The ground floor also features a well-appointed kitchen that opens directly onto the terrace, making al fresco dining a delightful option. A spacious bedroom and a modern bathroom with a WC complete this level, offering convenience and privacy. As you ascend to the first floor, you'll find three additional bedrooms, each thoughtfully designed to maximize comfort and style. A second bathroom and a separate WC ensure that the needs of a busy household are met with ease. Local Lifestyle and Amenities Living in Sauveterre-de-Béarn means embracing a lifestyle that balances the charm of rural France with the vibrancy of nearby urban centers. The town itself is just a five-minute drive away, offering a range of amenities including shop ... click here to read more

Picture 1

A Tranquil Retreat in the Heart of Aquitaine Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the distant melody of birdsong, as the first rays of sunlight filter through the expansive windows of your villa, casting a warm glow over the rustic wooden floors. Nestled in the picturesque village of Sauveterre-de-Béarn, this contemporary villa offers a serene escape from the hustle and bustle of city life, inviting you to embrace the tranquil rhythms of the French countryside. A Home Designed for Comfort and Connection Built in 2015, this 124m² villa seamlessly blends modern design with traditional charm. The open-plan living and dining area, complete with a cozy wood burner, serves as the heart of the home—a perfect space for gathering with family and friends. The fully equipped kitchen, with its sleek countertops and state-of-the-art appliances, inspires culinary creativity, whether you're preparing a simple breakfast or a gourmet feast. Upstairs, the master bedroom offers a private sanctuary, featuring a luxurious en-suite bathroom and breathtaking views of the Pyrenees. Two additional bedrooms provide ample space for guests or family, each thoughtfully designed to maximize comfort and privacy. Embrace the Outdoors Step outside onto the sun-drenched terrace, where you can savor your morning coffee while soaking in the panoramic views of the surrounding landscape. The 2800m² garden offers endless possibilities for outdoor activities, from leisurely strolls to alfresco dining under the stars. A spacious double garage and additional storage spaces ensure that all your practical needs are met. Discover the Allure of Sauveterre-de-Béarn Located just 10 minutes from the charming town of Sauveterre-de-Béarn, this vil ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Sunday morning in Espiute. The church bell in the village square chimes eight, carrying clean across the valley. You're standing on the terrace with a coffee, watching mist lift off the Pyrenees in slow rolls, the light turning the foothills amber and gold. The gîte behind you is empty until Thursday, when your next guests arrive — another booking, another week of income. Life here has a rhythm you won't find anywhere else in France. Espiute sits in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques, a département that most international buyers haven't discovered yet, which is precisely the point. This is Basque Country and Béarn country simultaneously — two of the most quietly compelling cultural identities in all of France, packed into one corner of Aquitaine. The village itself is small and unfussy. What surrounds it is the draw: proper mountain terrain to the south, the Atlantic coast to the west, and the kind of French market town culture — Oloron-Sainte-Marie, Pau, Navarrenx — that hasn't been packaged for tourists yet. The property is a two-dwelling estate on 6,500 square metres of land. Total habitable space runs to 218m², split between the main house at around 147m² and a fully independent gîte at 71m². That separation matters. It means you can have family or friends in the gîte without anyone living in each other's pockets. It also means you have a ready-made income stream from day one. Walk into the main house and the living room hits you first — 30m², anchored by a wood-burning stove that earns its place every winter from November through March. The dining room has its own open fireplace, which transforms evening meals in the cold months into something genuinely atmospheric. Pyrénées winters aren't brutal, but they're real, and the ... click here to read more

Picture 1
New

On a clear morning in Laàs, you can stand at the edge of the garden with a coffee and watch the snow-capped peaks of the Pyrenees catch the first light — no crowds, no noise, just the faint sound of a church bell drifting over the rooftops from the village center five minutes down the lane. That view alone stops people in their tracks. The fact that it comes with a four-bedroom village villa, a large barn, a swimming pool, and nearly a hectare of parkland makes it genuinely hard to walk away from. Laàs sits in the heart of Béarn, one of those corners of southwest France that visitors stumble into by accident and then spend years trying to get back to. It's not Dordogne-famous. It hasn't been overrun. The village has kept its soul — a proper weekly market culture in the wider area, real neighbors who've lived here for generations, and a restaurant that people drive twenty minutes to eat at. The Château de Laàs, with its formal French gardens and museum-quality decorative arts collection, is literally within walking distance. Not many village properties can say their local landmark is a 17th-century château. The villa itself sits in what can only be described as a genuinely peaceful setting. Not "quiet because there's nothing going on" quiet — more like the deep, settled calm of a place that knows what it is. The grounds run to around 10,000 square meters, giving you real space: room to let children disappear into the garden for hours, space to plant a kitchen garden, or simply to keep the world at a comfortable distance. The swimming pool looks out toward the mountains. On summer evenings, when the light goes amber and the Pyrenees turn pink, that pool terrace becomes the only place you want to be. Inside, the ground f ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Located in the picturesque village of Orion in the heart of the Pyrénées-Atlantiques region, this seven-bedroom farmhouse provides a serene getaway in the bucolic Aquitaine countryside. Built in 1829, the house has undergone a thoughtful restoration, maintaining much of its original charm while incorporating modern facilities essential for today's living. Spanning roughly 300 square meters of living space, this charming farmhouse stands on a generous 5,000-square-meter plot, providing abundant space for both indoor and outdoor enjoyment. It features original stonework that captures the historic essence of the property, creating a warm and inviting ambiance. However, it’s important to note, while considerable work has been accomplished, there's still potential for the new owners to add their own personal touches and finish the partial renovations. The property includes a swimming pool, providing a delightful retreat during the warm summer months. Additional outdoor space offers myriad possibilities for landscaping, making it a gardener’s dream. Imagine crafting a lush garden or perhaps starting a small organic farm. For those contemplating a lifestyle switch to the tranquil French countryside, Orion is an idyllic setting. Surrounded by rolling hills and scenic views, it epitomizes peaceful rural living while remaining conveniently close to basic services. Local markets, artisan bakeriess, and quaint restaurants pepper the landscape, offering tastes and traditions of the region. Property Features: - Seven bedrooms, providing ample living space for a large family or guests - Four well-appointed bathrooms - Large plot of 5,000 square meters - Approximately 300 square meters of living space - Partially completed restor ... click here to read more

Front house & pool

Nestled in the picturesque town of Salies-de-Béarn, this charming bungalow offers a unique opportunity to own a slice of French paradise. Perfectly positioned between the vibrant coastal city of Biarritz and the majestic Pyrenees mountains, this property is an ideal second home for those seeking tranquility, adventure, and a taste of authentic French living. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the distant melody of birdsong, as the sun casts a warm glow over the lush 2000m² garden. This is not just a home; it's a retreat from the hustle and bustle of everyday life, a place where you can unwind and recharge. A Home Designed for Comfort and Convenience Built in 2008, this single-story bungalow boasts a modern design with a focus on open-plan living. The spacious kitchen-diner-sitting room is the heart of the home, where family and friends can gather for meals, laughter, and shared stories. With three well-sized bedrooms, a contemporary bathroom, and a utility room, this property is ready to welcome you. Key Features: - Open-Plan Living: 53m² kitchen-diner-sitting room, perfect for entertaining. - Three Bedrooms: Sizes ranging from 11m² to 13m², offering ample space for guests. - Modern Amenities: Double glazing and electric shutters for comfort and security. - Expansive Terrace: 74m² outdoor space for al fresco dining and relaxation. - Garage: 21m², providing secure parking and storage. - Generous Garden: 2000m² with stunning mountain views. A Gateway to Adventure and Relaxation Salies-de-Béarn is renowned for its therapeutic salt baths, offering a unique wellness experience right on your doorstep. The town itself is a charming blend of history and culture, with its cobbled streets, quaint shops, and ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the picturesque countryside of Salies-De-Béarn, this inviting farmhouse offers an opportunity to immerse yourself in the uniquely charming region of Aquitaine, France. With a tranquil rural setting and stunning views of the Pyrenees, this farmhouse combines the allure of country living with the convenience of nearby amenities, making it a great place for those considering a life amidst nature yet close to all modern facilities. Let's take a dive into the property — a spacious, 210 square meter farmhouse that's been cared for with thoughtful renovation efforts already underway. The renovation process is almost finished, so it’s a great chance for you to put your personal touch on the finishing details and make it truly your own. The living spaces are ample and full of light, thanks to the installation of double glazing and proper roof insulation. Yet, despite its proximity to the vibrant thermal spa town of Salies-de-Béarn, when you’re on the property, peace and quiet embrace you, offering a genuine escape from the hustle and bustle of everyday life. Stepping through the entrance, which is impressively sized at 35 square meters, makes you instantly feel at home. The main floor comprises a large open-plan space that includes the living and dining room, which spans an expansive 55 square meters; perfect for entertaining guests or enjoying family time. The kitchen, with its 28 square meters, allows plenty of room for one or multiple chefs to craft delicious meals, perhaps using fresh, local ingredients from the nearby markets. Upstairs, you will find four comfortable bedrooms and a shower room with WC, catering effortlessly to family needs or accommodating guests. Each room is generously proportioned, providing ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Discover the charms of living in Salies-de-Béarn, a delightful spa town nestled in the Aquitaine region of France, with this inviting townhouse that boasts a fusion of historical allure and contemporary comforts. Set in the scenic 64270 postcode, this property offers a rich blend of cultural heritage, modern amenities, and natural beauty, providing an idyllic setting for both expatriates and overseas buyers. This exquisite 4-bedroom house, with origins tracing back to the 17th century and embellishments from the early 1930s, spans an inviting 190 square meters of living space. The home is designed thoughtfully with family living in mind, featuring a spacious kitchen-diner, perfect for family meals and entertaining guests, and a cozy living room equipped with an open fireplace that leads out onto a pleasant terrace. The interiors are adorned with charming period features including the original flagstone flooring in the living room, enhancing the historical character of the home. The residence's practical layout across two floors comprises a quartet of well-proportioned bedrooms, one of which enjoys the luxury of a private shower room. Additionally, the house is fitted with modern necessities such as double glazing and mains gas central heating, ensuring comfort throughout the seasons. The outdoor space includes a generous 343 square meter garden, a rarity for a townhouse location, offering a private oasis for relaxation or a safe playground for children. Amenities: - Large kitchen-diner - Living room with open fireplace - Terrace access from the living room - Period features like original flagstone flooring - Four bedrooms (one with a private shower room) - One communal bathroom - One separate WC - Double glazing - Ma ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Welcome to this inviting townhouse nestled in the picturesque spa town of Salies-de-Béarn. This charming abode is situated in the Aquitaine region of France, offering a wonderful blend of tranquility, history, and convenience. As an agent working with clients globally, I have the pleasure of introducing you to a property that seamlessly combines the joys of living in a quaint town with easy accessibility to some of France's most coveted locations. Salies-de-Béarn is renowned for its saltwater spas, making it a unique destination for relaxation and wellness. The town itself has a friendly, welcoming atmosphere—a place where the sense of community thrives, yet privacy is respected. For those considering relocating or investing in France, this home offers a substantial amount of value and an opportunity to embrace a truly serene lifestyle. This 148 square meter townhouse has been thoughtfully designed to cater to various lifestyle needs. It's set in a serene setting, perfect for families or individuals seeking a peaceful retreat yet wishing to remain close to urban conveniences. The house boasts four spacious bedrooms, making it ideal for a growing family or those who frequently have guests over. One bathroom serves the home, alongside a separate WC, ensuring everything runs smoothly during mornings when everyone is rushing to start their day. It's not just a home; it's a space where memories are waiting to be made. Upon entering, you'll find yourself in a generous hallway, leading you to the main living area. The living room, with its light-filled ambiance, offers a perfect spot for family gatherings or quiet moments alone. It's a space that radiates warmth and comfort—a place you'll look forward to returning to after a ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque Salies-de-Béarn, this inviting 3-bedroom villa offers a serene escape into the French countryside. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the soft chirping of birds, as the morning sun filters through the lush greenery surrounding your home. This is not just a property; it's a gateway to a lifestyle steeped in tranquility and cultural richness. ### A Day in Your New Home As you step into the villa, you're greeted by a spacious entrance hall that leads into a bright living room. Here, a wood-burning stove crackles warmly, creating a cozy atmosphere perfect for family gatherings or quiet evenings with a book. The semi-open kitchen, with its modern amenities, invites you to explore the culinary delights of the region, perhaps starting with a traditional Béarnaise sauce or a hearty cassoulet. The villa's layout is thoughtfully designed to offer both privacy and communal spaces. Two bedrooms on the first floor provide restful retreats, while a third bedroom on the ground floor offers flexibility for guests or a home office. Each room is tastefully decorated, reflecting the charm and elegance of French country living. ### Embrace the Outdoors Step outside, and you're enveloped by a sprawling 3,000m² garden, a personal oasis where you can unwind, entertain, or simply enjoy the beauty of nature. Whether you're hosting a summer barbecue or planting a vegetable garden, this outdoor space is a canvas for your imagination. ### Discover Salies-de-Béarn Living in Salies-de-Béarn means immersing yourself in a community rich with history and culture. Known as the "Cité du Sel," this town is famous for its saltwater spa, offering rejuvenating treatments just a short drive from you ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Introducing a beautiful villa that stands nestled in the charming town of Salies-de-Béarn, within the picturesque Aquitaine region of France. This is a prime opportunity for overseas buyers looking for a serene and inviting locale, with a property that offers both comfort and potential. With its great condition, this villa offers you the essence of French countryside living combined with the allure of a well-equipped home, at a price of €267,750. The villa sits graciously close to the centre of Salies-de-Béarn, conveniently placing you within a stone's throw of everything this delightful town has to offer. Picture yourself enjoying your morning coffee in the courtyard, a spacious 1678 m2 expanse that feels like your private piece of paradise. The well-appointed garden adds a splash of greenery where you can unwind and take in the relaxing atmosphere. Built in a traditional French style, this home welcomes you with a spacious entrance hall that sets the stage for the warmth and conviviality of the living space. Step into a sunny living room where light flows generously, complemented by a refurbished open kitchen that invites culinary adventures. With three comfortably sized bedrooms, the villa accommodates family living or hosting guests with ease. One bedroom opens directly onto the courtyard, enriching your connection to the outdoors. The villa further provides two bathrooms, ensuring morning routines run smoothly. Here's a compact list of features the villa offers: - Spacious living/dining area (53 m2) - Three bedrooms offering comfort and privacy - Refurbished open kitchen, perfect for home-cooked meals - Luminous spaces throughout the home - Storage room for all your essentials - Courtyard and garden, a tranquil ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Picture yourself waking to the gentle murmur of a stream flowing past your centuries-old stone farmhouse, morning mist rising from 3000 square meters of private land that stretches toward the foothills of the Pyrenees. Your coffee steams on the terrace as you plan today's adventure: perhaps a morning at the thermal baths in Salies-de-Béarn, lunch at a coastal seafood restaurant in Biarritz, or an afternoon exploring medieval villages where the ancient Salt Road once connected mountain communities to distant Mediterranean shores. This is the rhythm of life at this converted farmhouse, where the borders between relaxation, adventure, and authentic French culture blur into something remarkably rare. This property embodies the essence of southwestern France as a vacation home destination. The house sits just outside Salies-de-Béarn, a thermal spa town that has drawn visitors seeking wellness and rejuvenation since the Bronze Age. The positioning offers remarkable versatility for vacation property owners: coastal pleasures along the Atlantic lie fifty minutes west, world-class skiing in the Pyrenees awaits ninety minutes south, and the cultural richness of Basque Country surrounds you in every direction. Few European locations deliver such geographic diversity within an hour's radius, making this an exceptional base for exploring one of the continent's most distinctive regions. The farmhouse itself tells a story of thoughtful conversion that respects architectural heritage while embracing modern comfort. On the ground floor, a generous 19-square-meter kitchen anchors daily life, complemented by a 25-square-meter living room where a wood-burning stove becomes the social heart during cooler months. The configuration includes a ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the picturesque landscape of Berenx, Aquitaine, this exquisite Maison de Maitre offers a unique blend of historical charm and modern comfort. Perfectly positioned between the renowned thermal spa town of Salies-de-Béarn and the medieval allure of Orthez, this property is a gateway to the rich cultural tapestry of southwestern France. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves in your private 6000m² park, where manicured gardens provide a serene backdrop to your morning coffee. The house itself, a testament to timeless elegance, has been meticulously maintained, preserving its original features while seamlessly integrating contemporary amenities. ### A Day in the Life Start your day with a refreshing dip in the heated saltwater pool, a luxurious feature that promises relaxation and rejuvenation. As the sun rises, the spacious kitchen becomes the heart of the home, where you can prepare a delightful breakfast using fresh local produce from the nearby markets. The ground floor offers a harmonious flow, from the large boot room with its practical shower room and utility space, to the inviting kitchen that leads into a long corridor. Here, you'll find a grand sitting room perfect for entertaining guests, and a snug sitting room ideal for cozy evenings by the fire. Venture upstairs to discover three luminous bedrooms, each offering a tranquil retreat with views of the lush gardens. A modern bathroom with WC ensures convenience, while a new shower room on the half landing adds a touch of luxury. The fourth bedroom, located above the boot room, provides a private sanctuary for guests or family members. ### Local Lifestyle and Activities Living in Berenx means embracing a lifestyle rich in culture and outd ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the enchanting Salies-de-Béarn, this delightful villa offers a unique opportunity to embrace the serene lifestyle of the French countryside. Known for its therapeutic salt baths and charming medieval streets, Salies-de-Béarn is a hidden gem in the Aquitaine region, offering a perfect blend of tranquility and vibrant local culture. Imagine waking up to the gentle sounds of nature, with the sun casting a warm glow over your expansive 3,000m² garden. This villa, in excellent condition, is a sanctuary for those seeking peace without sacrificing modern comforts. With three spacious bedrooms and two well-appointed bathrooms, this home is ideal for families or those looking to entertain guests. ### A Day in Salies-de-Béarn Start your day with a leisurely stroll through the town's cobblestone streets, where you'll find quaint cafes and artisan shops. The local market, bustling with fresh produce and regional delicacies, is a must-visit for any food enthusiast. For those seeking relaxation, the renowned thermal spa offers rejuvenating treatments that have been a staple of the town for centuries. ### The Villa Experience Upon entering the villa, you're greeted by a bright and airy living room, complete with a cozy wood-burning stove, perfect for those cooler evenings. The semi-open kitchen is a chef's delight, offering ample space to prepare meals while staying connected with family and friends in the adjoining dining area. The ground floor features a versatile space that can be used as a guest suite or a private retreat, complete with its own shower room and laundry facilities. The garage, equipped with an electric gate, provides secure parking and additional storage. ### Local Attractions and Accessi ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the picturesque town of Salies-de-Béarn, this inviting 3-bedroom townhouse awaits its new owners. If you're an overseas buyer or an expatriate in search of a cozy sanctuary within the heart of France's beautiful Aquitaine region, then look no further. Salies-de-Béarn itself is a place where history and a vibrant community come together. Imagine strolling through its charming streets, discovering its local boutiques and savoring the delights offered by traditional French bakeries and cafes. This town is world-renowned for its thermal spa, a perfect retreat for those seeking relaxation and well-being, situated just a stone's throw away from your potential new home. This property offers a world of possibilities, whether you're working remotely or planning to immerse yourself in the French lifestyle. The house is in good condition and embodies the essence of a warm family home. It features an open-plan living area that seamlessly integrates the kitchen, dining room, and living room, making it a great space to gather and relax with family and friends. A ground floor bathroom ensures convenience for guests and family alike. As you enter the garden level, you'll find a cozy bedroom, a dressing room for all your storage needs, and a practical shower room. Venturing upstairs, the first floor boasts two more bedrooms that provide ample space for family or guests. The charming balcony adds a touch of character, where you might enjoy a quiet morning coffee while soaking in the serene surroundings. A shared WC completes this level's layout, ensuring comfort and accessibility. The outdoor terrace, spacious enough to accommodate lively dinners or quiet evenings under the stars, invites you to embrace the joys of alfresco ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the captivating town of Salies-de-Béarn in the picturesque region of Aquitaine, France, this stunning Maison de Maitre awaits its new occupants. Built in 1910, this house embodies a robust history and offers ample opportunity for those looking to settle in a space that combines tradition with comfort. In its good condition, the property offers a delightful living experience with plenty of space for family gatherings and soaking in the unique locale. The property comes with a sprawling 314m² of living space across three floors, all of which are in commendable condition. Upon entering, you'll be greeted by a welcoming entrance hall that sets the tone for the rest of the home. As you venture further, you will find a generously sized living room perfect for relaxation, along with a dining room and a kitchen equipped to handle everything from your morning coffee to full-course dinners. A practical utility room rounds out the ground floor amenities, making day-to-day living as seamless as possible. The first floor hosts four comfortable bedrooms alongside a petite room featuring a washbasin and a family bathroom. Ascending to the second floor, you'll discover additional sleeping quarters, including four more bedrooms. One of these includes an en-suite shower room and a WC, complemented by an independent shower room for convenience, ensuring plenty of space for guests or a large family. The kitchen opens up to an enchanting enclosed garden spanning 2014m², presenting a perfect haven for those who appreciate outdoor living, gardening, or space for children to play. The property also includes an independent apartment accessible through the garage, adding 45m² of living space—a fantastic opportunity for guest accommo ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the vibrant spa town of Salies-de-Béarn, this 190 m2 four-bedroom traditional townhouse represents a delightful blend of historical charm and modern conveniences, providing a perfect canvas for those looking to infuse their personality into their new home. This property, rich in history since its inception in the 17th century and later expanded in the 1930s, is set within the picturesque Aquitaine region of France. Upon entering the house, the warmth of the original flagstone flooring in the living room immediately gives a sense of the character that permeates throughout the home. The space is airy and welcoming with an open fireplace adding a cozy touch that is ideal for quiet winter evenings. The large kitchen-diner offers a practical space for family meals and entertaining guests, with direct access to the terrace where one can enjoy the serene outdoor setting. The upper floors of the house feature four spacious bedrooms, one of which boasts its own private shower room, exhibiting the thoughtfully designed layout conducive to both privacy and family gatherings. Additional amenities include a separate WC, a communal bathroom, and a sizable music room that could alternatively serve as a study or play area. One of the property’s charming features is its 343 m2 garden; a delightful rarity in townhouse living, presenting a private oasis right in the town centre. Here, gardening enthusiasts can exercise their green thumbs or simply create a tranquil escape from the bustiques of daily life. The house’s condition is generally good, but it leaves room for some modern updates and personal touches. As such, it suits those who appreciate the character of older homes but are also looking to undertake some renovation ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Nestled in the heart of the picturesque spa town of Salies-de-Béarn, this magnificent 19th-century residence offers a unique opportunity to own a piece of French history. With its 13 bedrooms and expansive 460 square meters of living space, this property is perfect for those seeking a second home or a holiday retreat in the enchanting region of Aquitaine, Pyrénées-Atlantiques. Imagine waking up to the gentle sounds of the river Le Saleys, just a stone's throw from your doorstep. This historic house, with its beautifully landscaped gardens, provides a serene escape from the hustle and bustle of everyday life. Whether you're looking to create cherished family memories or explore the potential of a bed and breakfast venture, this property offers endless possibilities. ### A Glimpse into the Past As you step through the grand entrance, you're immediately transported back in time. The elegant chestnut staircase and spacious corridors set the tone for the rest of the house. With 18 rooms spread across three floors, there's ample space for relaxation, entertainment, and creativity. - Ground Floor: Features a music room, reception area, office, kitchen, shower room, and utility room. A wine cellar of approximately 38 square meters awaits your collection. - First Floor: Home to a cozy library with a fireplace, a walk-in wardrobe, laundry and boiler room, and four bedrooms. - Second Floor: Offers additional bedrooms, a meditation room, children's playrooms, and a study. Three bedrooms open onto a charming gallery. ### A Garden Oasis The property's garden is a true sanctuary, with mature trees, lush lawns, and picnic areas. It's the perfect setting for outdoor gatherings or quiet moments of reflection. The garden's proximity to ... click here to read more

Picture 1