Northern Costa Blanca Premium Towns (2026): Moraira, Benissa, Calpe – Where to Buy
The northern Costa Blanca’s three premium coastal towns – Moraira, Benissa, and Calpe – sit along an 18-kilometre stretch of Mediterranean coast between Jávea and Altea. They are not interchangeable. Moraira is the most preserved (no buildings above four storeys, by municipal rule), Benissa Costa is the most exclusive (cliffside villas with the widest plots on the coast), and Calpe is the largest and most amenity-dense (with both touristic high-rise zones and premium villa areas). Indicative 2026 villa prices: €500K–€3M+ in Moraira, €600K–€5M+ on Benissa Costa, €450K–€3M in Calpe’s premium residential zones. Below is the honest comparison – character, demographics, property, services, and the buyer profile each town suits.
Where these towns sit
If you’ve read our Altea / Polop / Jávea guide, you know the southern half of the northern Costa Blanca premium belt. This article covers the northern half – the stretch between Jávea and Altea, dropping south along the coast.
From north to south:
- Jávea (Xàbia) – covered in article 03
- Benitachell (El Poble Nou de Benitachell) – between Jávea and Moraira, covered briefly here
- Moraira / Teulada-Moraira – covered in detail below
- Benissa & Benissa Costa – covered in detail below
- Calpe (Calp) – covered in detail below
- Altea / Polop – covered in article 03
The northern Costa Blanca’s centre of gravity for foreign buyers sits in this 25-kilometre coastal corridor. Most of reSELECTA’s Costa Blanca activity happens here – premium villas, established communities, sea views, and the calmest concentration of restaurants and services on the coast.
Moraira – the preservation case
Geography and character
Moraira is the coastal half of the Teulada-Moraira municipality. Teulada itself is the inland village, ~6km from the sea, with a working medieval old town. Moraira is the coast – a former fishing village rebuilt around a small marina and four named beaches (El Portet, L’Ampolla, Platgetes, and Cap Blanc).
The defining feature is what isn’t there. Moraira’s municipal planning rule prohibits buildings over four storeys, anywhere in the town. There are no high-rises, no large hotels, no tower blocks. The coastline preserves a Mediterranean village skyline that elsewhere on the Costa Blanca was lost between 1970 and 1995. Walk the seafront at sunset and the silhouette is whitewashed houses and slim cypress trees, not concrete.
This single planning choice is why Moraira holds its premium positioning. It is one of three or four coastal Spanish towns south of Barcelona where this is true, and the only one of the three in our coverage area.
Demographics
- Municipal population: ~16,500 (registered)
- Summer peak population: ~35,000–45,000
- Foreign-resident share: ~50% officially registered, materially higher in practice including seasonal residents
- Largest foreign nationalities: German (the largest single group), Dutch, British, Swiss, Belgian, Scandinavian
- Spanish presence: stronger in Teulada inland than in coastal Moraira itself
Moraira’s foreign community skews older, more established, and more Northern European than the British-dominated southern Costa Blanca. The dominant language on the seafront after Spanish is often German rather than English.
Property market – Moraira 2026
| Property type & area | Indicative price range | €/m² range |
|---|---|---|
| Villa in El Portet (premium seafront) | €1.2M–€4M+ | €5,500–€8,500 |
| Villa in central Moraira / La Sabatera | €700K–€2M | €4,000–€6,000 |
| Villa in established residential (El Tesoro, Solpark, Pinar de l’Advocat) | €500K–€1.4M | €3,500–€5,000 |
| Apartment in Moraira centre (walking to marina) | €350K–€700K | €3,200–€4,500 |
| Apartment seafront / Platgetes | €450K–€900K | €4,000–€5,800 |
| Townhouse in established urbanización | €350K–€650K | €2,800–€3,800 |
| Apartment in Teulada inland village | €180K–€350K | €1,800–€2,500 |
The named premium zones – El Portet, La Sabatera, Cap Blanc – sit at the top of the Moraira market. They are walking-distance to the sea, with mature gardens, and almost never come to the open market – most quality transactions happen off-portal. Standard residential zones (El Tesoro, Solpark, Pinar de l’Advocat) offer the deepest value for buyers who want quality villa life without the seafront premium.
Lifestyle
Moraira’s daily rhythm is calm. Restaurants are family-run rather than touristic, the marina is small enough that you recognise the regulars, and the Wednesday morning market in the town centre is one of the better outdoor markets on the coast. The town has a real winter community – restaurants stay open year-round, residents know each other, and the population shrinks but doesn’t vanish from October to April. This is unusual on the Costa Blanca, where many coastal towns become near-empty in winter.
Services and connectivity
- Supermarkets: Mercadona, Consum, two German-run delis
- Healthcare: Hospital Marina Salud Dénia (private, ~25 min), Hospital Clínica Benidorm (~35 min)
- International schools: Lady Elizabeth (Llíber, ~15 min), Xabia International (Jávea, ~20 min)
- Airport: Alicante (~90 min via AP-7), Valencia (~95 min)
- Motorway: AP-7 exit 63 (Teulada-Moraira)
- Train: nearest mainline at Alicante
Who Moraira fits
Best fit for established families and retirees who prioritise: low-density coastal living, an active winter community, premium quality with restrained presentation, and the security of a planning regime that won’t change. Less well-suited for buyers who want urban density, large amenity choice, or nightlife.
Benissa – privacy, plot, and cliffside
Geography and character
Benissa is a municipality with two faces. Benissa pueblo is the old town – inland, ~6km from the sea, a working Spanish village with a medieval core, weekly market, and modest property prices. Benissa Costa is the 4-kilometre coastal strip – and it is where the most exclusive villa real estate on the entire northern Costa Blanca sits.
The defining feature of Benissa Costa is the topography. The coast is cliffs, not beaches – most of the shoreline is dramatic limestone falling 20–60 metres to small coves. The result is large, well-spaced clifftop villa plots with unobstructed sea views, mature pine cover, and the kind of privacy that simply doesn’t exist on flat coastline. Plot sizes of 2,000–8,000 m² are common; in Moraira and Calpe, similar plots are rare.
Demographics
- Municipal population: ~13,500
- Summer peak: ~30,000
- Foreign-resident share: ~40% municipally, but >85% in the coastal premium zones (Fanadix, Buenavista, Montemar)
- Largest foreign nationalities: German, Dutch, Belgian, British, Scandinavian, Swiss
- Spanish character: strong in the inland pueblo, almost absent in coastal Benissa
Benissa Costa has a quieter, more private feel than Moraira’s town centre or Calpe’s seafront. There is no real “main street” along the coast – just discrete cliff roads, named residential areas, and individual villas behind walls.
Property market – Benissa 2026
| Property type & area | Indicative price range | €/m² range |
|---|---|---|
| Cliffside villa Fanadix / Buenavista (premium) | €1.8M–€6M+ | €5,500–€9,000 |
| Coastal villa Montemar / La Fustera | €800K–€2.2M | €3,800–€5,500 |
| Coastal villa Pinos Beach / Baladrar | €650K–€1.6M | €3,500–€4,800 |
| Inland villa Pedramala / Benimarco | €450K–€1M | €2,500–€3,500 |
| Apartment in coastal Benissa | €300K–€700K | €2,800–€4,200 |
| House in Benissa pueblo (old town) | €180K–€450K | €1,500–€2,500 |
| Finca / rural property inland | €350K–€900K | variable, by plot |
The cliffside premium zone (Fanadix and Buenavista, both immediately south of the Cap d’Or headland) is materially more expensive than anything else in our wider coverage area outside Altea Hills. The combination of cliff position, plot size, and view is rare on Spanish coastline – and the price reflects it. Off-market transactions are the norm at the top of this market; rarely do the best villas list publicly.
Lifestyle
Coastal Benissa is quieter than Moraira and substantially quieter than Calpe. There is no town centre on the coast – restaurants are scattered, no high street, the lifestyle revolves around the home and its outdoor space. Inland Benissa pueblo is a 10-minute drive and offers a working Spanish town for groceries, weekly market, banking, and routine services.
For buyers who want a coastal home but value privacy over town density, Benissa Costa is the strongest profile match on the whole northern Costa Blanca. For buyers who want to walk to restaurants and a marina, Moraira or Calpe is better suited.
Services and connectivity
- Supermarkets: Mercadona in Benissa pueblo and several smaller stores along the coast
- Healthcare: Hospital Marina Salud Dénia (~20 min), Hospital Clínica Benidorm (~30 min)
- International schools: Lady Elizabeth (~15 min), Xabia International (~20 min)
- Airport: Alicante (~75 min), Valencia (~90 min)
- Motorway: AP-7 exit 64 (Benissa)
Who Benissa fits
Best fit for buyers who prioritise: privacy, large plot, mature trees, dramatic sea views, and quiet over town life. Strong fit for HNW retirees, established families, anyone whose ideal day involves the garden, the pool, and the sea more than restaurants and shopping. Less suited for buyers wanting walkability to amenities, families with young children needing daily town life, or anyone uncomfortable with rural-feeling coastal driving (some access roads are narrow and twisting).
Calpe – amenity, scale, and the Peñón
Geography and character
Calpe is the largest of the three towns by population, by visitor numbers, and by built area. Two large beaches – Playa de la Fossa to the north and Playa del Arenal-Bol to the south of the headland – bracket the iconic Peñón de Ifach, a 332-metre limestone outcrop rising directly from the sea. The town centre includes a working fishing port (one of the few still active on this coast) and a busy promenade.
Calpe has a split character. The seafront in the centre is dense, mixed use, with high-rise apartment blocks built during the 1970s–1990s – visually closer to Costa Blanca cliché than to Moraira’s preservation. But Calpe also has substantial premium residential zones – La Cometa, Maryvilla, Empedrola, Costera del Mar – built up the slopes inland from the centre, where villas with sea views toward the Peñón sit on quieter, less dense streets.
Demographics
- Municipal population: ~30,000
- Summer peak: ~100,000+
- Foreign-resident share: ~50% officially registered
- Largest foreign nationalities: British (largest), German, Dutch, Scandinavian, Russian
Calpe is the most internationally mixed of the three towns. Of the three, it is also the one where year-round daily life is most active – supermarkets, restaurants, shops, and services operate at scale that Moraira and Benissa cannot match.
Property market – Calpe 2026
| Property type & area | Indicative price range | €/m² range |
|---|---|---|
| Villa in La Cometa / Maryvilla / Empedrola (premium hill) | €700K–€2.5M | €4,500–€7,000 |
| Villa in established Calpe residential | €450K–€1M | €3,200–€4,500 |
| Sea-view apartment seafront premium | €450K–€1.2M | €4,000–€6,000 |
| Sea-view apartment centre | €300K–€700K | €3,200–€4,500 |
| Standard apartment interior | €180K–€420K | €2,200–€3,200 |
| New-build villa premium development | €650K–€2M+ | €4,800–€6,800 |
Calpe’s headline median per m² is lower than Moraira’s or Benissa Costa’s because the apartment supply (including high-rise centrally located stock from earlier decades) pulls down the average. Premium villa zones – La Cometa, Maryvilla, Empedrola – price comparably to standard villas in Moraira and Benissa, with somewhat better walkability to amenities because the hill slopes are minutes from the town centre.
Lifestyle
Calpe is the only one of the three where you can comfortably live without a car – restaurants, supermarkets, the marina, the beach, and the train station to Alicante are all walkable from many residential zones. It is also the one with the most year-round activity, the most variety of restaurants, and the strongest medical and commercial infrastructure.
The trade-off: the town centre’s high-density character is closer to “Costa Blanca” cliché than Moraira’s preservation or Benissa’s privacy. Buyers who want walkable town life and modern amenities will value Calpe’s scale; buyers who want preserved village character will find it overbuilt in places.
Services and connectivity
- Supermarkets: Mercadona, Lidl, Carrefour Express, Consum, multiple smaller stores
- Healthcare: Hospital Clínica Benidorm (~15 min), Hospital Marina Salud Dénia (~30 min), public Centro de Salud in town
- International schools: Lady Elizabeth (~25 min), Sierra Bernia (~30 min toward Benidorm), Newton College (~40 min)
- Airport: Alicante (~60 min), Valencia (~105 min)
- Motorway: AP-7 exits 63 and 64
- Train: TRAM Alicante line stops in Calpe – direct narrow-gauge service to Benidorm and Alicante (slow but useful)
Who Calpe fits
Best fit for: buyers who want walkable town life, year-round services, the strongest amenity base, and don’t need to be in the most preserved coastal environment. Strong for younger active retirees, couples without children who want urban-like density on the coast, and buyers entering at the €400K–€900K apartment level where Calpe offers better value than Moraira or Benissa. Less suited for buyers seeking preservation, privacy, or large plot size.
Benitachell (El Poble Nou de Benitachell) – the new-build node
Benitachell sits between Jávea and Moraira, and serves as the third significant premium pocket on this stretch – though structurally different from the three above. Its character is defined by two large named developments: Cumbre del Sol (a planned community with substantial off-plan villa pipeline from developers including Magnum, Lobster, Insur) and Los Lirios (an established residential zone with predominantly Dutch and German residents).
| Area | Indicative villa price | €/m² range |
|---|---|---|
| Cumbre del Sol – new-build villa with sea view | €700K–€2M+ | €4,800–€6,800 |
| Cumbre del Sol – apartment / townhouse | €350K–€700K | €3,500–€5,000 |
| Los Lirios – established villa | €550K–€1.4M | €3,500–€5,000 |
Benitachell is the strongest profile match for buyers who specifically want a new-build villa with full LOE warranty, modern energy systems, and architect-led design – see our off-plan vs resale guide for the full structural detail on this decision. For resale buyers wanting established mature gardens and lived-in communities, Moraira and Benissa offer deeper supply.
Side-by-side comparison
| Moraira | Benissa Costa | Calpe | Benitachell | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Municipal population | ~16,500 | ~13,500 | ~30,000 | ~5,200 |
| Foreign-resident share (coast) | ~65% | ~85% (coast) | ~50% | ~80% |
| Defining feature | No high-rise rule | Cliffside plots, privacy | Amenity scale + Peñón | New-build pipeline |
| Premium villa €/m² | €4,000–€8,500 | €5,500–€9,000 | €4,500–€7,000 | €4,800–€6,800 |
| Apartment €/m² | €3,200–€5,800 | €2,800–€4,200 | €2,200–€6,000 | €3,500–€5,000 |
| Walkability to amenities | Strong in centre | Weak – car dependent | Strongest of the three | Weak – car dependent |
| Winter community | Active | Quiet | Most active | Quiet |
| Best beach access | El Portet, Platgetes | Cala Baladrar, Cala Llobella | La Fossa, Arenal-Bol | Cala del Moraig (rocky) |
| Closest hospital | Dénia (~25 min) | Dénia (~20 min) | Benidorm (~15 min) | Dénia (~20 min) |
| Alicante airport | ~90 min | ~75 min | ~60 min | ~80 min |
| Best for | Established families, retirees | HNW privacy seekers | Active retirees, urban-feel | New-build buyers |
How they price out – €/m² hierarchy in 2026
If you rank the four areas purely by 2026 premium-zone €/m² for quality villas:
- Benissa Costa (Fanadix / Buenavista cliffside): €5,500–€9,000 – top of the market on the whole northern Costa Blanca outside Altea Hills
- Moraira (El Portet / La Sabatera): €5,500–€8,500 – close second, distinguished by preservation rather than plot
- Calpe premium hills (La Cometa, Maryvilla): €4,500–€7,000 – material discount on the top tier with amenity benefit
- Benitachell (Cumbre del Sol new-build): €4,800–€6,800 – narrower band, newer stock, full LOE warranty
The standard residential tier (€3,500–€5,000/m²) is broadly comparable across all four – the differentiation happens at the top and the bottom of each market.
Decision framework – which town fits you
Five questions, in this order:
- Do you want walkability or privacy? Calpe is the only one where walking-to-amenities is the default. Benissa Costa is the opposite – car-dependent by design. Moraira sits in between (walking works in the centre, but not from most villas). Benitachell is car-dependent.
- Year-round residence or seasonal? Moraira and Calpe both have active winter communities. Benissa Costa is materially quieter from October to April. Benitachell varies by zone – Cumbre del Sol is quiet in winter, Los Lirios more active.
- How important is plot size and privacy? Benissa Costa is the unrivalled answer if this is your top criterion. Moraira premium villas have good plots but rarely match Benissa scale. Calpe premium villas are smaller plots typically.
- How important is preservation of village character? Moraira is the only one with explicit planning protection. Benissa Costa preserves character by topography. Calpe centre does not – though premium villa zones are well preserved.
- Off-plan or resale? If you want a new-build with full LOE warranty, Benitachell (Cumbre del Sol) is the strongest fit. For mature resale stock with established gardens, Moraira and Benissa offer the deepest inventory.
Three buyer profiles – worked decisions
Profile 1 – Retired Dutch couple, €1.2M budget, premium-comfort priority
Two paths:
- Moraira El Tesoro / La Sabatera villa €1M–€1.3M: 4-bed, pool, walking to centre or short drive, mature garden, active winter community of Northern European retirees.
- Benissa Costa Montemar villa €1.1M–€1.3M: larger plot, more privacy, partial sea view, 5-minute drive to inland village for daily life.
For this profile, both work – the choice is preservation/community (Moraira) vs plot/privacy (Benissa).
Profile 2 – UK family of 4, two children at Lady Elizabeth School, €1.8M budget
School commute reality: Lady Elizabeth is in Llíber, north of Benitachell. Practical school commute time:
- Moraira: ~15 min
- Benissa Costa: ~15 min
- Calpe: ~25 min
- Benitachell (Cumbre del Sol): ~12 min
For this profile, Benitachell (Cumbre del Sol new-build villa €1.5M–€1.8M) is the strongest match – newest stock, full LOE warranty, shortest school run, organised community. Moraira is the close second for resale preference. Calpe is the longest commute and least suited.
Profile 3 – Active retired couple, €700K budget, amenity priority
This is Calpe’s sweet spot. €700K buys a quality 3-bed sea-view apartment in the premium central seafront (Edificio Apolo or comparable) with walking access to restaurants, marina, beach, supermarkets, train to Alicante, and excellent healthcare 15 minutes away in Benidorm. The equivalent budget in Moraira or Benissa Costa buys either a smaller apartment further from amenities or a small villa in a standard residential zone with car dependence. For an active retirement profile, Calpe’s amenity density is the right answer.
Common mistakes
- Buying in central Calpe by mistake. The 1970s–1980s high-rise stock along the seafront is often presented with stunning view photography but suffers from dated construction, weak energy efficiency, and material exposure to derramas for façade and lift renewals. A pre-purchase technical inspection is essential for any pre-1995 Calpe seafront apartment.
- Underestimating the Benissa Costa winter quiet. Buyers visit in June and don’t anticipate the January reality. Many Benissa Costa villas are second homes – January through March can be genuinely quiet on the coastal roads. Some buyers love this; others find it isolating. Visit at least once in winter before committing.
- Confusing “Moraira” the town with “Teulada-Moraira” the municipality. The municipal town hall is in inland Teulada, not coastal Moraira. Some property listings labelled “Moraira” are technically in Teulada – 6km inland, very different character. Confirm exact address before viewing.
- Buying off-plan in Cumbre del Sol without checking developer track record. The wider Cumbre del Sol planned area includes multiple developers of varying quality. Some have excellent track records; some have had delivery, quality, and bank-guarantee issues. Reference our off-plan guide for the full developer due diligence.
- Ignoring the urbanización fee structure. Many premium areas (especially in Benissa Costa, Maryvilla, and Cumbre del Sol) have additional urbanización service fees beyond standard community fees – for shared private roads, security, common landscaping. Check this before signing arras.
- Buying in late August on emotional terms. The Costa Blanca in August is beautiful, busy, alive, full. The same coast in February is much quieter. Both are real; the property is bought for both. Avoid signing in the first 72 hours of a peak-season visit.
How a boutique advisor helps here
These three towns look similar in the brochure photography – Mediterranean villas, sea views, terracotta tiles, cypress trees. They are not similar in practice. The mistake foreign buyers make most often is collapsing the differences and choosing on price-per-square-metre alone – and then discovering they bought into Calpe density when they wanted Moraira preservation, or into Benissa winter quiet when they wanted Moraira’s year-round community.
The work is in the calibration: matching the actual buyer profile (year-round vs seasonal, family vs couple, plot vs walkability, resale vs new-build) to the right town, then to the right named residential zone within that town, then to the specific properties that fit. Almost none of the best examples come from the open portals.
Selective by design: we represent the buyer, not the listing.
FAQ
Which is better, Moraira, Benissa, or Calpe?
None is universally better – they suit different buyer profiles. Moraira is best for buyers prioritising preservation, no high-rises, and an active winter community. Benissa Costa is best for buyers prioritising plot size, privacy, and dramatic cliffside views. Calpe is best for buyers prioritising amenities, walkability, and year-round commercial scale. For new-build with full LOE warranty, Benitachell (Cumbre del Sol) is the strongest fit.
How much does a villa cost in Moraira?
Indicative 2026 ranges: €500K–€1.4M in established residential zones (El Tesoro, Solpark, Pinar de l’Advocat); €700K–€2M in central Moraira and La Sabatera; €1.2M–€4M+ in El Portet premium seafront. Apartments in the town centre run €350K–€700K. Per square metre, premium villas sit at €5,500–€8,500; standard residential €3,500–€5,000.
How much does a villa cost in Benissa Costa?
Indicative 2026 ranges: €1.8M–€6M+ for cliffside villas in Fanadix and Buenavista (the top premium zones); €800K–€2.2M for established coastal villas in Montemar and La Fustera; €450K–€1M for inland villas in Pedramala and Benimarco. Benissa Costa cliffside €/m² (€5,500–€9,000) is the highest in our coverage area outside Altea Hills.
How much does a villa cost in Calpe?
Indicative 2026 ranges: €700K–€2.5M for villas in the premium hill zones (La Cometa, Maryvilla, Empedrola); €450K–€1M in established standard residential. Sea-view apartments €300K–€1.2M depending on location and view. New-build villa developments €650K–€2M+. Calpe has the widest price spread of the three towns due to its mix of premium hills and dense central seafront.
Is Moraira a good place to retire?
Yes – particularly for established Northern European retirees who value preserved village character, active year-round community, healthcare access (Dénia private hospital ~25 min, Benidorm clinics ~35 min), and low-density coastal living. Moraira’s planning rule (no buildings above four storeys) protects the lifestyle in a way most Costa Blanca towns cannot.
Is Calpe overdeveloped?
The central seafront has substantial high-rise apartment stock from the 1970s–1990s – more developed in character than Moraira or Benissa. But Calpe also has substantial premium residential zones inland on the slopes (La Cometa, Maryvilla, Empedrola) where villa life is calm and preserved. The town is best understood as two characters in one municipality – touristic centre and premium hill – and buyers should choose the zone, not the town.
Where do most Germans buy on the Costa Blanca?
Moraira is the largest single German-resident community on the Costa Blanca and possibly in Spain – with Dutch and Swiss communities forming a similar Northern European concentration. Benissa Costa also has substantial German and Dutch resident populations, particularly in Fanadix, Buenavista, and Montemar. Calpe is more British-led, with significant German and Dutch presence too. Benitachell’s Cumbre del Sol has a notable Belgian and Dutch new-build buyer base.
What’s the difference between Benissa pueblo and Benissa Costa?
Benissa pueblo is the inland old town – medieval core, Spanish working village, weekly market, ~6km from the sea, property prices €1,500–€2,500/m². Benissa Costa is the 4-kilometre coastal strip ~6km away – cliffside villas, Northern European resident population, no real town centre on the coast itself. They share a municipality but are very different in character. Most foreign buyers focus on Benissa Costa.
How is the school commute from Moraira / Benissa / Calpe to international schools?
Lady Elizabeth School (Llíber): ~15 min from Moraira, ~15 min from Benissa, ~25 min from Calpe, ~12 min from Benitachell. Xabia International (Jávea): ~20 min from Moraira, ~20 min from Benissa, ~30 min from Calpe, ~10 min from Benitachell. Sierra Bernia and Newton College are materially further south – typically 30–45 min depending on location. School bus services exist for most of these from the established residential areas.
Is the AP-7 motorway still toll-free in this area?
Yes – the AP-7 became toll-free on 1 January 2020 between Tarragona and Alicante, including all junctions serving Moraira (exit 63), Benissa (exit 64), and Calpe (exits 63 and 64). The N-332 coastal road provides an alternative for short hops between towns. Practical travel time from Moraira to Calpe via AP-7 is ~15 minutes; via N-332 ~25 minutes.
Sources and further reading
For underlying official data and area information:
- Instituto Nacional de Estadística (INE) – population, demographic, and housing data for Spanish municipalities
- Idealista – Informe de precios – quarterly municipal price reports for reference (commercial source, used here as a market index reference)
- Catastro – cadastral reference for any specific property
- Ajuntament de Teulada-Moraira – Moraira municipal authority
- Ajuntament de Benissa – Benissa municipal authority
- Ajuntament de Calp – Calpe municipal authority
- Ajuntament d’El Poble Nou de Benitatxell – Benitachell municipal authority
Where to start
Three towns, four if you count Benitachell. Each suits a different buyer. The narrow part of the work – finding the specific villa or apartment – is downstream of the broad part: choosing the town that actually fits how you’ll live. A clear-eyed conversation about that, before the property search begins, saves months of mismatched viewings.
Read the Altea / Polop / Jávea guide · Read the cost-of-buying breakdown · Read the annual ownership costs guide · Read the off-plan vs resale guide · Read the international schools guide · Get in touch.