Alicante's inland villages: buying away from the crowds
Guadalest, Alcoy, Villajoyosa, Jijona, Finestrat: inland Alicante offers prices from 900 euros/m², nature and a pace of life the coast can no longer provide.
Explore the Costa Blanca neighborhood by neighborhood: Alicante city, coastal towns, residential areas and inland villages.
Guadalest, Alcoy, Villajoyosa, Jijona, Finestrat: inland Alicante offers prices from 900 euros/m², nature and a pace of life the coast can no longer provide.
Turquoise coves, villas among pine trees, Moscatel wine and a fishing village that chose tranquillity over crowds. Moraira and Teulada are the northern Costa Blanca's best-kept secret.
A UNESCO Creative City of Gastronomy, ferry to Ibiza, a medieval castle and wild coves. Dénia is the northern Costa Blanca that tastes of the authentic Mediterranean.
A WHO-recognised microclimate, crystal-clear coves, the Montgó massif as a backdrop and an international community that already feels like home. This is life in Jávea.
Benidorm is not just hotels and Levante beach. Behind the skyscrapers lie quiet neighbourhoods, big-city infrastructure and a residential life that works twelve months a year.
A 332-metre rock that splits the horizon in two, two fine-sand beaches, a fishing port with a daily auction and an international community that now outnumbers the local population. Calpe is unlike anywhere else on the Costa Blanca.
A town of blue domes, cobblestone streets and art galleries where the Mediterranean is lived slowly. Altea is the cultural jewel of the northern Costa Blanca.
Alicante's southernmost municipality, with Blue Flag beaches, still-reasonable prices and a calm that the major coastal cities can no longer offer.
Golf courses among pine groves, Blue Flag beaches and the province's largest shopping centre. Orihuela Costa is the southern Costa Blanca at its purest.
Over 120 nationalities, pink salt lakes, affordable prices and year-round sunshine. Torrevieja is Spain's most international city — and one of the best investment options on the Costa Blanca.
Eleven kilometres of beach, a dune forest unique in Spain and prices that still invite you to stay. Guardamar is the Costa Blanca that doesn't shout, but convinces.
A working fishing port, flamingo-filled salt flats, ferries to Tabarca and fine sandy beaches. Santa Pola blends authentic local life with still-accessible prices on Alicante's southern coast.
Two municipalities right next to Alicante that combine residential calm, university life and more accessible prices. The inner metropolitan ring with its own personality.
Twenty-three kilometres of coastline, a millennia-old archaeological site and a direct tram to Alicante. El Campello is village and beach without compromise.
Close to the centre, with prices still accessible and a transformation underway. These two neighbourhoods offer the best value for money in Alicante city.
Pedestrian streets, Santa Bárbara Castle, the central market and the Explanada at your feet. This is what living in the heart of Alicante is like.
Rocky coves, villas with gardens and one of Alicante's lowest densities. This is the most exclusive neighbourhood in the Costa Blanca's capital.
Between the Serra Grossa and a crystal-clear beach, Albufereta offers the unhurried pace the Costa Blanca promises. Here is what living here is like.
Nearly seven kilometres of sand, a tram to the centre and residential complexes with pools. This is what living on the Costa Blanca's most coveted beach is like.
Over 300 days of sunshine, the sea five minutes away and a city that keeps growing. This is what living in Alicante is like, neighbourhood by neighbourhood.