Real Estate July 2025 5 min read

How to Prepare a Luxury Villa
for a Photo Shoot

The difference between a good property photo and a great one is rarely the camera. It is almost always what happened in the two hours before the shoot.

Luxury villa photography preparation Algarve Portugal

A luxury villa listing lives or dies by its visuals. International buyers searching on Idealista or Rightmove make their first decision in under 30 seconds based entirely on what they see. The property may be exceptional but if the shoot is not prepared properly, that exceptionality does not translate.

Here is exactly what to do before a professional photographer arrives at a luxury property in the Algarve.


Start with the exterior

The first frame a buyer sees is almost always an exterior shot. It sets the expectation for everything that follows. A few hours before the shoot, walk the full perimeter of the property and address these points:

  • Remove all cars from the driveway and visible parking areas. Vehicles break the sense of space and luxury immediately.
  • Clear the garden of hoses, tools and any equipment. Pool cleaning equipment, garden hoses and furniture covers should be stored out of sight.
  • Check the pool. It should be clean, filled and ideally have any fountains or water features running. Blue, still water photographs exceptionally well.
  • Arrange outdoor furniture cleanly. Chairs should be symmetrical, cushions plump and clean. Remove any personal items left by guests or owners.
  • Consider the time of day. The best exterior shots happen at golden hour, roughly 45 minutes before sunset. Confirm the shoot time with your photographer in advance.

Prepare the interiors

Inside the property, the goal is to create the impression of a space that is lived in with intention but not cluttered. Think of it as staging for the camera, not for a guest stay.

  • Remove all personal items. Family photos, toiletries, medication, children's toys and personal paperwork should be stored completely out of sight.
  • Make every bed with fresh, white or neutral linen. Avoid patterns or bold colours that date quickly. Beds should be made hotel-tight.
  • Clear kitchen surfaces completely. Leave only one or two decorative elements. A bowl of fresh fruit, a coffee machine if it is high-end, a single vase.
  • Open every blind and curtain. Natural light is the most valuable asset in property photography. The photographer will adjust, but start with maximum light.
  • Turn on all lights. Even during daytime shoots, lamps create warmth and depth that cameras respond to well.
  • Add fresh flowers to key rooms. Living room, master bedroom and dining area. Simple white arrangements work best on camera.

The details that make the difference

These are the small things that separate a good shoot from an exceptional one. Experienced photographers will notice them immediately:

  • Iron or steam all bed linen and cushion covers. Creases are amplified on camera.
  • Clean all glass surfaces. Windows, mirrors, shower screens and glass table tops should be streak-free.
  • Set the dining table. A properly set table with clean glassware and simple place settings adds significant perceived value to a dining room.
  • Place fresh towels in bathrooms. Folded hotel-style and hung with precision. Remove any used or personal towels.
  • Check that all light bulbs are working. A dark corner because of a missing bulb will affect the final image.

What to tell your photographer

Before the shoot begins, share three things with your photographer: the key selling features of the property, the target buyer profile and any areas that should be de-emphasised. A good photographer uses this information to guide the narrative of the shoot, not just document rooms.

For luxury properties in the Algarve, the key features are almost always the same: the view, the outdoor living space, the pool and the master suite. These should anchor the shoot. Everything else supports them.


The result

A properly prepared property does not just photograph better. It sells the vision of a lifestyle, not just a space. Buyers looking at a luxury villa in Lagos or Vilamoura are not buying square metres. They are buying how it feels to arrive on a Friday evening, open a bottle of wine and watch the sun set over the Atlantic.

The preparation you do before the shoot is what makes that feeling visible in the final images. And that feeling is what makes buyers book a viewing.

Ayrton Vaquer is a filmmaker and visual production specialist based in Lagos, Algarve. He produces property listing video, HDR photography and drone coverage for luxury real estate agencies and villa owners across the Algarve and Portugal. ANAC certified drone pilot. Get in touch to discuss your next listing.

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