You can discover this home and claim it as your own — and you can also discover yourself inside.
On England’s side of the stunning Wye Valley, which forms the border between England and Wales, fans of Netflix’s raunchy teenage “Sex Education” series may recognize this charming riverside property. In the show — set in fictional Moordale and showing the sexual-discovery escapades of high school-age therapist Otis Milburn (Asa Butterfield) and even the romps of his sex therapist mother Jean (Gillian Anderson) — this property stars as the home they both share, appearing frequently on screen.
And now, according to Mansion Global, it’s listed for sale asking $1.82 million. That price will get a new owner a Norwegian-style salmon fishing lodge built in 1912 that’s filled with sunlight and adorned with jewel-toned walls.
That’s in the real world. On the show, this home is where Otis experiences his first orgasm and later loses his virginity during a house party. It’s also where his mother forms a relationship with a repairman named Jakob (Mikael Persbrandt).
The fourth and final season of the show hit Netflix on Sept. 21.
Called “The Chalet” in its listing, the home stands in the village of Symonds Yat, and comes surrounded by woodlands offering views of the Wye Gorge. It runs 3,100 square feet and is perched on 4.52 acres — and offers five bedrooms and three bathrooms.
The current owners bought the residence in 2002, with the listing noting it needed a complete renovation at that time. The footprint was expanded with a conservatory dining room made in a Norwegian design. They also put in a new kitchen, replaced the roof, and even replaced the flooring with wood and stone touches. Ground-floor French windows open to balconies, which also appear in the show as a family hangout. One deck has a Swedish hot bath and another has a pizza oven.
The grounds additionally include two greenhouses, a former enclosed kitchen garden — and the listing notes there’s an opportunity to buy an old chapel near the home under separate negotiation.
“The fact that this property is so well known only adds to the appeal of what is an incredibly rare opportunity to own a spectacular home, with exceptional views of the River Wye in a beautiful, private, woodland setting,” listing agent James Toogood, head of Knight Frank’s Bristol office, told The Post in a statement.