You have 1 free trial analysis. · Register for free to unlock more full reports.Register
1 March 2026 · trullo

Buying a trullo in Salento: 2026 guide to constraints, compliance and real bargains

How much does a trullo really cost in Apulia in 2026? Landscape constraints, planning compliance, real discounts and the 5 traps to avoid before signing the preliminary contract.

Redazione Deal Rating9 mintrullo · vincoli · guida-acquisto

The trullo is Southern Italy's real-estate dream: conical chiancarelle roof, dry-stone limestone walls, half a dozen square metres of romance per cone. Yet behind the postcard, buying a trullo is one of the most technical purchases you can make in Italy. Across Lecce, Brindisi, Taranto and the Valle d'Itria we have analysed hundreds of listings over the past 12 months: here is what we learned.

How much a trullo costs in 2026

Official OMI quotations (Italian Revenue Agency) classify the trullo within the 'typical historic' residential segment. The market averages we observe:

AreaAvg €/m²Notes
Cisternino, Locorotondo, Alberobello centre2,000 — 2,800Tourist hotspots, inflated prices
Ceglie Messapica, Ostuni countryside1,200 — 1,800Best value-for-money
Martina Franca, Carovigno1,000 — 1,400Good compromise, infrastructure
Isolated trulli with land (1+ ha)From 60,000 to 250,000The land matters more than the building

The 5 most frequent traps

1. Building abuses disguised as 'to renovate'

Many trulli were extended in the '70s-'90s — verandas, tufa-stone additions, sunken pools — never legalised. The listing says 'to renovate' but underneath there is no agibilità (habitability certificate). Always request the agibilità + cadastral records + original building permit.

2. Landscape constraint under art. 142 D.Lgs. 42/2004

Almost the entire Salento countryside falls under landscape protection: monumental olive trees, 300m coastal strip, nature parks, archaeological sites. Every intervention (even rebuilding a dry-stone wall) requires landscape authorisation. Timing: 90-180 days if you are lucky.

3. Non-drivable access road

Many isolated trulli are reached only by a footpath or a right-of-way over someone else's land. Always verify a public or properly-registered private road exists. A poorly-documented easement can block the final agibilità.

4. Missing or non-compliant well / cistern

In the countryside running water only reaches serviced hamlets. Otherwise: artesian well (Apulia Region authorised?) or buried cistern. An unsealed cistern is worth zero today and remediation costs €4,000-8,000.

5. Wrong cadastral category

You'll find trulli registered as 'C/2 — warehouse' or 'F/2 — collapsing'. To use them as a home you need a change to A/3 / A/4 plus full hygiene & sanitation requirements. Budget 3-8 months of paperwork + €2,500 surveyor fees.

When a trullo is truly a bargain

On our scoring system, a trullo qualifies as BARGAIN when:

  • Asking price 20%+ below the OMI benchmark for the area
  • Cadastral category already residential (A/3, A/4) with agibilità certificate
  • No archaeological or hydrogeological constraint overlapping the lot
  • Documented well or water connection
  • Direct drivable access from a public road
"A €80,000 trullo that becomes €140,000 after works, renovation bonus and amnesty is a fair deal. The same trullo at a €120,000 starting price is a trap."
Evaluating a specific trullo?
Analyse the listing for free
Quick start

Paste a listing link

Copy the URL of any real-estate listing you found online and paste it here. You'll get a full report: deal score, rental yield estimate, regulatory risks.