Village colonials a short walk from the white church and the country store, farmhouses on a few quiet acres, and lakeside camps down a dirt road, shown to you by people who grew up in these hills, know which roads get plowed first, and can tell you which villages hold their light through a long winter.
A few of the places these hills are known for, with fresh listings every week.
Sap lines in March, the green in summer, the maples turning the hills red and gold in October, and a woodstove going through the quiet months. We help you find the place that fits the life you actually want, in step with the seasons these towns live by.
Which town greens stay walkable, which roads are dirt and how they hold up in mud season, and which farmhouses still have good bones under old paint. We walk you through the honest feel of each village and hill town before you choose.
What it really costs to heat a 1840s farmhouse through a Vermont winter, how a well, a septic, and an old slate roof actually hold up, what a dirt road and a long driveway ask of you in February, and which fixes can wait. We give you the honest local math up front, not after closing.
Each village in these hills has its own feel. Here are the ones families fall for.
A lot of our buyers are coming for a slower village life, a farmhouse with room for a garden and a few animals, a remote job with the hills out the window, or a place near family for the long haul, so we slow down and walk you through how a country property really lives across a full New England year.
How an old house heats and what wood, oil, or a heat pump fit your budget, what a well and septic ask of you, which roads stay clear in a hard winter, and what land, taxes, and upkeep truly cost. Real answers before you commit, not after your first March thaw.
Start With a Local GuideTell us what you picture, a colonial on the village green, a farmhouse on a few acres, or a camp on the lake, and we will send you the places worth a look.
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