The best villas and houses to rent in Portugal

From seaside stays to city dwellings, these Portuguese villas are waiting for you to call them home
The best villas in Portugal Houses to rent

Sleeps: Up to 20 
Price: From €6,600 per week

Casa QuatroFrancisco Nogueira

Casa Quatro, Algarve

The fourth in this sleek series of authentic, live-like-a-local boltholes has just swung open its doors in one of the eastern Algarve’s prettiest towns, São Brás de Alportel. Sitting within the sound of the bells of the town’s 16th-century church, the house's old walls house four bedrooms with ensuite bathrooms, a rooftop terrace complete with a typically charming Algarvian chimney and a gorgeous inner courtyard where a pool shimmers. The kitchen is separated from the sitting room by a fireplace for winter nights – an old vaulted stone ceiling above it. There is indoor and outdoor dining, the latter set back from the pool in the shade, and a cellar that the knowledgeable owners have put together to highlight the country’s best wines. Its skilful mix of old and new, its luxurious simplicity and its tangible sense of history make this the ideal place for those wanting to get under the skin of Portugal.

Sleeps: Up to 8 
Price: From €1,600 per week

Villa Boa Vista

Villa Boa Vista, Cruz João Mendes, Alentejo

It doesn't get more calm and tranquil than the Alentejo countryside, and this large villa sits atop a hill overlooking the fields and forests of nearby Melides, one of our favourite destinations for 2023. The pool and large outdoor area are particular selling points of this villa, particularly if you're the type to gather a group of friends and cook large, delicious meals to wash down with local wines. On-site cleaning services will turn down beds and prepare breakfast, so you get the luxury experience of a hotel but the privacy of a villa.

Sleeps: 12
From: £1,854 per night

Villa Epicurea Eco Lodge

Villa Epicurea, Sesimbra

Just 40 minutes from Lisbon is Arrábida, where the eco-lodge Villa Epicurea can be found. With three suites in the main house and two private villas (which sleep four people), it's not entirely yours to enjoy – but you will experience the benefits that come from the property. These include on-site catering (all meals are vegan or vegetarian and prepared using organic ingredients), the infinity pool and yoga dome and activities including massages, surf lessons, horse riding on the beach, private picnics and more. Within walking distance is Praia da Foz, and the villa itself is surrounded by nature for you to soak up. There are several wellness retreats held throughout the year, should you wish to experience everything Villa Epicurea has to offer.

Sleeps: From 2-4
Price: Suites from £102, villas from £111

Casa Moderna

Casa Moderna, Comporta

If you've been dying to get to Comporta but haven't yet had the chance, this in-demand villa should surely be on your wishlist. Built using natural materials, it blends into the scorched sand and earth landscape, all thatched roofs and wooden pergolas. This is a villa designed to make the most of the outdoors, so you'll find plenty of spaces to sit and take in everything around you. All six bedrooms have patio doors, to help you easily access the outside areas, and there is a large kitchen available to help you create memorable meals with friends. Of course, there's also a large pool to help you cool off when the warm weather gets to be a little bit too much.

Sleeps: 12
Price: £1,373 per night

Rustic-Chic City Hideaway

City hideaway, Porto

Not all villas in Portugal are found alongside the beach or in the countryside. Porto is fast becoming one of the most in-demand areas of the country, and it's not hard to see why; history, excellent food and impressive views all come together to make the perfect weekend break. This property is perfectly located for you to make the most of everything available to you. With chic, homely designs and memorable finishing touches, it's ideal for two days or two weeks.

Sleeps: 2
Price: From £73 per night

Cozy 1850s Windmill

Windmill house, Caparica

One of Lisbon's best beaches, Caparica, is a wonderful place to stay if you want both a beach and city break; and where better to enjoy the views than in this quirky windmill? The wonderfully unique property is fully-furnished and entirely comfortable, with a sitting room, full kitchen, bedroom and bathroom – plus, of course, a wonderful view over to Lisbon from the outdoor terrace. There's even a pool available to use in the garden if you don't fancy making it to the beach.

Sleeps: 4
Price: From £79 per night

Mothership

Mothership, Setúbal

This breathtaking villa was designed by renowned architect Joao Pedro Falcao de Campos, and looks like a work of art. Nestled amongst the rice fields of Setúbal, the three bedroom, three bathroom property is as private as they come; just you, and five other guests of your choosing. Interiors are chic and simple to match the outside; think white walls and decor, with wooden accents. There's a large kitchen for hosting, and free-standing bathtubs sit alongside floor-to-ceiling windows to allow you to take in the sunset as you relax.

Sleeps: 6
Price: From £6,686 for 7 nights

Campo De Arroz, Comporta

Campo de Arroz, Comporta

Comporta, a wild stretch of Atlantic coast, an hour and a half south of Lisbon, spent generations unnoticed before being snapped up by Portugal’s most powerful banking clan, which ensured strict rules for anyone intending to build a house here. These days, a select band of architects are finding inspiration in the area’s unusual scenery – storks nest on every other telephone pylon – and the homespun vernacular of whitewashed fishermen’s huts and horizontal-striped, woven-reed exteriors topped with palm-frond roofs. Regulars will tell you that the best way to experience Comporta is to rent a house. And this one, a family-friendly project that sleeps 10, makes the most of its views over rice fields that flick from water-logged to luminous green as the seasons change. From the stripped-down main bedroom, which has poured-concrete floors, wooden ladders and shaggy, palm-fibre lampshades, there’s a view of the sunrise over the fields, punctuated only by the orange trees in the garden. Outside is a huge barbecue with a pergola-sheltered table, and a swimming pool to leap into. The other way, the dense forest backdrop is filled with umbrella pines and gnarled cork trees. Without this place’s sandy, wooden decking, it would be easy to forget it’s so close to the beach. But just behind the treeline are miles of unspoilt caster-sugar dunes.

Sleeps: 9
Price: From about £771 for 3 nights

Casa do Pego

Casa Do Pego, Comporta

Tapping into the barefoot, salty-haired vibe of Portugal’s coolest holiday destination used to be an exercise in knowing the right people. The best beach shacks were privately owned, and only for friends of friends. Now though, in addition to a number of new hotel openings, the top spots can be infiltrated. This low-slung six-bedroom villa, right behind the high dunes of Pêgo beach in Comporta, is as close as you can get to having your toes in the water. Olive groves and wild pines surround three separate cabanas – ideal for giving grandparents or older siblings a bit of space – that are linked by sandy pathways; there’s no need to bring shoes. Inside, floors are smooth polished concrete and sun-bleached driftwood informs the styling. And while the kitchen is fully kitted out, the house is within walking distance of the gorgeous Sal Beach Club, to which the whole family can decamp for long lunches.

Sleeps: 6
Price: From about £423 a night

Baixa House

Baixa House, Lisbon

Jesús Moraime, Baixa House's owner, and manager María Ulecia may be Spanish but they have both fallen in love with Lisbon and are committed to sourcing all sorts of Portuguese products for the interiors of these 13 crashpads, from the linen sheets to the wonderful Alvarez Gómez shower gels (stock up while you're here or buy them from Cologne and Cotton in the UK). The whole place is done with incredible taste and eclectic styling; it's full of market finds, with pottery plates on the walls, bedside lights set on stepladders and flashes of colour against the painted white backdrop. The look is a fresh take on mid-century modern, with Ercol-esque furniture alongside Seventies standing lamps, and G-Plan sideboards paired with canvas butterfly and wicker Acapulco chairs. Retro record covers are framed on the walls beside pretty botanical prints. Kitchens are stocked with gorgeous green cabbage-leaf-patterned espresso cups and cereal bowls, proper coffee machines with freshly ground beans in a jar, daily deliveries of fruit, milk, yogurts and a cake for tea time. Just-baked bread (seeded and sourdough) arrives still warm in a muslin sack that's hung on the door handle at the crack of dawn each morning. Everything here is thoughtfully done and couldn't be further from a cookie-cutter sensibility. Rooms are often let long-term to artists, writers and poets, and there's a feeling of being in a creative hub. But that's not to say this place isn't smart, too - the cool marble bathroom floors are warmed with underfloor heating.

Sleeps: 2
Price: From about £120 per night (two-night minimum stay)

ANA ANA, PORTIMÃO, ALGARVE

Ana Ana, Portimão, Algarve

Ana Ana – ‘I am’ in Arabic – is the house-atelier of artist Eric de Bruijn, whose creative eye has helped him restore and refashion what was once a boat-repair factory, as is evidenced by the hooks that still protrude from the ceiling. In its very sleek current incarnation it offers a vast open-plan ground floor where a sitting room abuts a kitchen, both decorated with de Bruijn’s lyrical, abstract art work, some of his furniture designs and a tangible sense of stillness. Outside cactuses pressed against a pink wall cast shadows onto the lap pool, while upstairs a roof terrace comes with sunbeds, a barbecue and a shaded dining table. Five bedrooms are kitted out with thick mattresses on wooden floors and roomy dressing rooms and there are bathrooms to share. For those who want to be in a town rather than by the beach and who appreciate design details, this will tick all the boxes.

Sleeps: 10 (or 12, plus £100 per night, if studio is included)
Price: From about £345 a night

Villa Pedra, Coimbra

Villa Pedra, Coimbra

Arriving here, after winding upwards on narrow roads that cut through wildflower meadows, is like stumbling onto a Merchant Ivory film set, so perfectly formed is the stone hamlet lost in the hills of Serra de Sicó. When the car stops, silence falls, broken only by the whistle of the wind and the distant honking of geese. Victor Mineiro, the architect of these seven fantastically renovated cottages and adjoining restaurant (local olives and wine, tremendous coriander poached fish), will appear, all smiles and warmth, with Jack Russells Olivia and Jackie at his heels. He brims with enthusiasm for a project he has spent more than a decade working on, since he and partner Manuel Casal decided to breathe new life into the abandoned village. Gardens are lush and filled with blossom; tiny wild irises, deep purple, have taken root under olive branches. There is a swimming pool and a set of yellow chairs in the shade of a medlar tree. But it is not just picture-postcard prettiness, there is also soul within these old limestone walls. Inside the little ochre- coloured houses, sunlight floods across highly polished stone floors. Portuguese porcelain, old and new, and Mineiro's eclectic artwork sit side by side in the sitting rooms; mid-century furniture and ancient Berber rugs create a lived-in charm. Kitchens have juicers to squeeze the fresh oranges provided, the fridge is stocked with farmyard eggs and Rabaçal, possibly Portugal's best cheese, which comes from the goats that you occasionally hear bleating across the hills, and every morning warm bread, baked in a wood-fired oven at dawn, is hung in a cloth bag on your front door. Why come here? Gather your favourite people and rent all the houses: it's a brilliant take-the-whole-place set-up.

Price: Two-bedroom cottage from about £180 per night

Monte Palmeira

Monte Da Palmeira, Sao Bras de Alportel, Algarve

Be warned, you will fall under the spell of this house, for charm curls around it like the tendrils of the wisteria that hangs heavy above the shaded dining table. It is an old farmhouse, restored with love by current owner Antonia, who has carefully sourced Portuguese antiques to set against the sun-dappled white interiors, creating a real sense of place. Sloping ceilings are lined with reeds in the traditional Algarvian way and painted white; floors of ancient tiles are cool underfoot. Wrought-iron beds come swathed in muslin mosquito nets; bathrooms are in dusty-pink Portuguese marble; and bedrooms have little terraces perfect for that first cup of coffee as the sun rises. Outside, through a garden of lemon, orange, olive and fig trees, a pool awaits, and bordering it is a one-bedroom cottage, perfect for noisy teenagers. Unspoilt countryside stretches all around you and in the distance you can see the sea.

Sleeps: 9
Price: From about £662 per night

Casa Da VoltaALEXANDRE RAMOS

Casa Da Volta, Grandola, Alentejo

Designed by acclaimed Lisbon-based Promontório architects, Casa da Volta reimagines the ancient Portuguese practice of fortification, creating a gravelled inner courtyard onto which all rooms in the house open. Here faded pitchers and sharp cacti cast silhouettes against the whitewashed walls under a beating sun. Here too, under a leaning tree at a large table, is where António from caterers Twopack Kitchen might serve his grilled prawns, dusted with spices, straight from the barbecue. Walk through the superbly equipped kitchen, or the sitting room decorated with tribal headdresses and ceremonial weapons, out to the swimming pool. Olive trees and wildflowers stretch as far as you can see; sunbeds border one side of the pool, deckchairs (with inbuilt pillows) line up in the shade of the house. ‘Da Volta’ means to return and that, for sure, you will want to do.

Sleeps: 12
Price: From about £838 a night

Casa UmFrancisco Nogueira

Casa Um, Tavira, Algarve

In the tranquil eastern Algarve, amid meadows scattered with wildflowers, an old shepherd’s house has been reimagined as a holiday home with four bedrooms, contemporary in style, tucked into the slope of the land beneath it. The main house offers a sitting room, with log burner for winter evenings, a dining room and a kitchen with a wine fridge – filled with enticing Portuguese bottles by the wine-merchant owner. There is a little terrace off the house on one side, allowing meals in the shade of the latticed Algarvian chimney. On the roof is a swimming pool, overlooking the gardens of lavender and carob trees. A concierge, Mario, will organise your life – book restaurants, arrange cooks for special dinners, scoop up laundry – allowing you to lie back and listen to the cicadas.

Sleeps: 8
Price: From about £1,412 per week

Casa da Música

Casa Da Musica, Boliqueime, Algarve

This is an ideal base for families with children: teenagers will be kept happy by the snooker and table tennis in the games room, toddlers by the dedicated children’s swimming pool. Sleeping 14 in seven bedrooms, the villa sits on vast, lush lawns and has sweeping views over the countryside to the sea. It’s one of a cluster of villas owned by rental company Shantivillas near Boliqueime, a pretty, unspoilt, whitewashed village built around a church where locals still gather for coffee under the jacaranda tree. Casa da Musica embraces the music theme with gusto, with bedrooms named Do, Re and Mi and keyboards among the contemporary furniture. There are two sitting rooms, one with a television, allowing children and adults to each do their own thing – the key to a happy holiday.

Sleeps: 14
Price: From about £7,229 per week

VerandaSanda Vuckovic

Casa Na

This subterranean lair in Portugal's Alentejo is a double-take hideaway that emerges from the remote landscape. This part of the country, which borders the Spanish deserts of Extremadura, is famed for its fortress towns and pretty villages of white-and-cobalt cottages. But Casa na Terra conforms to no vernacular. A bunker, almost buried in the ground and barely visible even from up close, it is an alien structure in this land. The building looks like nothing ever seen before: hyper-man-made yet totally in sync with the surroundings. Its spaces are part of the terrain – very little emerges. As you approach, the green roof looks as if it’s another natural slope, only the white circular courtyards that act as light wells mark out that this is an artificial construction. From beside the lake, you occasionally glimpse the dome of the terrace – the focal point – but it looks elemental, forgotten, a thing that has been here forever. Inside, minimalist concrete-and-wood interiors and three sparsely fitted-out bedrooms are embraced by the heaviness of the earth. Being hidden away like this provides a sense of protection. See the full review of Casa na Terra.

Sleeps: Up to 6
Price: £315 per night for two and about £45 per additional person (minimum stay three nights)

Villa Pedra, Coimbra

Villa Pedra, Coimbra

Arriving here, after winding upwards on narrow roads that cut through wildflower meadows, is like stumbling onto a Merchant Ivory film set, so perfectly formed is the stone hamlet lost in the hills of Serra de Sicó. When the car stops, silence falls, broken only by the whistle of the wind and the distant honking of geese. Victor Mineiro, the architect of these seven fantastically renovated cottages and adjoining restaurant (local olives and wine, tremendous coriander poached fish), will appear, all smiles and warmth, with Jack Russells Olivia and Jackie at his heels. He brims with enthusiasm for a project he has spent more than a decade working on, since he and partner Manuel Casal decided to breathe new life into the abandoned village. Gardens are lush and filled with blossom; tiny wild irises, deep purple, have taken root under olive branches. There is a swimming pool and a set of yellow chairs in the shade of a medlar tree. But it is not just picture-postcard prettiness, there is also soul within these old limestone walls. Inside the little ochre- coloured houses, sunlight floods across highly polished stone floors. Portuguese porcelain, old and new, and Mineiro's eclectic artwork sit side by side in the sitting rooms; mid-century furniture and ancient Berber rugs create a lived-in charm. Kitchens have juicers to squeeze the fresh oranges provided, the fridge is stocked with farmyard eggs and Rabaçal, possibly Portugal's best cheese, which comes from the goats that you occasionally hear bleating across the hills, and every morning warm bread, baked in a wood-fired oven at dawn, is hung in a cloth bag on your front door. Why come here? Gather your favourite people and rent all the houses: it's a brilliant take-the-whole-place set-up.

Price: Two-bedroom cottage from about £180 per night