Living in Sardinia

Buy to Enjoy: How a Home in Sardinia Works for You — On Two Timelines

08/05/2026
Edil Costa Sarda
There is a question we hear often, in different accents, in different rooms.

“How does this actually work?”

It comes from the German engineer who has been visiting Sardinia for fifteen summers. From the American doctor approaching retirement. From the Swiss couple who first came on a sailing trip and never quite left.

It’s a fair question. It deserves an honest answer.

Here’s ours.

A home in Sardinia, well chosen, does two things at the same time.

It gives you a quieter life when you’re here. And it grows in value when you’re not. Most of the families we work with come for the first reason and stay because of the second. We think it’s worth explaining both.

A place to disappear

Most of the couples who buy from us aren’t looking for another house. They have houses. They’re looking for a place that lets them step out of their own life for a while.

The American executive who hasn’t taken three weeks in a row in twenty years. The German consultant whose phone rings in three time zones. The Swiss banker who already owns a chalet but wants somewhere the chalet doesn’t reach.

What they’re after is space — not square metres, but distance. From the people who always need something. From the calendar. From the version of themselves they have to be, most of the year, somewhere else.

Sardinia gives them that. Especially the parts of Sardinia we build in: the eastern coast, far enough from the headlines and the international circuits that the rhythm of the place has stayed its own. Mornings are slow. Lunches are long. Evenings end on a terrace, not in a restaurant queue.

This is the first timeline. The one most people start with.

What happens when you’re not there

But for most of the families we work with, they’re not in Sardinia all year. They have lives elsewhere — jobs, partners, friends, routines that won’t move. They come for weeks, sometimes months, and the rest of the year the home is theirs in a different way.

This is the part most people don’t think about until after they have bought. And it is exactly the part we have spent twenty-eight years solving.

We are builders. We have been building on this coast since 1998. But over the years, we noticed something simple: the families who bought from us would call, months after the keys had been handed over, with the same kinds of questions.

“The boiler isn’t working — who do we call?”
“There’s a leak after the storm. Can someone go and check?”
“We’re arriving Friday. Could the fridge be stocked?”


So we built a service for it. We call it the ECS Concierge.

When you’re here

The home is ready. The cleaning is done. The garden is in order. The fridge has the basics — bread, fruit, water, the local wine you mentioned last time. The heating is on in winter. The cool air is on in August.

You arrive, and you are home. Eva often describes it like “arriving at your aunt’s house, where someone has been waiting for you.”

When you’re not

We take care of the house the way we would take care of our own.

Routine maintenance. The garden through the seasons. The boiler before winter. Insurance renewals. Local taxes. The relationship with the comune. The utility bills.

And, if you want, the short-term rentals.

Some of our owners rent their homes during the peak weeks of summer. Others don’t — they prefer the privacy. We do not push either way. But for those who choose to, we manage the rentals end-to-end: photography, listing, pricing, guests, check-in, check-out, cleaning between stays, the conversation with the local authorities, the paperwork.

One number. One team. The same people who built your home.

The financial side, said plainly

This is where we depart from how most real estate in Italy is sold. We are not going to promise you double-digit yields. We are also not going to pretend the financial side doesn’t matter.

It matters. It’s part of why people buy. So we’ll just be straight about it.

In a well-managed year, the homes we manage typically generate around 6% on top of their annual running costs. That figure isn’t a promise — it depends on the home, its location, the season, the choices the owner makes about how often they rent. But it’s the number we see most often, after almost three decades and dozens of homes managed.

In other words: in most years, the home pays for itself, and earns a little.

That’s the operating side. The more interesting story is somewhere else.

Why a home in Sardinia grows in value

There are three structural reasons a well-built home on the Sardinian coast holds and grows in value over time.

The coast is protected by law. Sardinia’s regional planning regulations — the Piano Paesaggistico Regionale — are among the strictest in Italy. New construction along the coastline is tightly limited. What is built today is, in effect, what will be there in twenty years. Supply does not expand.

New construction itself appreciates immediately. When you buy a new home from us, you are buying at the cost of construction plus a builder’s margin. The market, however, prices coastal Sardinian homes on scarcity, location, and finish. The arithmetic of those two facts is straightforward: a new ECS home, on the day you receive the keys, is in most cases already worth more than what you paid for it. We don’t say this in a brochure. We say it because we’ve watched it happen, home after home, for twenty-eight years.

International demand is growing. Direct flights, remote work, the slow-living movement, the rediscovery of Italian living among American and northern European buyers — all of this is bringing new demand to a coast where supply is structurally limited. Quietly, year after year. Not the speculative wave that hits a region for two seasons and disappears. The slow, steady kind that compounds.

We are not making predictions. We are describing what we have seen, on the ground, for almost three decades.

A home on this coast appreciates because the coast itself is protected. That is the whole sentence.

Why this only works with the builder

There is a structural reason the ECS Concierge works differently from most property management services in Italy.

We are not agents. We are the builders.

The home you buy from us was designed by us. Built by us. The people who lay the tiles, install the kitchen, plaster the walls — we know them by name, because they work for us.

So when something needs attention, six months or six years after you have moved in, the conversation is not with a third party. It is with the people who built it. They remember the house. They have the drawings. They know which valve, which pipe, which choice was made in which room.

This is not a service we sell. It is the natural continuation of building.

The result, for the owners we work with, is a kind of peace that is hard to find elsewhere in Italy.

Buy to Enjoy

We have a name for all of this.

We call it Buy to Enjoy.

It means a home you buy because you want to live in it — for the weeks each year you want to disappear from your own life. A home that pays for itself when you’re not there. And a home that grows in value, quietly, on a coast Italy protects by law.

Three things, in the same place.

That’s what we mean when we say a home in Sardinia works on two timelines.

A quiet invitation

If this resonates with you, we would be glad to talk.

Not a sales call. A conversation. About the coast, about your life, about what kind of home would actually fit.

We build here. And we stay here.

Edil Costa Sarda — Sardinia, Italy