Character properties · Highland
Period homes, listed buildings, cottages, farmhouses and barns across Highland — each one chosen for original features, provenance and the kind of character you can't replicate.
Highland covers most of the Scottish Highlands — crofts, traditional cottages, lochside homes, glens and some of the most dramatic countryside in Britain.
Generally any home with original period features and history — typically pre-1930 — including cottages, farmhouses, barns, manors, rectories, mills, period townhouses and converted historic buildings.
No. Many character homes have original features but no listing. Listed status is awarded by Historic England (or equivalents in Wales/Scotland) for buildings of special architectural or historic interest.
Usually yes, but Listed Building Consent is required for most internal and external changes. Sympathetic extensions, glazing, heating and kitchen upgrades are often approved — heavy-handed alterations rarely are.
Standard insurers will cover most character homes but specialist insurers are often better value for thatched, listed or non-standard-construction properties.
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