You can buy a home in Italy for less than $5

A rural town in southern Italy is hoping some cheap real estate will entice a few summer tourists to cancel their return flights.

Driving the news: The village of Sambuca di Sicilia is auctioning off 12 houses with prices starting at just €3. It’s the third time the village has put homes on the market for unbelievably low prices in an effort to convince more people to live in the remote area.

  • In what would make a great premise for an HGTV show, buyers are also required to renovate the homes within three years, costing anywhere from €30,000 to €200,000.

Catch-up: Sambuca first listed homes for sale for €1 in 2019 and then again for €2 in 2021 in an effort to replace some of the residents who had left for bigger cities. The fire sales were a hit with foreign buyers, with most of the 250 homes sold between €5,000 and €10,000.

  • The two previous sales gave the local economy a €20 million boost, resurrecting the real estate sector and attracting new businesses to the once-empty village.

Why it matters: It’s not just Sicilian villas being listed for the price of a gelato. Rural areas in Japan, the US city of Baltimore, and even the town of Cochrane, Ontario, have all made properties available for dirt-cheap or given them away to attract newcomers.


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