Living in Calpe (Calp)
An honest guide to living or buying in Calpe, northern Costa Blanca: the Peñón de Ifach, the areas one by one, sandy beaches, healthcare, getting around and cost of living.
By the team at Team Picou · RE/MAX Inmomás II, Costa Blanca.
Calpe — Calp in Valencian — is unmistakable: it’s crowned by the Peñón de Ifach, a 332-metre rock plunging into the sea that is both a natural park and a symbol of the whole Costa Blanca. At its foot, Calpe combines something few towns in the area manage at once: fine-sand beaches, a genuine fishing port and an old town, alongside hillside villa urbanisations with spectacular views.
It’s also one of the most affordable entry points on the northern Costa Blanca, because it has plenty of apartments by the beach. That makes it appealing both to someone after their first place in the sun and to someone wanting a villa with a view of the rock.
Who Calpe suits
Calpe is a strong fit if you want a real sandy beach and services on your doorstep without giving up the option of a villa with views. It works for families, retirees and international buyers across very different budgets — precisely because the range runs from a practical seaside apartment to an exclusive villa. If you want a compact white town with no tall buildings, Altea or Benissa will suit you better.
The areas of Calpe
- Old town and port. The historic heart and the fishing port, with a fish auction, seafood restaurants and local life all year.
- Fossa (Levante) and Arenal-Bol beaches. The two big sandy beaches, with promenades, bars and lots of apartments. The most sought-after area for rentals and for living near the sea.
- The Salinas. Calpe’s salt flats, with flamingos, right in the urban area — a rarity.
- Maryvillas, La Canuta, Empedrola, Gran Sol, Carrió. Hillside urbanisations of villas, with views of the rock and sea, and more peace and quiet.
Beaches and coves
Calpe has real sand, not so common on the northern Costa Blanca: Fossa (Levante) and Arenal-Bol, both wide, blue-flag and lined with a promenade. For cove-lovers, the area around the rock and Les Bassetes offers rocky spots with clean water ideal for snorkelling and diving.
Schools
Calpe and the wider Marina Alta have Valencian state schools and access to several international schools in the district, well regarded by foreign families. If education weighs on your decision, we’ll help you compare options and availability by your children’s ages.
Healthcare
Calpe has a health centre and a district hospital nearby, plus private clinics with multilingual care. For European residents, combining Spanish public healthcare with private insurance is the norm.
Getting around
Here Calpe has a little-known advantage: TRAM Line 9 (tram) connects Calpe with Altea, Benidorm and Dénia, so you’re not entirely dependent on a car along the north coast. For the hillside urbanisations, though, a car is still strongly recommended.
- Alicante Airport (ALC): around 1 hour.
- Valencia Airport (VLC): around 1 h 30.
- TRAM Line 9: stop in Calpe, toward Benidorm and Dénia.
International community and social life
Calpe has a large, long-established international community — British, Dutch, German, Belgian and Nordic — well woven into town life. Many services run in several languages, so it’s easy to get around from day one without perfect Spanish.
Cost of living
Daily life in Calpe is reasonable: markets, restaurants for every budget — starting with fish from the port — and accessible services. On property, Calpe is more affordable to enter than its neighbours thanks to apartments, though villas with rock views reach high prices.
The Calpe property market
Calpe is a mixed market: apartments by the beaches as the accessible option, and hillside villas with views as the premium product. That wide spread makes the headline average misleading — what matters is the fine-grained figure by area and by view.
So you can decide with real numbers, we publish up-to-date median prices and €/m² for Calpe as open data, and you can browse the live inventory any time. If you’re thinking of buying or selling here, talk to someone who walks Calpe every week: we’ll tell you plainly what’s moving, at what price, and why.

