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6,616 results for:

Luxury Properties for sale in Tuscany

  • Villa in Vecchiano-Nodica, Pisa
    Villa in Vecchiano-Nodica, Pisa
    Price on Application
    536 m² 8 7
    Presented by Lionard Luxury Real Estate
    Premium
  • Rural or Farmhouse in Forni di Gavorrano, Provincia di Grosseto
    Rural or Farmhouse in Forni di Gavorrano, Provincia di Grosseto
    CN¥ 63,934,700
    900 m² 12 17
    Presented by Carratelli Luxury Homes
    Premium
  • Villa in Cortona, Province of Arezzo
    Villa in Cortona, Province of Arezzo
    CN¥ 19,180,400
    340 m² 6 5
    Presented by Alba Luxury - Prestige Properties
    Premium
  • Villa in Montelupo Fiorentino, Florence
    Villa in Montelupo Fiorentino, Florence
    CN¥ 15,983,700
    1,078 m² 13 14
    Presented by Alba Luxury - Prestige Properties
    Premium
  • Villa in Barberino Val d'Elsa, Florence
    Villa in Barberino Val d'Elsa, Florence
    CN¥ 19,979,600
    700 m² 12 11
    Presented by Alba Luxury - Prestige Properties
    Premium
  • Villa in Sovicille, Province of Siena
    Villa in Sovicille, Province of Siena
    CN¥ 19,979,600
    1,100 m² 13 13
    Presented by Roof&Roots
    Premium
  • Villa in Massa, Provincia di Massa-Carrara
    Villa in Massa, Provincia di Massa-Carrara
    CN¥ 75,922,500
    2,500 m² 30 28
    Presented by IB International Real Estate
    Premium
  • Villa in Castiglione della Pescaia, Provincia di Grosseto
    Villa in Castiglione della Pescaia, Provincia di Grosseto
    CN¥ 17,582,000
    260 m² 6 5
    Presented by Unica Prestige
    Premium
  • Country House in Lucignano, Province of Arezzo
    Country House in Lucignano, Province of Arezzo
    CN¥ 11,188,600
    785 m² 12
    Presented by Great Estate Immobiliare S.R.L.
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  • Villa in Scandicci, Florence
    Villa in Scandicci, Florence
    CN¥ 55,942,900
    3,400 m² 8 14
    Presented by Roof&Roots
    Premium
  • Villa in Bagno a Ripoli, Florence
    Villa in Bagno a Ripoli, Florence
    CN¥ 27,971,400
    980 m² 10 10
    Presented by Roof&Roots
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  • Country House in Cetona, Province of Siena
    Country House in Cetona, Province of Siena
    CN¥ 16,782,900
    489 m² 6
    Presented by Great Estate Immobiliare S.R.L.
    Premium
  • Villa in Pistoia, Provincia di Pistoia
    Villa in Pistoia, Provincia di Pistoia
    CN¥ 54,344,500
    1,500 m² 10 10
    Presented by Alba Luxury - Prestige Properties
    Premium
  • Villa in Abbadia di Montepulciano, Province of Siena
    Villa in Abbadia di Montepulciano, Province of Siena
    CN¥ 16,782,900
    360 m² 8 5
    Presented by Alba Luxury - Prestige Properties
    Premium
  • Villa in Vecchiano-Nodica, Pisa
    Villa in Vecchiano-Nodica, Pisa
    Price on Application
    630 m² 8 9
    Presented by Alba Luxury - Prestige Properties
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luxury guide

Tuscany's luxury real estate market lists 6,337 properties for sale today, spanning the hills of Chianti, the Val d'Orcia plateau, the Maremma coast and the medieval towers of San Gimignano. This is the most internationally recognized market in Italy, and the numbers reflect it. Buyers from the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany and Scandinavia have been acquiring property here for decades, not just for the landscape but for the lifestyle infrastructure that surrounds it. Florence has direct flights to London, Paris and New York. Pisa airport connects the western part of the region to the rest of Europe in under two hours. Siena, Cortona, Volterra, Montepulciano and Pienza are all within ninety minutes. The market offers villas, farmhouses, estates, prestigious apartments and agricultural holdings. Few regions in Europe match this breadth of offering at this price point.

Luxury property prices in Tuscany

Prices range from CN¥1,196,530 to CN¥11,804,688,000, with an average of CN¥20,822,450. Floor areas run from 1 to 1325720 sqm, with a typical size of 1524 sqm. Three things drive price above everything else: the view, the view, and access to the view. A property with an unobstructed sightline over the Val d'Orcia or the Chianti vineyards commands a significant premium over a comparable property without one. Proximity to Florence and Siena matters too, as does road access for year-round living. Compared to the Côte d'Azur or the Swiss lakes, Tuscany still offers more space per euro. But that gap is narrowing. Historic properties with architectural constraints are a finite resource. There are no new ones coming onto the market.

Most sought-after areas in Tuscany

The Chianti Classico zone, between Florence and Siena, is the most consistently active market in the region. It has been for two decades and shows no sign of changing. The Val d'Orcia is a UNESCO World Heritage landscape and draws buyers who want absolute privacy and a setting with no visual equivalent elsewhere in Europe. The Maremma, along the Tyrrhenian coast, has a rougher character: maritime pine forests, direct sea access and prices that still sit below the regional average. The area around Cortona and Montepulciano in the Val di Chiana attracts a predominantly Anglo-American clientele looking for authenticity without the competitive pressure of Chianti. And then there is the Lucca area, understated and precise, with a market of walled-city apartments and countryside estates that rarely appears on the open market. Each zone has its own logic. Choosing between them is really a question of how you plan to live.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why invest in Tuscany's luxury real estate market?

The international demand for Tuscan property has been consistent for over thirty years, with no meaningful correction. At an average of CN¥20,822,450, the market remains competitive against comparable destinations in France and Switzerland. Historic farmhouses and estate properties exist in finite supply, and architectural constraints prevent new construction in most protected zones. That combination of stable demand and limited supply is rare.

What is everyday life like in Tuscany?

Tuscany works as a primary residence in a way that many comparable Italian regions do not. The infrastructure is solid: well-connected airports, international schools in Florence, private hospitals and a road network that makes moving between towns genuinely easy. The international community, particularly in the Chianti and Lucca areas, is well established and self-sufficient. Winters are short, summers are long, and the food and wine culture is not a marketing claim but a daily reality.

What makes Tuscany unique in the global luxury property market?

The landscape is UNESCO-protected, the architectural heritage is legally preserved, and the Tuscany brand is one of the few regional identities that sells itself in every market in the world. More practically: there are no new historic farmhouses being built. What exists today is what will exist in twenty years. Buyers who understand scarcity understand why this matters.