
Collection
MOLISE — APPENNINES & THE ADRIATIC
Agnone · Larino · Sepino · Frosolone · Campomarino, Molise
“The least-known region in Italy — tiny stone borghi inland, a short Adriatic coast, and the country’s lowest entry prices inside the 7% zone.”
About this region
A closer look
Molise is the smallest mainland region in Italy and the one most outsiders couldn’t place on a map. That obscurity is the point: with the exception of Campobasso and Isernia, every comune in the region sits under the 30,000-inhabitant ceiling of Art. 24-ter, which makes Molise the most generously eligible territory in the entire 7% regime.
The interior is Appennine borgo country — Agnone (bell foundries since the 14th century), Larino (Roman amphitheatre still in use), Sepino (an entire Roman town walkable end to end), Frosolone (knife-making since the 1500s). The short Adriatic coastline picks up around Campomarino, Petacciato, and Montenero di Bisaccia.
Inventory is rural and stock is deep: stone case in the centro storico from €30–€60k restored, casali with land in the rolling Appennine hills, small detached homes within sight of the Adriatic. Rome is under three hours by car; Naples and Pescara airports both serve the region.




Why this collection
The case for the region
- 01Eligible under Art. 24-ter (7% flat tax for up to 10 years)
- 02Interior towns: Agnone, Larino, Sepino, Frosolone, Bojano, Capracotta
- 03Coastal towns: Campomarino, Petacciato, Montenero di Bisaccia
- 04Lowest per-m² entry prices of any 7% region
- 05Rome (FCO) reachable in under 3 hours by car
- 06Two airports within ~1 hour (Pescara, Naples)
- 07Adriatic and Appennine landscapes both inside one region
- 08Italy’s last truly under-the-radar territory
A short list of properties is being curated for this collection. Reach out to be notified before the public release.
Towns in scope
- Agnone
- Larino
- Sepino
- Frosolone
- Campomarino
Every town listed sits below the 30,000-inhabitant ceiling of Italy’s Art. 24-ter flat-tax regime. Adjacent municipalities can be added on request once a brief is defined.