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Stone House with Garden near Marliana

€360,000 $392,400
$
Location Marliana, Tuscany

Ref #: V5967D-X

ITALY, TUSCANY, PISTOIA, MARLIANA

VIRTUAL TOUR:


Traditional stone 2 storey house, located near Marliana, in the Pistoia province of Tuscany, and built about 225 years ago. The house enjoys a private location and has 2 separate mature gardens with flat and easy access from a small parking piazza.

Marliana is less than 1.5 km and has a grocer’s, pizzeria and post office.

The house is entered from the south-facing terrace into the entrance/dining room.

The double aspect kitchen, fully modernised with luxury deep cherry red lacquered integrated appliances & solid grey stone worktops & sink is accessed to the left. Floors are cotto-tiled and there are the traditional Tuscan beam and cotto tile ceilings.

The living room, accessed from the entrance room is located to the right. A generous room with double aspect windows and a fireplace.The floors are white ceramic tiles and there is a feature wall in stone and off-white walls with Tuscan beam and cotto tile ceiling. A fine quality, light honey coloured leather suite, is part of the sale.

From the entrance terrace which has a beamed cotto-roofed entrance pergola, access is into a fully fitted laundry/utility room leading to a cloakroom with fitted mirrored basin unit.

A solid antique stone staircase leads up to the first floor landing/study area which could also be used as a bedroom, with south-facing window & large Velux roof window.

The antique pitched cotto ceiling with a central beam has good height. The walls are off-white with all solid chestnut doors into the bedrooms.

The main bedroom is to the left of the stairs. With the benefit of dual aspect windows and pitched cotto-tiled ceiling with central beam, it is fully air-conditioned.

A contemporary fitted white wardrobe with mirrored door, contrasting with the antique walnut bedroom suite & double bed, is included in the sale. The walls are off-white/pale aqua for the bed wall.

A chestnut door leads to an ensuite shower room with fitted dark wood wall store shelf unit. A glass corner shower and a white marble effect tiled walls and a basin & toilet complete this room. Fitted chestnut cupboard doors provide access to a fully tiled attic store space.

The second double aspect bedroom is to the right of the study. A pretty room decorated in light traditional Tuscan style with feature headboard, cotton lace wall & ceiling drapes. Twin modern single beds, a white cupboard unit & drawer unit and a cotto-tiled pitched ceiling with central beam completes this room.

A fully tiled and fitted shower room is accessed from a small lobby to the 2nd bedroom.

The house offers about 100 sqm of floor area. It was completely restored inside & out in 2005/6. to international designers plans & specifications.

The antique cotto tiled roof was reconstructed with additional insulation & earthquake structural protection.

The lawned garden is Mediterranean in style with an elevated gazebo terrace to the end. A wisteria-clad dining terrace is built off the west side of the house with access from the kitchen/ dining room.

A separate garden is found across the private grass lane and accessed by wrought iron gates. This lawned garden also has a large paved terrace area stepping down to an above ground swimming pool.  A timber structure changing room is located at the end of the terrace.

Distances:
Marliana (restaurant, grocer’s, post office) 1.5 km

Montecatini Terme (many shops, restaurants and services, train station) 10 km

Florence 58 km

Pisa 52 km

Siena 125 km

San Gimignano 80 km.

Energy Class G. 373.306 kWh/m2 p.a.

Address: Marliana, Tuscany

Location type: Village

Condition: Restored

Bedrooms: 2

Bathrooms: 3

Property size: approx 100 sqm

Land size: 690 sqm

Has Virtual Tour
Air Conditioning
Walking distance of amenities
Within 1 hour of an airport
Features
above-ground pool
air conditioning
Character property
Garden
original features
Parking
within walking distance of amenities

Similar Properties

FAQs

What is a notary?

A notary is a qualified lawyer who is employed by the Italian government. When you are buying Italian property, it is a notary who conducts the legal transfer of a property from vendor to buyer, and prepares the deed of sale, checks there are no charges on the property, title issues and with the assistance of a technician such as a geometra or architect, checks the property conforms to all planning issues.

It is always the buyer and not the vendor who pays the purchase taxes due and who pays the notary fees also. This means that it is up to the buyer which notary is used. In practice it is usually one of the local notaries and we can recommend which one to use and which one is cheapest, as notary prices do vary.

We provide a detailed list of all fees and taxes (including the notary’s quote) before you sign any contracts.

Translator – if you do not speak fluent, enough to understand detailed legal contracts, you will need to have a translator at the notary deed. Your agent or the notary will usually arrange this so you don’t need to worry about it. The cost varies but is often 200-300 euros. This can sometimes be shared with the vendor if they are also non fluent in Italian.

What taxes are payable for a property purchase in Italy?

This depends firstly on two things.
A. Are you buying as a resident or a non resident?
B. Are you buying from private individuals or from a company?

If you are buying from private individuals, then the taxes you pay are based on the cadastral value – a nominal value which each property has and which depends on its size, location, standard etc – nothing to do with the market value.

Example 1:
House price agreed €100,000.
Property belongs to private sellers.
Cadastral value of the property €32,000.

Let’s say you intend buying the house as a non resident (.ie. you do not intend moving to Italy permanently and applying for residency).
Taxes payable are 9% on cadastral value €32,000 so €2,880 plus a few smaller fixed taxes.

Or, if you intend moving to live in the house permanently, applying for Italian residency, then as long as you don’t already own another property in Italy;
Taxes payable are 2% on cadastral value €32,000 so €640 plus a few smaller fixed taxes. A minimum figure may be payable.

Please note, you could buy the house as a resident and pay the lower rate of tax if you intend moving there and obtaining residency within the next 18 months. Don’t be tempted to do this unless you are definitely sure you will become a resident. If you then do not, you need to pay the difference in taxes plus a penalty of around 30%.

If there is substantial land (not just a garden) with the property, then 15% is payable on the value attributed to the land, which can be quite low, eg a value of €15,000 could be attributed to the land so 15% of 15,000 = €2,250 would be the tax on the land.

Example 2:
House price €100,000
Property is being sold by a company
Cadastral value of the property is €32,000

Let’s say you intend buying the house as a non resident (i.e. you do not intend moving to Italy permanently and applying for residency).
Taxes payable are 10% VAT on full market price €100,000 so €10,000 plus a few smaller fixed taxes.

Or, if you intend moving to live in the house permanently, applying for Italian residency, then as long as you don’t already own another property in Italy,
Taxes payable are 4% VAT on €100,000 so €4,000 plus a few smaller fixed taxes.

Once we know
– which house you want to buy, its cadastral value and who owns it (company/individual)
– whether you intend to buy as a resident/non resident and if it’s your first property in Italy

only then can we ask the notary to provide a quote for the precise taxes payable.

Other circumstances

Then of course there are other scenarios.

If the value of the property you want to buy is very low (eg €50,000) then purchase costs are likely to be a higher percentage as there are set minimums to pay for all fees and taxes. So on a €50,000 house, you are likely to pay 12-15% instead of 10% (non resident).

You might want to buy a property (being sold by private individuals) with your company. Taxes are considerably higher in this case, as they would be 9% on the sale price (not on the cadastral value). So it’s cheaper to buy a privately owned property as a private individual, not as a company.

But, in the case of a country property which is a farm/winery/agriturismo, these are often owned by a farming company (azienda agricola) , which has considerable tax advantages as you can buy the farm and pay just 0-1% (depending on the circumstances) on the purchase price in tax.

If you buy directly an existing farm (ie a farming company with no other assets within the company), you just pay the fees for buying the shares in a company – ie an accountant, a notary and some small fixed taxes.
If you set up a farming company (the property must have all the requisites to be a farm) with a board of directors and an IAP (professional farmer) to buy the property and land you pay 1% on the sale price.
In both cases above, you are buying as a company so being a resident or non resident doesn’t come into it, you are not buying as a physical person.
So buying an existing farm, or setting one up, has tax advantages, compared to buying a property, especially as a non resident. However there are of course costs involved in running the company, so it’s best to seek the advice of an Italian accountant.

Taxes would be different for a commercial purchase, eg if your company is buying an Italian company (ie a farm or other company). Buying the shares of a company usually meets zero taxes, just a few fixed fees, and notary and accountancy fees.

The above is a guide, and once you have found a property you are interested in buying, we can obtain a notary quote for you, with a full breakdown of the taxes and fees due.

What other purchase costs are there?

Notary fees – approx 1-2%, more for a lower priced property due to some fixed taxes.

Agency fees – in Italy both buyer and seller pay the agent. These are payable to the Italian agent  (one of our partners) you view the house with at compromesso (preliminary contract) stage and for each party are usually 3% plus VAT. VAT is 22% in Italy. Minimums apply. Nothing is payable to Casa Tuscany so you will not pay double the fees, you will just have double the assistance!

Compromesso registration fees – approx €380 plus a part payment of taxes which is deducted from the total taxes due at completion.

Translator for the deed signing at the notary’s office. Required if you do not speak Italian well enough to understand legal deeds. Approx cost €250 – €350 depending on the notary.

Technical report for the notary.  Checks all the planning issues of the property, making sure it matches the official plans, no works have been carried out without permission, gathers all previous permits, checks the house is sellable and not illegal in any way. Carried out by a geometra, architect or engineer and costs vary considerably, a minimum of €761 including VAT/ Please note this report is NOT a structural survey, that is an optional additional report you may wish to instruct.

What annual costs are there? How should I pay them?

Local council tax – IMU (formerly ICI) – payable only by non residents. This needs to be paid twice a year at the post office – no bill is sent. Most people use a local accountant or property manager to calculate it.

Refuse tax (TARI)

In some areas, mountain community tax.

If you buy a property which is part of a condominium, e.g. with shared pool and grounds, lighting etc, then there will be annual condominium fees to pay which usually range from about €200 to €1000/year unless it is a particularly luxurious property with many amenities in which case costs could be higher.

Utilities

Do I need an Italian bank account?

You don’t really need an Italian bank account for buying a property in Italy any more as money is usually sent by bank transfer, although some notaries insist the funds are sent from an Italian account set up by you.

You could of course open an account to handle bills but bear in mind that some utilities companies refuse to arrange direct debits for non resident accounts, and some bills cannot be paid by direct debit.
You could always pay your bills online or if you have a property manager then send them the funds for settling all the bills.
If you do intend opening an Italian bank account, bear in mind that Italian bank charges are high . Usually there is a monthly fee to pay, plus charges for receiving money, paying bills, sending statements, etc etc.

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