Move to Tuscany and unlock up to €20,000 in incentives for buying or renting a home in this authentic Italian hilltop village.
get paid $23,000 to move to Tuscany
Sailko, CC BY 3.0 Creative commons

Picture a medieval Tuscan hill village where the council helps pay for your move—up to €20,000 towards buying a home. Olive groves, proper trattorie and a calmer rhythm without big‑city aggro. If you’re ready to put down roots, the incentives make the numbers add up, and the community gives you something to be part of.

Get paid to live in Radicondoli, Tuscany

Radicondoli’s relocation scheme, WivoaRadicondoli, is designed to bring people back into long‑empty homes. Buyers can receive up to €20,000 to help purchase a property. Plus, you can get another €6,000 to ease everyday costs such as heating and transport. Renters are included too, with 50% of the first two years’ rent covered, and the current window runs through early 

The town has set aside a sizeable pot to keep the plan moving. The mayor has flagged more than €400,000 in 2025 for purchases, rentals and allied support. The message is that the houses have value, and the incentives are there to rebuild long‑term community life rather than quick flips.

move to Radicondoli
LigaDue, CC BY-SA 4.0 Creative commons

Housing in Radicondoli: prices, rent support and what homes look like

Stock ranges from one‑bedroom apartments in the historic centre to farmhouses on the edge of the village. Think exposed beams, thick stone walls and artisan brickwork. Around 100 of roughly 450 homes are empty, so there’s genuine choice. Smaller places often start near €50,000, with larger homes topping €100,000.

With the full €20,000 bonus, a simple apartment could land around €30,000. On the rental side, a 60–80 m² home that would usually be about €400 can drop to roughly €200 per month with the subsidy.

Life in a green Tuscan hill village

This is rural Tuscany with a cultural streak. Radicondoli has artisan workshops, guided walks through the old lanes and a calendar of local festivals and fairs. The countryside is made for trekking, cycling and horse‑riding. Foodwise, it’s hearty: Cinta Senese cured meats, the veggie stew ribollita, wild boar and porcini mushrooms are just a few local highlights. 

Day‑to‑day, you’re about 40 minutes from Siena and a bit over an hour from Florence. It’s quiet most of the year and busier in summer, when concerts pop up in the piazza. If you want even more peace, Belforte—ten minutes away—has cobbled alleys, a mini‑market, a couple of bars and restaurants, and the same postcard views.

Sustainable living in Radicondoli

Radicondoli taps local geothermal resources, which power the village and feed into a district heating network. For residents, that can mean steadier heating costs and fewer worries about winter fuel. The municipality offers help for homes not on the network, so you’re not left out if your place sits off the pipe. The Radicondoli Energy Museum, Le Energie del Territorio, explains how the system works and why this corner of Tuscany leaned into renewables early.

 
Moving to Radicondoli
LigaDue, CC BY-SA 4.0 Creative commons

Extra help for families, commuters and small businesses

The scheme doesn’t stop at housing. Families can access school book vouchers and university grants. Commuters get help with public transport to nearby towns. Energy incentives include support for heating and fuel aid if your home isn’t connected to the network. If you’re thinking in entrepreneurial terms, there are grants to open a new business or relaunch an existing one. Renovating a neglected place into a holiday rental attracts additional support, with loans and grants aimed at getting empty properties lived in again.

Progress so far and who it’s for

The initiative kicked off in 2023 as an attempt to repopulate the rural area. Since then, the town has funded 23 property sales and welcomed around 60 new residents, mostly Italians with a sprinkle of other Europeans. The Radicondoli population now sits near 966, and the target is to push back over 1,000. 

Radicondoli real estate
Unsplash
 

Living in Radicondoli suits someone who wants space, clean air and a solid neighbourhood rhythm. Expect fewer services than in a city, slower admin and the need for at least some Italian. The upside is the room to breathe and a community that actually notices new faces, all while being paid

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