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Luxury villas for sale in Tuscany

luxury guide

Tuscany's villa market is one of the most resilient in Europe, with 3,421 properties currently listed for sale. Buyers come from across the Atlantic and from northern Europe, drawn by something that cannot be replicated: a landscape shaped over centuries by farming, stone architecture and cypress-lined roads. A Tuscan villa is not just a house with a garden. It comes with olive groves, wine cellars, panoramic terraces and the kind of privacy that urban properties simply cannot offer. The most active markets cluster around the Chianti hills, the Val d'Orcia and the countryside around Lucca, with strong interest also in the areas near Montalcino, Cortona, San Gimignano and Montepulciano.

How much does a villa cost in Tuscany

Prices for Tuscan villas start at €320,000 for properties in lesser-known inland areas and reach €1,470,000,000 for fully restored estates with vineyards, guesthouses and mature gardens in the Chianti Classico zone. The average asking price sits at €3,183,795. Living space ranges from 1 to 951260 sqm, with a typical footprint of 1206 sqm and between 1 and 108 bedrooms. Restoration quality is the single biggest price driver. A villa with high-end finishes, original terracotta floors and a renovated wine cellar commands a significant premium over a comparable property that still needs work. Private pool, productive vineyard and unobstructed hill views are the three features that push values highest on the international market.

Where to buy a villa in Tuscany

Chianti Classico, the stretch between Greve in Chianti and Gaiole in Chianti, is where the most prestigious villas change hands. Stone farmhouses converted into luxury estates, private chapels, swimming pools framed by vineyards. It is the benchmark zone, and prices reflect that. The Val d'Orcia draws buyers who want complete seclusion: villas set among rolling clay hills with no neighbors in sight, in a Unesco-protected landscape that photographs like a Renaissance painting. Around Lucca, villas tend to feature formal Italian gardens, lemon houses and frescoed interiors, often at lower prices than Sienese estates, though the gap is closing fast. The Maremma, along the southern Tuscan coast, suits buyers seeking larger plots and proximity to the sea. And the hills around Cortona offer outstanding value, with stone villas and sweeping views toward Lake Trasimeno at prices still below the regional average.