A Large Stone Village House With 95 M2 Of Living Space On A 320 M2 Plot, Featuring Several Terraces And A Terraced Garden To Be Landscaped.
€172,800€1,819/m²
Cessenon Sur Orb, Languedoc-Roussillon, France
3
bedrooms
1
bathroom
95 m²
interior
320 m²
plot
House
property type
Today
listed
About this place
A charming medieval village with two restaurants and a mobile grocery shop, 10 minutes from Cessenon-sur-Orb, 15 minutes from Roquebrun, 30 minutes from Beziers and 45 minutes from the beaches and the motorway.
Charming village house offering approximately 95 m2 of living space, complemented by a partially converted attic of 38 m2, offering great potential for conversion, particularly for the creation of a master bedroom suite. Set on a 320 m2 plot, the property features two terraces and a terraced garden, offering excellent potential for enhancement following clearance and landscaping work. A property with definite potential, ideal for those keen on renovation projects wishing to create a home tailored to their own tastes, right in the heart of the village.
Ground = Cellar of about 10 m2.
1st = Hall of 4.5 m2 + fitted kitchen of 13.4 m2 (gas hob, oven, microwave, washing machine, fridge) + living room of 19 m2 with access to another living room of 25 m2 + WC.
2nd = 8 m2 hall with access to a terrace + 3 bedrooms of 9.2 m2, 8m2 and 10.2 m2 + 5.5 m2 bathroom (shower, bath, WC, washbasin).
3rd = Partially converted attic of 38 m2.
Outside = Terrace adjoining the house of 25 m2 + small courtyard/terrace at the side of the house + terrace above the house of approximately 20 m2 with a small stone ruin + sloping garden to be landscaped.
Miscellaneous = House in very good overall condition + oil-fired central heating + double glazing + electric water heater + mosquito nets + estimated amount of annual energy consumption for standard use: between 4198 Euros and 5680 Euros per year. Average energy prices indexed on 2021, 2022 and 2023 (including subscriptions) + property tax of around 600 Euros + furniture negotiable.
Price = 172.800 Euros (Comfortable house with potential !)
The prices are inclusive of agents fees (paid by the vendors). The notaire's fees have to be paid on top at the actual official rate. Information on the risks to which this property is exposed is available on the Geo-risks website: georisques. gouv. fr
Property Id : 83351
Property Size: 95 m2
Property Lot Size: 320 m2
Bedrooms: 3
Bathrooms: 1
Reference: SC172800E
Other Features
Immediately Habitable
Outside space
Rental Potential
Terrace
With Land/Garden
Where you’ll be
Cessenon Sur Orb, Languedoc-Roussillon, France
Location is approximate — exact address is confirmed by the agent.
Open in Google MapsBuying property in France
France places no restrictions on foreign property ownership. The notaire (a public official, not a lawyer for either side) handles the conveyance and is paid by the buyer. A French bank account is strongly recommended for completion funds and ongoing charges.
- 1
Make an offer
Offers are usually verbal or via the estate agent (agent immobilier). Once accepted, the agent drafts the offer letter.
- 2
Sign the compromis de vente
Preliminary contract setting price, conditions, and a 5–10% deposit held in escrow. Buyer has a 10-day statutory cooling-off period after signing.
- 3
Engage a notaire
Buyer and seller can share one notaire or use separate ones at no extra cost — fees are fixed by law and split.
- 4
Searches & conditions
Notaire runs title, planning, and mortgage searches; mortgage conditions (clause suspensive) typically allow 45 days to secure financing.
- 5
Final funds & pre-completion
Transfer balance plus all notaire fees to the notaire's account a few days before signing.
- 6
Sign the acte de vente
Final deed signed at the notaire's office (in person or by power of attorney). Keys handed over.
- 7
Registration
Notaire registers the sale at the Service de la Publicité Foncière and sends the buyer a certified copy (attestation) within weeks; the full deed follows in 2–6 months.
No residency requirement to buy. Non-resident mortgages available from French banks, typically 70–80% LTV with stricter affordability checks. France abolished taxe d'habitation on primary residences (2023) but it still applies to second homes — and many communes now apply a surcharge of up to 60% on second homes in high-demand zones.
General guidance only — confirm specifics with a qualified local lawyer or tax adviser. Reference














