Alicante City & Province Relocation Guide

Moving to Alicante Insurance Checklist

A practical guide for expats moving to Alicante — the province (Provincia de Alicante / Alacant) and the city itself. Whether you’re settling in Alicante city, the coastal Playa de San Juan extension to the north, El Campello, Santa Pola, the southern Vega Baja coast (Torrevieja, Orihuela Costa), Elche, the inland industrial towns or the mountain villages of the Marina Baixa and inland Alicante, this guide walks through the visa routes, the local healthcare network, schools, Valencia region tax and the insurance arrangements that matter most. We don’t recommend specific insurers on this page; we explain options based on where you’re settling and your situation, in plain English, seven days a week.

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Introduction

The Province of Alicante (Alacant in Valencian) is one of the three provinces of the Valencian Community and one of Spain’s most-established expat destinations. The province covers 5,800 km² from the Marina Alta in the north (Denia, Javea) through the central Marina Baixa (Benidorm, Altea), the city of Alicante and its metropolitan area (including Elche / Elx), and southward through the Vega Baja (Torrevieja, Orihuela Costa) to the Murcia border.

This guide covers the province as a whole, with deeper focus on Alicante city itself and on the southern Vega Baja zone — the two areas often less well covered by the broader Costa Blanca guide. For the northern Marina Alta coast (Denia, Javea, Moraira, Calpe, Altea, Benidorm and the inland villages of the Marina Alta), see our dedicated Costa Blanca guide.

Alicante city has, over the past decade, become a meaningful expat destination in its own right alongside its role as the provincial capital. It combines a working Spanish city with substantial international remote-worker, student and lifestyle-driven mover communities. The southern Vega Baja zone (Torrevieja, Orihuela Costa, Pilar de la Horadada) hosts one of Europe’s largest concentrations of British, Norwegian, Swedish and Belgian expat residents.

Why Alicante province

Geographic and lifestyle diversity — the province offers premium northern Marina Alta coastal living, a working Mediterranean city in Alicante, traditional Spanish industrial towns (Elche, Elda), Vega Baja coastal towns with massive established expat communities, and inland mountain villages of the Marina Baixa.

Direct flights — Alicante-Elche Airport (ALC) is one of Spain’s busiest international airports for UK and Northern European traffic. Direct connections to most major UK, Irish, Dutch, German, Belgian, Norwegian, Swedish, Finnish, Danish, Polish, Czech and other European cities.

Established expat infrastructure — the province has one of Europe’s most-established English-speaking medical, legal, banking and everyday-life infrastructures, particularly in expat-heavy zones.

Cost of living — meaningfully lower than the Costa del Sol or Mallorca for property, rent and everyday costs.

Climate — 300+ days of sun, mild winters along the coast, summers moderated by sea breezes.

Universities — Universidad de Alicante (UA) and Universidad Miguel Hernández de Elche (UMH) create substantial student populations alongside the established residential communities.

Healthcare network — broad public and private hospital coverage across the province.

AVE high-speed rail — Alicante to Madrid in around 2h20.

Alicante city in detail

Alicante (Valencian: Alacant) is the provincial capital, population around 340,000. Built around the Castillo de Santa Bárbara on Mount Benacantil, with extensive beaches and a working port. Over recent years it has become a meaningful international remote-worker, student and creative-class destination alongside its established Spanish core.

Central city neighbourhoods

  • Centro and Casco Antiguo — the historic centre around the Cathedral, with traditional Spanish character, restaurants, walkable streets. Apartment-led
  • El Barrio (Santa Cruz) — the old fishermen’s and merchants’ quarter below the castle. Distinctive whitewashed houses, narrow stepped streets, restaurants. Tourist-active but with year-round residents
  • Pla del Bon Repos and Mercado — central residential zones around the Mercado Central
  • Ensanche — the grid neighbourhood with the Avinguda d’Alfons el Savi and Rambla. Walkable, larger apartments, mixed Spanish and international residents
  • Carolinas and Ciudad de Asis — residential, increasingly remote-worker friendly
  • Polígono San Blas and Vistahermosa — modern residential apartment districts

Playa de San Juan and the coastal extension

The Playa de San Juan area to the north of Alicante city (technically a city neighbourhood) is one of the city’s most-established coastal residential corridors. Long sandy beach (one of Spain’s longest urban beaches), apartment buildings and villa zones inland, full English-speaking infrastructure given the substantial year-round international community. Walking distance to the beach for most residents, easy access to Alicante centre via the TRAM Metropolitano or bus.

Cabo de las Huertas and Albufereta

The coastal zone between Alicante centre and Playa de San Juan. Premium properties with sea views and access to beach coves. Strong international and Spanish residential community.

El Campello

Coastal town immediately north of Playa de San Juan, with its own town hall and identity. Long beach, marina, small Spanish core with substantial international community. Often grouped with Playa de San Juan as the “Alicante coastal corridor”. Lower prices than central Alicante city.

Alicante city character

The city combines Spanish working culture (the Hogueras de San Juan in June is one of Spain’s major fire festivals, recognised as a Festival of International Tourist Interest), university energy, a growing remote-worker community, established Spanish-Mediterranean lifestyle and the practical advantage of being the regional administrative centre.

Northern coastal corridor: San Juan to Calpe

For the northern Marina Alta coast (Calpe, Altea, Benidorm, Moraira, Javea, Denia, Jalon Valley), see our dedicated Costa Blanca guide which covers each town in detail. Brief note: the corridor north of El Campello hosts substantial year-round British, Dutch, German, Belgian and Northern European communities, with premium microclimate in the Javea / Moraira / Denia Golden Triangle.

Southern Vega Baja: Santa Pola to Pilar de la Horadada

The Vega Baja del Segura is the southernmost region of the Province of Alicante, hosting one of Europe’s largest concentrations of expat residents.

Santa Pola

Coastal town immediately south of Alicante airport, with working fishing port and salt flats (Salinas de Santa Pola, Parque Natural). Small year-round international community alongside the substantial Spanish summer-resident core. Lower property prices than the established expat towns further south.

Gran Alacant

Large urbanisation between Santa Pola and the airport, with substantial year-round British, Belgian, Norwegian and Swedish communities. Apartment-led developments with beach access. Often used as a quieter, lower-priced alternative to Torrevieja.

Guardamar del Segura

Coastal town with pine forest dunes, beaches, and a substantial international community alongside the Spanish residential core. The Segura river meets the sea here.

Torrevieja

Population around 84,000, one of Spain’s most internationally-resident towns. Substantial year-round British, Norwegian, Swedish, Belgian, Dutch and Russian communities. The Torrevieja salt lakes (Salinas) are a notable natural feature. Full English-speaking everyday infrastructure including multiple supermarkets, restaurants, English-speaking GPs, dentists and legal services.

Orihuela Costa

The coastal extension of the inland town of Orihuela. Includes well-known urbanisations: La Zenia, Cabo Roig, Punta Prima, Playa Flamenca, Mil Palmeras, Aguamarina, Campoamor. Each with distinct character but all with substantial year-round international communities. La Zenia Boulevard is one of the larger commercial centres of the Costa Blanca south.

Pilar de la Horadada

The southernmost Alicante province coastal municipality, bordering Murcia’s San Pedro del Pinatar. Mixed community with growing Anglophone presence. Often considered the bridge between the Alicante Vega Baja and Murcia Mar Menor zones.

Orihuela inland town

The historic town of Orihuela itself (the “Holy City”) is inland and quite different in character from the coastal Orihuela Costa — Spanish character, cultural depth (Miguel Hernández heritage), the Easter Week processions are a major UNESCO-recognised tradition. Lower expat density inland than on the coast.

Elche (Elx) and the metropolitan south

Elche (Valencian: Elx) is the second-largest city in the Province of Alicante, population around 235,000. Around 20km south-west of Alicante city. It’s a working Spanish industrial city historically associated with footwear manufacturing, with significant expat interest growing in recent years.

Distinctive features

  • Palmeral de Elche — the UNESCO World Heritage palm grove with over 200,000 palm trees, one of Europe’s largest
  • Dama de Elche — the ancient Iberian sculpture (the original is in Madrid’s archaeological museum; a replica is in Elche)
  • Misteri d’Elx — the medieval mystery play, UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage, performed annually in August
  • Universidad Miguel Hernández (UMH) — major university with strong international student programmes
  • Industrial base — footwear, textiles, food processing

Elche is increasingly chosen by movers seeking authentic Spanish urban life at lower cost than Alicante city or coastal alternatives. The English-speaking infrastructure is less developed than in expat-heavy coastal zones but growing. Spanish language is essential.

Crevillente and the surrounding industrial belt

The industrial towns between Elche and Murcia (Crevillente, Aspe, Novelda) host smaller Spanish-character communities with limited international infrastructure. Very low cost of living. Generally chosen by movers seeking deep Spanish immersion.

Inland Alicante and Marina Baixa

Alcoy (Alcoi)

Mountain town in the Sierra de Mariola, population around 60,000. Industrial heritage (paper, textiles), distinct Valencian-speaking culture, the famous Moors and Christians festival each April (Festival of International Tourist Interest). Cooler climate than the coast, distinctive mountain character.

Cocentaina, Muro de Alcoy

Smaller Sierra de Mariola towns with traditional Spanish character and very low cost of living.

La Marina Baixa inland (Polop, La Nucia, Alfaz del Pi, Callosa d’En Sarrià)

The inland villages of the Marina Baixa host substantial Northern European retiree communities seeking quieter lifestyles at lower prices than the coastal towns of Calpe, Altea or Benidorm.

  • Alfaz del Pi hosts Norway’s only consulate in the region and has one of Spain’s highest concentrations of Norwegian expat residents
  • La Nucia has substantial British and Belgian communities, plus the Sierra Bernia School and ELIAN’S British School
  • Polop has a small mountain village character with established Anglophone residents
  • Callosa d’En Sarrià is the loquat (níspero) capital of Spain

Elda and Petrer

Twin industrial cities inland from Alicante. Traditional Spanish character, footwear industry, very low cost of living. Limited international infrastructure.

Villena and the Vinalopó valley

Historical interior route towards Madrid via the AVE corridor. Wine country (Vinos de Alicante DOP). Mostly Spanish residential character.

Climate and microclimates

Alicante province climate varies meaningfully by location:

  • Coastal Alicante city and southwards: Mediterranean with mild winters (15–18°C daytime) and warm summers (28–32°C, often higher inland from the coast). Among Spain’s driest coastal climates, with rainfall concentrated in October-November
  • Northern Marina Alta: the Javea / Moraira / Denia Golden Triangle has the Montgo mountain microclimate — noticeably milder winters than equivalent latitudes
  • Inland Marina Baixa villages: warmer summers, cooler winter nights than the coast
  • Alcoy and the Sierra de Mariola: cooler year-round, occasional winter snow at higher altitudes, distinct mountain climate
  • Vega Baja southern coast: consistently mild, very dry, among Spain’s sunniest year-round

Expat community by nationality

  • British: the largest Anglophone community across the province, particularly Torrevieja, Orihuela Costa, Benidorm, Javea, Denia, Calpe, Alfaz del Pi, plus growing in Alicante city itself
  • Norwegian: particularly strong in Alfaz del Pi (Norway consulate), Torrevieja, Orihuela Costa
  • Swedish: substantial in Torrevieja and Orihuela Costa
  • Belgian: Orihuela Costa, Calpe, La Nucia particularly
  • Dutch: across the northern Marina Alta corridor
  • German: across the province, with concentrations in Javea, Denia, Altea and inland villages
  • Irish: Benidorm and Torrevieja particularly; growing in Alicante city
  • French: growing in Alicante city, the Jalon Valley and Altea
  • American and Canadian: smaller but growing — Alicante city, Javea, Denia
  • Russian / Eastern European: notable presence in Torrevieja and Orihuela Costa
  • Romanian: substantial community across the southern Vega Baja and inland industrial towns

International schools in Alicante province

The province has a substantial international school cluster:

  • El Plantío International School Alicante — British curriculum, north of Alicante city
  • Lady Elizabeth School (Llosa de Camatxo, near Javea/Denia) — British curriculum, IB Diploma
  • Sierra Bernia School (Alfaz del Pi) — British curriculum
  • Costa Blanca International College (La Nucia) — British curriculum
  • ELIAN’S British School (La Nucia)
  • Laude El Altet International College (Alicante) — British / Spanish bilingual
  • Laude Newton College (Elche-Alicante) — British curriculum near Elche
  • Lycée Français International d’Alicante — French curriculum
  • The English School Vega Baja (southern coastal zone) — British curriculum

Annual fees range from around EUR 5,000 to EUR 14,000 depending on school, year and curriculum. Several schools serve specific zones — choose with proximity to your settlement location in mind.

Universities

  • Universidad de Alicante (UA) — San Vicente del Raspeig, north of Alicante city. Major Spanish university with strong international student programmes and Spanish-language courses for international students
  • Universidad Miguel Hernández (UMH) — based in Elche with campuses in Alicante (medicine), Orihuela (agricultural and food sciences) and Altea (fine arts). Strong applied science and engineering programmes
  • Centro Estudios Superiores Alicante and various private institutions

Alicante province has one of the most-established Spanish-language immersion programmes for international students, with private language schools across Alicante city, Denia, Torrevieja and the Marina Alta.

Visa routes

The Spanish visa framework applies the same way to Alicante movers as elsewhere. Main routes for non-EU citizens:

  • Non-Lucrative Visa (NLV) — major route for retirees and pre-retirees moving to the Vega Baja / Marina Alta. See NLV health insurance
  • Digital Nomad Visa (DNV) — growing in Alicante city. See Digital Nomad Visa guide
  • Student Visa — for UA, UMH and language schools
  • Work Visa, HQP, Entrepreneur, Self-Employed
  • Family Reunification and EU Family Member

The Golden Visa investor route closed to new applications in April 2025.

NLV financial threshold — worked example

Standard couple threshold around EUR 36,000/year (400% IPREM main + 100% spouse). Alicante province cost of living typically supports comfortable lifestyles around EUR 2,000–3,000/month for a couple including rent and Spanish-regulated health insurance — meaningfully below Madrid or Barcelona.

Health insurance for Alicante movers

Standard Spanish-regulated DGSFP-authorised requirements apply: sin copago, sin carencias, annual upfront cover, repatriation where required, bilingual EN/ES certificate.

Province-specific considerations

Alicante province has one of Spain’s most developed healthcare networks for international residents, given the substantial expat population. Many Spanish-regulated insurers maintain comprehensive networks across Alicante city, Torrevieja, Orihuela Costa, Elche, the Marina Alta and the Marina Baixa.

English-speaking specialists are widely available particularly in expat-heavy zones (Torrevieja, Orihuela Costa, Javea, Denia, Moraira, Altea, Calpe, Alicante city, Playa de San Juan).

Cost

Indicative monthly premium ranges:

  • Aged 30–39: EUR 40–75
  • Aged 40–49: EUR 60–100
  • Aged 50–59: EUR 90–150
  • Aged 60–64: EUR 130–200
  • Aged 65–69: EUR 170–260
  • Aged 70–74: EUR 230–340
  • Age 75+: new-policy availability becomes more limited

Hospital network across the province

Alicante city and metropolitan area

  • Hospital General Universitario Doctor Balmis (public — the regional reference hospital, formerly Hospital General de Alicante)
  • Hospital Universitario de San Juan (public, near Playa de San Juan)
  • Hospital Vithas Medimar Internacional
  • Hospital Vithas Perpetuo Socorro
  • HLA Clínica Vistahermosa
  • Hospital Quirónsalud Alicante

Elche and metropolitan south

  • Hospital General Universitario de Elche (public)
  • Hospital IMED Elche (private)
  • Hospital Universitario del Vinalopó (public concession)

Vega Baja south coast

  • Hospital Universitario de Torrevieja (public)
  • Hospital Quirónsalud Torrevieja (private)
  • Hospital Vega Baja (public, Orihuela)

Marina Baixa central

  • Hospital Marina Baixa (public, La Vila Joiosa)
  • Hospital Clínica Benidorm (private)
  • Hospital IMED Levante (Benidorm, private)

Marina Alta north

  • Hospital de Denia (public concession)
  • Vithas Medimar Denia (private)
  • Multiple private clinics across Javea, Denia, Moraira

For Spanish-regulated private cover, confirm with the insurer which hospitals are in direct billing network.

Valencia region tax position

Alicante province sits within the Valencian Community. The regional tax position applies uniformly across Alicante province, Valencia city / province and Castellón.

Wealth tax

The Valencian Community currently applies wealth tax with standard national exemption (EUR 700,000) plus regional allowance around EUR 500,000. Less favourable than Madrid (full rebate) or Andalusia (full rebate) for high-net-worth movers. National solidarity tax above EUR 3 million may also apply. Regional rules can change — verify the current position.

Inheritance tax

Valencia region applies reductions for direct family, less generous than Madrid’s 99% bonification or Andalusia’s near-zero position. Engage Valencia-region-specialist tax advice.

ITP (transfer tax on resale property)

Valencia region’s standard ITP rate is 10% — higher than Andalusia (7%) or Murcia (7.75%). The same rate applies to all Alicante province resale property purchases. Reduced rates may apply for first-home buyers in some circumstances.

Income tax (IRPF)

Valencia region IRPF brackets are broadly in line with the national average. Beckham Law election (where applicable for DNV / HQP holders) operates within the national framework.

Valencia tax — worked examples

Indicative examples. Tax outcomes depend on full personal circumstances and current rules — these are illustrative, not advisory.

Example 1: typical retiree couple Torrevieja

  • UK couple, both 65, NLV
  • UK state pension + modest private pension
  • Net worldwide assets: EUR 700,000

Wealth tax exposure modest given thresholds and exemptions. Under the UK-Spain treaty, most private pensions and state pension income are generally taxable in Spain once the holder becomes Spanish tax resident; some government-service pensions may remain taxable in the UK. Apply for S1 form for SNS healthcare access where eligible. Standard IRPF applies. Inheritance planning to direct family less generous than Madrid but typically manageable.

Example 2: DNV Beckham in Alicante city

  • US-employed remote worker moving to central Alicante or Playa de San Juan
  • Spanish-sourced salary: EUR 90,000
  • Beckham Law election within 6 months

Beckham flat 24% = EUR 21,600. Modelo 720 exempt during Beckham. Effective tax meaningfully reduced compared with standard Valencia IRPF.

Example 3: HNW retiree comparing regions

  • Couple, both 62, NLV, net worldwide assets EUR 3.5 million

Valencia region: wealth tax exposure can be meaningful. Madrid or Andalusia: rebated to zero. National solidarity tax applies above EUR 3M per individual. For HNW retirees prioritising tax, Alicante province is less favourable than Madrid or Andalusia.

Example 4: resale property purchase

  • EUR 200,000 resale apartment in Torrevieja or Orihuela Costa
  • ITP at 10% = EUR 20,000

Compare with Murcia (7.75% = EUR 15,500) just south of the border, or Andalusia (7% = EUR 14,000) further west. The 10% rate is a meaningful cost on Alicante province purchases.

Renting and buying property

Renting

Alicante province has a substantial rental market across the coastal zones. Standard LAU framework: 1-year contracts with renewal up to 5 years for individual landlords. Winter monthly rates substantially below summer holiday rates in coastal towns.

Buying

Total costs typically 11–14% on top of price: ITP 10%, IVA + AJD 10%+1.5% on new build, plus notario / registro / abogado / gestoría.

Property considerations

  • Substantial resale stock across the Vega Baja, Costa Blanca corridor
  • Off-plan new-build markets active particularly in the Vega Baja and inland Marina Baixa
  • Verify Cedula de Habitabilidad before buying
  • Tourist licence (Vivienda Turística) rules vary by municipality — verify current position if planning short-term lets
  • Substantial urbanisations and gated communities across the south coast and inland villages — comunidad de propietarios fees vary considerably

Worked property purchase example

Indicative numbers for a typical EUR 180,000 resale apartment in Torrevieja, Orihuela Costa or Playa de San Juan:

  • Purchase price: EUR 180,000
  • ITP (10% Valencia): EUR 18,000
  • Notario: EUR 1,400
  • Registro: EUR 900
  • Abogado / gestoría: EUR 2,500–3,500
  • NIE process: EUR 200–500
  • Total acquisition cost: approximately EUR 203,000–204,300

Same EUR 180,000 apartment in Murcia at 7.75% ITP = EUR 13,950 (EUR 4,050 less). The 10% ITP is among the most-meaningful cost differences when comparing Vega Baja Alicante vs Mar Menor Murcia just over the border.

Empadronamiento and town hall

Empadronamiento at the relevant town hall — Alicante Ayuntamiento, El Campello, Torrevieja, Orihuela, Pilar de la Horadada, Elche, Alfaz del Pi, La Nucia, and so on. Each municipality has its own process; the larger expat zones have well-established processes including English-speaking support in many cases. Required for TIE, local Centro de Salud access, school enrolment, convenio especial after 1 year.

Getting around: ALC airport, AVE, TRAM

Alicante-Elche Airport (ALC)

One of Spain’s busiest international airports, primarily serving UK and Northern European traffic. Direct flights to most major UK, Irish, Dutch, German, Belgian, Norwegian, Swedish, Finnish, Danish, Polish, Czech and other European cities. Located between Alicante city and Elche, around 12km from central Alicante.

AVE high-speed rail

Alicante to Madrid in around 2h20 via AVE from Alicante station (Estación de Alicante-Terminal). Direct connections to other Spanish cities. The AVE makes Alicante practical as a base for occasional Madrid business commitments.

TRAM Metropolitano

The TRAM Alicante runs north along the coast from Alicante city through Playa de San Juan, El Campello, Villajoyosa, Benidorm, Altea, Calpe, Denia and intermediate stops. One of Spain’s most useful suburban transport networks for the coastal corridor, allowing car-free living for many residents along the line.

Cercanías and Rodalies

Connections from Alicante to Murcia, Valencia and beyond.

Driving

The AP-7 motorway runs the length of the coast — AP-7 tolls have been removed on the main Alicante coastal stretch. The A-7 / N-332 inland roads provide alternative coastal connectivity.

Lifestyle, sport and culture

Beaches

From the long sandy Playa de San Juan, Postiguet (Alicante city centre beach), Playa de Muchavista (El Campello), to the southern coastal beaches of Santa Pola, Gran Alacant, Guardamar, Torrevieja, Orihuela Costa, and the northern Marina Alta beaches.

Golf

Substantial golf cluster across the province: La Sella (Denia), Oliva Nova, Bonalba (Mutxamel), Alenda Golf, Villamartin Golf, La Finca Golf, Las Colinas Golf & Country Club, Las Ramblas, Real Club de Golf Campoamor, and others. Among Europe’s densest golf infrastructures.

Marinas and sailing

Marinas across the province at Alicante (Real Club de Regatas), El Campello, Villajoyosa, Benidorm, Altea, Calpe, Moraira, Javea, Denia (one of Spain’s major marinas), Torrevieja and others.

Cycling

Alicante province is one of Europe’s premier professional and amateur cycling destinations, particularly Calpe and Altea which host major pro team winter training camps.

Festivals

Hogueras de San Juan (Alicante city, June, Festival of International Tourist Interest), Moors and Christians (Alcoy, April, Festival of International Tourist Interest), Misteri d’Elx (Elche, August, UNESCO), Semana Santa Orihuela (Easter, Festival of International Tourist Interest), plus the village fiestas across the province year-round.

Restaurants and food

Alicante cuisine includes arroces (rices in many varieties), turrón (nougat from Jijóna), the Alicante DOP wine, and the wider Valencian-Mediterranean food tradition. Strong Michelin presence emerging across the province.

Healthcare for Retirees and Older Applicants

Alicante province’s established retiree demographic means Spanish-regulated insurers have substantial experience with older applicants on the NLV route.

Age-band underwriting

Spanish-regulated insurers typically tier acceptance and pricing as follows:

  • Under 65: most insurers accept with standard underwriting
  • 65–69: most insurers accept; premium tiers may apply
  • 70–74: narrower insurer panel; premium tiers more common
  • Age 75+: new-policy availability becomes very limited — some providers only accept new applications up to age 75, although existing policyholders may be able to renew beyond that age

S1 holders (UK pensioners)

UK pensioners with S1 entitlement may use S1 + SNS as their primary healthcare, often with Spanish-regulated private top-up for dental and faster specialist access. Spanish-regulated private cover is still required at the NLV visa stage for non-EU applicants.

English-speaking specialists

Many private hospitals across the province have established protocols for international patients and English-speaking specialists, particularly Hospital Quirónsalud Torrevieja, Hospital Clínica Benidorm, Hospital Vithas Medimar Alicante, Hospital de Denia and HLA Vistahermosa.

Cost of living

Monthly couple budget

  • Modest: EUR 1,600–2,300/month — coastal apartment in Vega Baja or Marina Baixa, groceries, utilities, basic eating out, Spanish-regulated health insurance, car running costs
  • Comfortable: EUR 2,500–3,500/month — central Alicante apartment, Playa de San Juan apartment, or northern Marina Alta apartment; regular eating out, gym, regular travel
  • Affluent: EUR 4,000–5,500+/month — premium villa in Javea / Moraira corridor, frequent travel, premium private healthcare add-ons

Key monthly expenses

  • Rent: EUR 500–1,400 typical 2-bed coastal apartment depending on zone
  • Utilities: EUR 80–200
  • Groceries: EUR 300–600
  • Private health insurance: EUR 80–400 per person
  • Car running costs: EUR 150–300
  • Eating out: menu del día EUR 11–16, among the lower ranges in Spain

Insurance checklist

For Alicante province expats (Valencia region):

First 90 days

Week 1

  • Arrive with active visa stamp
  • Activate Spanish health insurance
  • Move into accommodation
  • Buy Spanish SIM

Week 2–3

  • Empadronamiento at local Ayuntamiento
  • Spanish bank account application
  • Register at local Centro de Salud if SNS-entitled

Week 3–4

  • Book TIE appointment at the Alicante Foreigners Office (Oficina de Extranjeros) — jurisdiction for most of the province
  • Attend TIE appointment
  • Set up direct debits for insurance, rent, utilities

Month 2

  • Spanish home insurance
  • Spanish car insurance if driving
  • Driving licence exchange or test preparation
  • Valencia-region-specialist tax adviser engagement

Month 3

  • Familiarise with local services: GP, pharmacy, dentist, supermarkets
  • Join local expat groups, social clubs or sports associations
  • School enrolment for children if relevant
  • Spanish will preparation for property owners

Alicante Province Insurance Help

Spanish-regulated cover for Alicante expats — health, home, car, pet, funeral and more. English-speaking advisers, seven days a week.

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Common mistakes

  • Confusing Alicante city with Alicante province (different scope, different choices)
  • Choosing a smaller inland village without confirming insurer network depth
  • Signing a long-term LAU contract before living in the area through at least one summer
  • Buying property before living in the area for 6–12 months
  • Using home-country private health insurance for the visa application (typically doesn’t qualify)
  • Buying cover with copago when sin copago is required for NLV
  • Forgetting TIE within 30 days of arrival
  • Forgetting empadronamiento
  • Not engaging Valencia-region-specialist tax advice before becoming Spanish tax resident
  • Underestimating the 10% Valencia ITP vs neighbouring Murcia 7.75% or Andalusia 7% when budgeting
  • Confusing Orihuela inland town with the coastal Orihuela Costa zone (very different in character)
  • Confusing Pilar de la Horadada (Alicante province) with neighbouring San Pedro del Pinatar (Murcia)
  • Buying off-plan without confirming bank guarantees on stage payments
  • Driving a Spanish-plated car on home-country insurance
  • Not making the EU Succession Regulation 650/2012 election in the Spanish will
  • Not factoring the AP-7 toll removal into route planning — it’s now the standard north-south coastal road
  • Not securing international school places early in the planning timeline
  • Choosing Elche or inland industrial towns without realising the limited English-speaking infrastructure compared with the expat-heavy coastal zones
  • Continuing to use home-country driving licence beyond IDP validity
  • Not registering at the local Centro de Salud once SNS access is established

Alicante Province Insurance Support

247 Expat Insurance helps expats moving to Alicante province — Spanish-regulated health, home, car, pet, funeral and other cover, in plain English, seven days a week.

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FAQs

What’s the difference between Alicante city and Alicante province?

Alicante province (Provincia de Alicante / Alacant) covers around 5,800 km² from the Marina Alta in the north through Alicante city and the metropolitan area to the southern Vega Baja border with Murcia. Alicante city itself has a population around 340,000. Most expats settle in coastal towns rather than the city itself, though the city is increasingly a destination for remote workers and students.

Which Alicante town has the most British expats?

Torrevieja, the Orihuela Costa urbanisations (La Zenia, Cabo Roig, Punta Prima, Playa Flamenca), Benidorm, Javea, Denia, Calpe, plus Alfaz del Pi and La Nucia inland all have substantial year-round British communities.

Where do Norwegians and Swedes typically settle?

Alfaz del Pi (Norway consulate), Torrevieja, Orihuela Costa for Norwegians and Swedes; Belgian community also concentrated in Orihuela Costa.

Is Alicante city a good DNV destination?

Increasingly — growing remote-worker community, established coworking infrastructure, good ALC airport access, mature English-speaking ecosystem. Lower cost than Madrid, Barcelona or Valencia city.

Is the AP-7 still tolled?

AP-7 tolls have been removed on the main Alicante coastal stretch. The AP-7 is now the standard motorway for north-south travel along the coast.

How long is the AVE to Madrid?

Around 2h20 from Alicante to Madrid via AVE high-speed rail.

What is the ITP rate?

Valencia region standard ITP is 10% for resale property — higher than Andalusia (7%) or Murcia (7.75%). Reduced rates may apply for first-home buyers.

What about the Murcia border?

Pilar de la Horadada is the southernmost Alicante province town; immediately south is San Pedro del Pinatar in Murcia. Many residents on both sides use the same hospital networks and amenities. See our Murcia / Costa Cálida guide.

What schools are available?

El Plantío (Alicante), Lady Elizabeth (Javea/Denia area), Sierra Bernia (Alfaz del Pi), Costa Blanca International College (La Nucia), ELIAN’S (La Nucia), Laude El Altet (Alicante), Laude Newton College (Elche), Lycée Français International d’Alicante. Annual fees EUR 5,000–14,000.

How much does Spanish private health insurance cost?

Same Spain-wide framework: indicative monthly EUR 40–80 at 30, EUR 130–200 at 65, depending on insurer, plan tier and underwriting.

Is Elche worth considering?

For movers seeking authentic Spanish urban life at lower cost and with strong UMH university presence — yes. The English-speaking infrastructure is less developed than coastal expat zones — Spanish language is essential.

Where is the TIE registration office?

The Alicante Oficina de Extranjeros covers most of the province for TIE registration. Cita Previa booking required.

Can I drive without a Spanish licence?

Short-term yes, typically with an International Driving Permit. Once Spanish-resident, current DGT rules apply for your specific country.

What hospitals do private insurers typically cover?

Network varies by insurer brand and tier but typically includes Vithas Medimar Alicante, Quirónsalud Alicante / Torrevieja, HLA Vistahermosa, Hospital Clínica Benidorm, IMED Levante / Elche, Hospital de Denia and various clinics across the province. Confirm with the insurer.

What about the southern Vega Baja vs northern Marina Alta?

Different demographics and characters. Southern Vega Baja (Torrevieja, Orihuela Costa) is dominated by year-round British and Northern European residents at typically lower property prices. Northern Marina Alta (Javea, Denia, Moraira) is premium-tier with a Golden Triangle microclimate, mix of nationalities including the Dutch and British. See our Costa Blanca guide for the northern corridor in detail.

Is Alicante climate consistent across the province?

No — meaningful microclimate variation. Coastal Vega Baja is among Spain’s sunniest and driest year-round. Northern Marina Alta Golden Triangle has the Montgo microclimate. Inland Alcoy is mountain-cooler. Alicante city is between the coastal extremes.

Do I need a Spanish will?

Strongly recommended for Spanish property. Non-Spanish nationals can elect home-country law via EU Succession Regulation 650/2012.

How do I choose between Alicante and Murcia for a similar coastal lifestyle?

Alicante province has stronger English-speaking infrastructure overall, better international school cluster and more direct flight connections via ALC. Murcia has lower ITP (7.75% vs 10%), lower property entry-points and similar lifestyle along the Mar Menor. See both guides to compare.