Brick cottages along the fairways · Homes under the longleaf pines · Horse farms on sandy lanes · In-town houses near the village(555) 692-0148 · hello@example.com
Carolina Sandhills Real Estate

Find your place
where the pines run to the fairway.

A brick cottage a short cart ride from the first tee, a home tucked under the longleaf where the needles soften every footstep, a horse farm on a sandy lane with white fence and room to ride, or an in-town house a walk from the village shops, shown to you by people who grew up under these pines, know which streets the late light pours through, and can tell you where the soil drains fast and where a low spot holds water after a hard rain.

On the FairwayUnder the PinesHorse FarmWalk to the VillageUnder $500k
8
Sandhills villages and pine communities we know course by course, lane by lane, and street by street
Both
The homes in the village close to the shops and the courses and the wide farms out where the pines open to pasture
Local
We were raised out here, on the same fairways, riding trails, and pine streets as the families we help find a place to land
520+
Families we have helped settle into a cottage in the village or a farm on the land out in the Sandhills they now call home
On the market

Homes built for soft pine light, slow mornings, and a walk to the first tee.

A few of the places this stretch of the Sandhills is known for, with fresh listings every week.

On the Fairway
Pinehaven Lane

The Brick Golf Cottage

$629,000
3 Bed2 BathSteps to the Course
Under the Pines
Longneedle Road

The Cottage in the Longleaf

$438,000
3 Bed2 BathScreened Porch
On the Land
Sandy Run Lane

The Horse Farm on Pine Acreage

$845,000
4 Bed3 Bath12 Acres
Why people put down roots out here

More than a house. A life lived close to the pines, the courses, and the quiet white-fence lanes.

01

The seasons stay gentle out here

A mild green winter when you can still play a round and ride in the morning, a long dogwood spring when the longleaf throws fresh candles, a warm pine-shaded summer of porch evenings and cart paths, and a soft gold fall when the light slants low through the trunks. We help you find the place that fits the life you actually want, a cottage in the village or a farm out on the land.

02

You learn the villages side by side

Which streets sit close to the courses and the shops, which neighborhoods have the quiet riding lanes, where the good school lines fall, how the village water and the country wells differ, and which farms have the sandy footing horse people want and which sit low and stay wet. We walk you through the real feel of each village and back road before you ever choose.

03

Straight about land, water, and soil

What a well, a septic, and a shared lane really ask of you out past the village, how the sandy Sandhills soil drains and where a low spot holds water, what a barn, a paddock, and good fence add up to on a horse farm, and which repairs can wait a season. We give you the honest country math up front, not after you have the keys.

The villages

Where you'll want to put down roots.

Each village out here has its own feel. Here are the ones people fall for.

Pinehaven

The village with a real walkable center, brick cottages on shaded streets, a course at the edge of town, and a bakery and a bookshop a walk from the porch

Longneedle

Deeper into the pines, cottages on quiet lanes and homes along the cart paths, a general store and a riding stable nearby, and that soft needle hush everywhere

Sandy Run

Out where the pines open to pasture, horse farms and acreage on sandy lanes, room for a barn, a paddock, and a porch facing the long pine line
New to the Sandhills

Moving out to the pines is its own kind of move.

A lot of our buyers are trading a crowded block and a long commute for a village where the kids can ride bikes to the bakery, a brick cottage a cart ride from the first tee, or a few sandy acres out where they can finally keep horses, a barn, and a long pine view, so we slow down and walk you through how a Sandhills property really lives across a full year, a warm porch evening and a gray January round alike.

How a home in the village and a farm out on the land hold up, what a well, a septic, and a shared lane ask of you if you buy acreage, how the sandy soil drains and where the wet spots sit, and what a barn, fence, and good footing mean for keeping horses. Real answers before you commit, not after your first season out here.

Start With a Local Guide
Come walk a pine street with us

The next chapter starts in the Sandhills.

Tell us what you picture, a cottage a walk from the village, a home along the fairway, or a horse farm on a sandy lane, and we will send you the places worth a look.

Plan a Visit
Library · Longleaf & Links (Carolina Sandhills)