Farmhouses
Generous country homes with land, outbuildings and proper kitchens built for boots and dogs.
Farmhouses are the workhorses of British country living — generous, honest homes built to do a job, usually with paddocks, orchards, outbuildings and a proper kitchen at their heart. They range from Yorkshire longhouses and Welsh stone farmhouses to Devon farmsteads, Cotswold rectories and Suffolk hall houses.
Our farmhouses for sale include detached farmhouses, working smallholdings, former dairy farms and country rectories — each one chosen for character, setting and the kind of land that comes with it.
Filter by structure, beds or county, and pair this with our homes-with-land collection if acreage is a priority.
Traditionally a farmhouse was the main home on a working farm, sitting alongside outbuildings, barns and grazing land. Many have been sold separately from their land over time, while others retain paddocks, orchards or smallholdings. Period features typically include flagstone floors, ranges, inglenooks, mullioned windows and substantial kitchens.
Buyers of farmhouses tend to want space, character and a connection to the land. Running costs and heating bills are usually higher than a modern home — so EPC ratings, oil/LPG vs ground-source, and roof condition are all worth checking carefully before purchase.
Farmhouses are typically larger, originally built to house the family running a working farm — with bigger kitchens, more reception rooms and usually some outbuildings or land. Cottages are smaller, simpler homes, often for farm workers historically.
Not necessarily. Many farmhouses were sold separately from their land in the 20th century. Always check the title plan and ask the agent whether paddocks, barns or outbuildings are included.
Solid-wall stone farmhouses are usually less energy-efficient than modern homes. Wood burners, ranges, oil and LPG are common — and ground-source or biomass systems are increasingly retrofitted. Check the EPC and look at recent bills.
Often yes, subject to planning, lender consent and local council rules. Many farmhouses already operate as holiday lets or B&Bs — listings usually flag this.
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