Last updated on · ⓘ How we make our designs
Check out our country beach house designs that use smart porches, raised floors, and small details to turn coastal country cottages into personal retreats.
These beach houses are all about easy coastal living, just tuned a bit differently each time. Some rise up like slim towers over the shoreline, others stay low and snug by the dunes, but every one tries to make the porch feel like the real living room.
Inspiration came from Southern beach towns, classic Lowcountry cottages, a few sun-faded stilt houses and even laid-back Mediterranean villas that somehow packed a suitcase and moved to the coast.
You will spot familiar forms like gables, cupolas and wraparound decks, just cleaned up with fresh siding, calm colors and details that quietly handle storms and sandy feet.
As you check through these designs, pay attention to how the raised floors hide cars and storage, how stairs turn into little grand entrances, and how porches chase breezes on every side. Notice the small things too, like mint roofs, aqua shutters, chunky chimneys and soft pathways that make each place feel like it has its own beach personality, even before you reach the door.
Modern Coastal Tower With Pool Terrace

This coastal retreat stacks living spaces vertically, almost like a slim little tower keeping watch over the shoreline. We wrapped it in wide porches and glassy corners so every floor gets a generous slice of the view and an easy breeze.
The elevated pool terrace sits above the garage level, which keeps cars tucked away and leaves the sunny side open for lounging and outdoor dining. Clean siding lines, a crisp metal roof and simple railings keep the whole place feeling fresh and uncluttered, inspired by classic stilt houses but with a more polished beach resort vibe.
Shingle Cottage By The Dunes

Weathered cedar shingles, a chunky stone chimney and that crisp metal roof all work together to feel like the house has lived happily by the sand for years. Tall windows and French doors open the rooms to the porch, so mornings can move straight from coffee cup to ocean view with almost no effort, which we think should be a building code.
The wraparound deck is wide enough for a row of Adirondack chairs and still leaves room to wander, which is kind of the whole point of being at the coast. Soft tones in the siding and trim were chosen to blend into the dune grass, so the house feels tucked in rather than shouting for attention.
Grand Veranda Retreat By The Shore

This coastal home stacks generous porches on every level, so you can chase the breeze without ever leaving your coffee cup behind. We wrapped the façade in warm gray shingles and crisp white trim to keep it relaxed and quietly upscale, kind of like beachwear that actually fits.
The tall gables, dormers, and big chimney give the house a confident profile while still feeling friendly from the sandy path. Arched openings on the ground floor and wide railings above tie everything together, creating a series of outdoor rooms that make the house feel bigger than its footprint and pull daily life out toward the dunes.
Sunny Sandfront Cottage With Cozy Porch

This little retreat leans into simple coastal charm, with board and batten siding and a warm wood door that feels like an instant welcome. Soft beige shutters, that slightly weathered shingle roof, and the snug dormer window all work together to make it feel both fresh and a bit nostalgic at the same time.
We tucked a tiny porch under the main gable so you get just enough shelter for wicker chairs and a slow cup of coffee while you watch the dunes. The sandy path lined with grasses and hydrangeas keeps maintenance low but still frames the entrance nicely, so the cottage feels cared for without trying too hard.
Elevated Marshfront Cottage With Grand Walkway

The raised cottage borrows its calm attitude from classic Southern beach towns, with the grand front stair giving you that little “ta‑da” moment every time you come home. Soft gray shingles, crisp white siding and a simple metal roof keep everything clean and breezy, like the house decided to dress in its favorite summer outfit.
We pulled the main level up to capture marsh views and tuck parking and storage neatly underneath, which also keeps everything safer when the tide gets a bit too friendly. Symmetrical gables, deep overhangs and the small porch with X‑rail details create a welcoming face, while the brick drive and round lawn soften the formality so it feels relaxed enough for sandy feet and flip‑flops.
Seaside Stairway Cottage With Twin Garages

The tall central stair pulling you up to the double front doors sets a charming, almost storybook tone, which fits perfectly with the soft siding colors and neat shingle detailing on the upper level. We designed the twin garages and raised main floor to handle coastal weather while still keeping everything looking clean and tailored rather than bulky.
A wide porch stretches across the front with crisp rail patterns that feel a bit nautical, almost like you are already on the boardwalk before you leave the house. The metal roof, symmetrical windows and simple trim keep maintenance easy and give the whole place a calm, breezy vibe, which is exactly what you want when flip‑flops are your primary mode of transportation.
Porchfront Lowcountry Cottage With Metal Roof

This design leans into classic Southern porch life, with a wide front stair that feels like it is inviting you up for iced tea. The tall dormer windows pop out of the metal roof, giving the upstairs plenty of headroom and just a little touch of storybook charm.
We pulled in delicate trim along the porch and sturdy square columns so the house feels both graceful and grounded, not fussy. The brick walkway, lush plantings and paired planters at the door guide you in a gentle straight line, making the entry feel important without trying too hard.
Mint-Roof Cottage Overlooking Quiet Waves

This design leans into that easygoing coastal vibe with a mint green roof that instantly feels breezy and relaxed. We wrapped the main level in a deep porch so there is always a shady spot to sit, no matter where the sun is wandering.
The house is lifted on sturdy piers, which keeps the living spaces safely above storms and leaves room underneath for cars and even a little boat, because why not. Clean white railings, simple columns, and soft shingle siding keep everything calm and tidy, letting the ocean and the bright landscaping do the showing off.
Soft Sandside Cottage With Wraparound Porch

This beach house leans into a calm, sandy palette, with soft stucco walls and pale wood trim that almost feel like they were lifted right from the dunes. Wide French doors and tall windows keep the front relaxed and inviting, while the simple gabled roof keeps everything feeling familiar and homey.
We wrapped the porch around the main living areas so you can wander from coffee spot to sunset seat without ever touching your shoes, which feels like a small everyday luxury. Shuttered windows, chunky porch columns, and the weathered boardwalk-style path all nod to traditional coastal cottages, yet the crisp lines keep it from slipping into grandma’s old beach camp.
Seaside Welcome Cottage With Arched Entry

This design leans into that feeling of walking up to a friend’s beach place and knowing you’re about to stay too long on purpose. The soft cream siding, tall gridded windows, and warm oak entry are all meant to feel calm and familiar, a little like a classic farmhouse that wandered down to the shore and decided to stay.
We pulled the deep covered porch and broad front steps right up to the dunes so the house feels stitched into the landscape, not just parked beside it. The standing seam metal roof, raised foundation, and low-maintenance coastal plantings keep everything practical for salty air and storms, while the generous glass and gentle curves of the entry turn everyday comings and goings into a tiny ritual.
Stonefront Beach Villa With Skyline Views

This place leans into a crisp mix of warm stone on the first level and clean white siding above, so it feels both relaxed and nicely put together. Large black framed windows pull your eye straight through the house to the water, which is really the whole point of being here anyway.
We wrapped both levels with generous outdoor seating areas, from the sheltered lower patio to the upper balcony that feels a bit like a front row seat to the sea. The long boardwalk entry and clipped hedges frame the house like a quiet green runway, guiding guests in and giving the whole design a calm, finished look.
Stilted Porch House Among Coastal Trees

This design leans into that easygoing coastal feel with crisp white siding, tall windows and porches stacked like a double decker living room. The raised foundation keeps everything safe from high water while giving the front stairway its little moment of glory.
We played up the railings with simple cross patterns and warm wood treads so it feels welcoming before you even reach the door. Generous windows on every side pull in breezes and views, which means the house pretty much insists you slow down and enjoy where you are.
Creamy Gable Cottage With Porch Swing

This little cottage leans into a clean vertical siding that stretches the walls upward and makes the compact footprint feel taller and a bit playful. The soft cream paint with crisp white trim calms everything down, so the gable roof and dormer can give character without yelling for attention.
We tucked a cozy porch under a simple shed roof that feels almost like an outdoor foyer, with the hanging chair and potted greens doing most of the charming. The generous steps and wide front door make arriving feel easy, while the neatly framed windows pull in views of the yard and keep the interior bright and relaxed.
Double-Porch Lowcountry Escape With Shutters

Tall and calm, this beach house leans on clean lines, big black-framed windows and those generous stacked porches that pretty much beg for a pitcher of iced tea. The wide brick stair and centered front doors create a friendly, almost ceremonial arrival that still feels relaxed and easygoing.
We played up the coastal vibe with soft blue shutters, a wood-lined porch ceiling, and slim cable railings that keep views open without feeling fussy. Rocking chairs, simple columns, and neatly layered landscaping finish the look, turning the front porch into a casual outdoor room that quietly steals the show.
Cupola Crown Cottage On Stilts

This design leans into that classic beach-house-on-stilts look, but cleans it up with really crisp lines and a calm gray and white palette. The broad front staircase feels a bit like a grand entrance, inviting you straight up into the heart of the house instead of sneaking around the side.
We added the cupola as a small architectural “hat” that gives the roofline character and suggests a breezy lookout above the main rooms. Around the perimeter, the deep porches and evenly spaced columns frame the views and also keep the main living level lifted well above the sand and spray, so it stays pretty and practical at the same time.
Harbor-Breeze Cottage With Sky-High Roof

This tall coastal home leans into classic charm with its crisp white siding, steep charcoal roof and those playful dormer windows that look a bit like raised eyebrows. The big front porch wraps the main level in a soft embrace, giving room for swings, plants and long chats that mysteriously stretch past dinner time.
Underneath, the brick base hides generous parking and storage while quietly lifting everything well above splashy storm days, which is both practical and oddly elegant. Soft seafoam shutters, potted greenery and simple white railings keep the look relaxed and unfussy, so the whole place feels like it dressed up just enough for company and then went straight back to vacation mode.
Coastal Gable Haven With Breezy Deck

This beach house leans into a soft coastal palette, with creamy siding, pale blue doors, and shutters that feel almost like sea glass pulled onto shore. The tall gables and dormers give it that storybook profile while big windows frame the dunes and water so you never really forget you are at the beach.
We wrapped the porch and pergola around the main living areas so mornings naturally spill outside and those deck chairs basically insist you sit down for “just one more minute.” Neatly clipped boxwoods in blue and white planters, layered with hydrangeas and grasses, keep the entrance relaxed but still a little dressed up, the way you’d show up to a nice dinner in flip flops and a good shirt.
Skyline Porch Cottage With Red Door

This design leans into that classic coastal look, with soft blue shingles and crisp white trim that feel calm before you even step inside. The stacked front porches give everyone a front-row seat to sea breezes and neighbor watching, in the nicest way of course.
We framed the bold red door to feel like a friendly exclamation mark, so the cottage has plenty of charm without trying too hard. The tidy picket fence, simple gables, and symmetrical windows keep everything feeling balanced and welcoming, which is exactly what we wanted for a relaxed beach town street.
Pastel Porch Cottage Facing Gentle Surf

This little cottage leans into a soft coastal palette with crisp white siding and minty shutters that feel like sea glass pulled straight from the shore. The steep gable roof in pale metal ties everything together and helps the whole place look neat and slightly proud without trying too hard.
Wide steps lead up to a porch that wraps just enough for morning coffee and neighborly gossip, framed by slim posts that keep the view nice and open. Big windows are lined up to pull the ocean straight through the living space, so even on a lazy day inside you still feel like you never really left the sand.
Boardwalk Bluff Cottage With White Cladding

Crisp board and batten siding gives the cottage that clean just-washed look that somehow fits the sea breeze better than any beach towel ever could. The tall gable roof and stacked windows pull your eye up and out toward the horizon, so even when you are grabbing coffee inside, it still feels like vacation mode is firmly on.
We wrapped the porch around the main living spaces so mornings can start on one side facing the dunes and end on the other watching the last glow over the water. Slim cable railings, chunky porch posts, and the low stone base keep everything feeling sturdy yet relaxed, a bit like a favorite pair of sandals that somehow works with every outfit.
Breezy Wraparound Cottage On Coastal Bluff

This cottage leans into a simple gabled form that feels almost like a childhood sketch, just refined and grown up. The wraparound porch drifts along three sides so you can chase shade or sun without moving more than a few steps.
Slim white posts and railings keep the structure feeling light while the raised foundation gives a bit of extra security from coastal weather and a better view of the dunes. We used soft siding tones and a crisp metal roof to keep it bright and low fuss, because nobody wants a high maintenance house when the water is calling.
Aqua Shutters Cottage On Coastal Stilts

This place takes the classic stilted beach house and gives it a bright, minty twist with bold blue shutters and door that feel almost like a postcard. The wide split staircase creates a welcoming moment, making the walk up feel a bit like entering your own small resort, even if you’re just hauling groceries.
We pulled the inspiration from old Lowcountry cottages, then cleaned it up with crisp white railings, neat lattice panels and tidy porch columns that keep everything looking fresh instead of fussy. The raised foundation protects from storms, but it also tucks in useful storage and parking underneath, so the upper level can stay all about views, breezes and those rocking chairs that everyone ends up fighting over.
Cedar Balcony Cottage Facing Green Lawn

This cottage leans into simple coastal charm, with warm cedar doors and railings that soften the crisp white siding and make it feel like a friendly neighbor rather than a showoff. The double stacked porches are all about outdoor living, giving you a quiet spot for morning coffee below and breezy sunset views above.
We framed the facade with a low picket fence and layered hedges so the house feels tucked in but still open to the street, kind of like a shy extrovert. The broad overhanging roof helps protect those porches and doors, while the clean geometry and centered chimney keep everything feeling calm and very easy on the eyes.
Mediterranean Archway Cottage By The Tides

This coastal home leans into a relaxed Mediterranean vibe, with creamy stucco walls and chunky timber beams that feel both sturdy and laid back. The terracotta roof tiles step down in layers, giving the whole place a gently tiered profile that pairs really nicely with the rolling dunes around it.
We opened the front to the sea with huge wood framed glass doors, so you can slide everything away and let the porch feel like an outdoor living room. The low deck, sandy path and tough little coastal plants keep the landscaping simple on purpose, because the real show here is that uninterrupted water view just a few steps from the front chairs.
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