Tuscan stone villa with private pool, terraced lawn and sweeping Tyrrhenian Sea views

Luxury Villa Rentals in Tuscany

Villa vacation rentals with pools across Tuscany - vineyards, hill towns and the coastline.

Browse Our Tuscany Villas For Rent

Dedicated Villa Specialist

Not Sure Which Tuscany Villa Suits Your Group?

Every enquiry lands with one villa specialist tuned to Tuscany - arrival patterns, pacing and practical details, not generic scripts. One thread from first hello to doorstep means sharper matching with fewer resets. You may explore more of our luxury villas or the full collection of villas across Italy.

From first conversation to checkout, the same person stays with you.

  • 2–3 villa picks tuned to your calendar and family rhythm
  • Provisioning & private experiences orchestrated calmly
  • Airport, rail or countryside transfers aligned to your ETA
  • 24/7 support covering your villa stay windows

Personally inspected • book directly • all-in transparent pricing • one dedicated specialist. Planning something specific? See how we approach vacations by type, including romantic getaways for couples.

Stone farmhouse Tuscany villa with private pool and cypress trees set among rolling Chianti hills

Locate Our Luxury Villa Rentals in Tuscany, Italy on Map

 

How Far Are the Villas From Pisa and Florence Airports?

Pisa suits the coast and west; Florence suits Chianti and the east. From Pisa: Chianti ~1-1.25hrs, Val d'Orcia ~1.5-2hrs, coast ~1.5hrs.

What Are the Best Places to Visit in Tuscany?

Florence's Uffizi, Siena's Campo, San Gimignano's towers, Chianti wineries, Val d'Orcia views, Saturnia springs, San Vincenzo beaches.

When Is the Best Time to Visit Tuscany?

May-June & Sept: warm, quiet, pools open. July-Aug: hot, lively, peak family season. September also brings the vendemmia grape harvest.

Do You Need a Car to Rent a Villa in Tuscany?

Almost always yes - villas sit down rural lanes. Mind ZTL zones in town centres. Your specialist arranges pick-up and a hire car.

Villas in Chianti Vineyards

Cellar doors, easy Florence & Siena day trips. Chianti is the classic first-timer base for groups and wine lovers.

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Villas in Val d'Orcia & Siena

Postcard hill towns, slow food, thermal springs. Val d'Orcia and Siena suit couples and anyone chasing quiet, cinematic scenery.

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Villas on the Etruscan Coast

A villa base near the beaches around San Vincenzo, with Super-Tuscan wineries and pine-shaded coastline close by.

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Villas in the Maremma Wild southern Tuscany

Hot springs at Saturnia, open country and coast. A less-polished, more local side of the region.

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Where Should You Rent Your Villa in Tuscany?

Our luxury vacation rentals in Tuscany are exclusively private villas -as a part of our wider luxury villas in Italy collection. Where you base yourself changes the whole trip, because Tuscany is bigger than it looks and the drives are slow and winding. Most of our homes sit in three belts, each a different holiday.

Area The feel Anchor towns Drive: Pisa / Florence Best for
Chianti & central hills Vineyard rows, cellar doors, medieval towns Gaiole, Castellina, Radda, Greve, San Gimignano, Colle di Val d'Elsa ~1–1¼ hr / ~45–60 min First-timers, wine, groups
Siena & Val d'Orcia Cinematic hills, slow food, thermal springs Siena, Pienza, Montepulciano, Montalcino ~1½–2 hr / ~1¼ hr Couples, scenery, foodies
Etruscan Coast & Maremma Pine-backed beaches, Super-Tuscan wine San Vincenzo, Bolgheri, Castagneto ~1½ hr / ~2 hr Beach families, summer

Chianti & the Central Hills - the classic first Tuscany

Rustic stone farmhouse villa with private pool and Chianti hillside views in Tuscany Italy

The postcard everyone pictures: vine rows, cypress avenues and stone hamlets between Florence and Siena, both easy day trips. Chianti Classico country - the black-rooster wineries around Gaiole, Radda and Castellina do walk-in and by-appointment tastings. San Gimignano's medieval towers and walled Colle di Val d'Elsa sit on the western edge. It's the most popular belt, so roads and towns get busy in July–August - a villa outside the honeypot towns keeps evenings quiet.

One of ours in this belt is Tuscany Villa 1006 in Rietine: a rustic, vineyard-surrounded farmhouse with six bedrooms and a private pool, sleeping up to 18 — just 4 km from Gaiole in Chianti, and a genuine example of the "one estate, not two small rentals" advice for large groups and reunions.

Siena, Val d'Orcia & the South - the scenery belt

Alfresco dining table with Tuscan wine and vineyard views from a Val d'Orcia villa Italy

The UNESCO Val d'Orcia: lone farmhouses, rolling wheat-gold hills, the drive between Pienza and Montepulciano that ends up on every screensaver. Food and wine heartland - Pienza pecorino, Montalcino's Brunello, Montepulciano's Vino Nobile. Soak in the open-air thermal springs at Bagno Vignoni or the free pools at Bagni San Filippo; Siena itself is walkable, art-packed, and hosts the Palio on 2 July and 16 August. It's further from airports and more remote - you'll drive more, but you trade crowds for calm. This is often the sweet spot for a romantic escape.

The Etruscan Coast & Maremma - Tuscany with a beach

Sandy Etruscan Coast beach with rows of parasols and beach bar overlooking the Tyrrhenian Sea

The Riviera degli Etruschi around San Vincenzo and Bolgheri pairs sandy, pine-shaded beaches with serious wine - this is Super-Tuscan territory (Sassicaia, Ornellaia). We have a Riviera degli Etruschivilla on this stretch sitting among fields just 3 km from San Vincenzo, with panoramic sea-facing terraces. The wilder Maremma to the south adds nature parks, hot springs at Saturnia, and a less-polished, more local feel - it's a summer-first region, best June–September, while inland Chianti and Val d'Orcia carry the shoulder seasons better.

What Amenities Do Our Tuscan Villas Have?

Tuscan villas are converted from real farm buildings, so the character is the point - but it's worth knowing what's standard, what's optional, and what to check before you book.

Villa style Best for Typical amenities
Restored farmhouse (casale) Families, groups Private pool, olive groves, outdoor kitchen, terracotta & beams
Vineyard estate Wine trips, weddings Large pool, wine cellar, big dining terrace, event space
Coastal villa Beach families Pool, sea access, shaded garden, close to town
Hill-town townhouse Couples Rooftop terrace, walk to restaurants, historic interior
  • You can expect: A private pool, vineyard or olive-grove views, an outdoor dining terrace, a proper kitchen, BBQ or pizza oven, and generous living space.
  • On request, we arrange: A private chef, housekeeping, in-villa provisioning, wine deliveries and transfers.
  • Always confirm per villa - don't assume: Air-conditioning (many homes have it, not all - thick stone stays cool but top-floor rooms can be warm in August); Wi-Fi strength (rural signal varies by valley); whether the pool is heated.
  • Honest character notes: Gravel driveways, uneven historic steps, the odd wasp near the fig tree, and seasonal pools - usually open roughly May to September.
  • Pool matters most? A handful of our Tuscan homes are agriturismo units with a shared pool - tell your specialist and they'll filter to private-pool villas only.
  • Experiences your specialist can book in and around the villa - Cooking classes and pasta-making, truffle hunts with dogs, private cellar lunches, olive-oil tastings, a chef for your arrival night. Timing a trip around Siena's Palio? It runs twice a year, on 2 July and 16 August - worth booking your Chianti or Val d'Orcia villa well ahead, as the town fills fast either side of those dates.

Which Tuscany Villa Fits Your Group?

The right villa in Tuscany comes down to who's coming and how you like to travel, more than star rating. Match on sleeps, not bedrooms - a Tuscan casale often converts a study or mezzanine into an extra bed, so a "4-bed" can genuinely sleep 8–9.

Your group Bedrooms → sleeps Best-fit area What to prioritise
Large groups & reunions 5–6 bed → 10–18 Chianti / central hills One big pool, long table, flat grounds
Multi-gen families 4–5 bed → 8–10 Central hills, near a town Safe pool, ground-floor room, short drive to shops
Couples & honeymooners 1–2 bed → 2–4 Val d'Orcia, quiet Chianti Privacy, plunge pool, sunset terrace
Wine & food trips 3–4 bed → 6–8 Walkable to cellars, big kitchen
Weddings & celebrations 6+ bed → 12+ Chianti estates Event licence, parking, marquee lawn

Large groups & reunions: one estate beats two small rentals - one big kitchen, one long table, one pool everyone gravitates to. Multi-generational families: a fenced or gently-sloping pool, ground-floor bedrooms, and a town within 15 minutes for gelato and groceries. Couples & honeymooners: a hillside two-bed with a private plunge pool facing the sunset - the Val d'Orcia and quieter Chianti lanes suit this far better than a party-sized estate; see our romantic holidays for more on this style of trip. Wine & food trips: base inside a wine zone so you can walk or taxi back from a tasting. Weddings: look past bedroom count - parking, a caterer-friendly kitchen, an event licence, and flat lawn for a marquee. Tell your specialist the headcount and they'll filter to villas that genuinely permit it.

Still deciding the shape of the trip? Browse by the kind of vacation you want, or explore our wider luxury villas collection beyond Tuscany.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between a villa in Chianti and one in the Val d'Orcia?

Chianti is closer to Florence and Siena and busier in peak season - better for first-timers, wine lovers, and groups who want an easy day trip either way. The Val d'Orcia is further from the airports and quieter, with the classic rolling-hills scenery - better suited to couples and anyone prioritising calm over convenience.

Do I need to book a private-pool villa specifically, or are shared pools common?

Most of our restored farmhouses and vineyard estates have private pools. A small number are agriturismo-style units with a shared pool - tell your specialist if a private pool is non-negotiable and they'll filter accordingly.

Is Tuscany walkable, or do I need a car the whole stay?

You'll need a car for almost the whole stay - villas are set down rural lanes, and public transport doesn't reach most of them. Historic town centres have ZTL restrictions, so you'll park outside and walk in once you arrive.

When should I book if I want to see the Palio in Siena?

The Palio runs twice a year, on 2 July and 16 August. Book your Chianti or Val d'Orcia villa well ahead of these dates - Siena gets very busy and accommodation fills early.