Cala Advocat villas in Benissa with live price check
Benissa — Cala Advocat, Costa Blanca North
- Cala Advocat setting gives this villa a specific buyer routine
- Live price block should be treated as the source of truth before a viewing decision
- 3 layout and 139 m² shape space planning before a viewing decision
- Beach at 0.8 km makes real access and local routine worth testing
- Completion timing should be confirmed before legal commitment starts
- Solarium and storage add appeal but running costs still need review
Available properties
2 properties available
Property essentials
Amenities
Location scores
Walk Score
Car dependent
Climate comfort
Exceptional
Flight connectivity
Fair
Price vs. area average
Location
Beach & waterfront
Nearby services
Airports & connections

Climate & environment
Climate
Average monthly temperatures (°C)
Sea and swimming season
Monthly sea temperature (°C)
Open-Meteo · averages 2023-2026 (3 years)
Air quality
Average: 2025-05-02 to 2026-05-01 · Open-Meteo CAMS reanalysis · open-meteo-cams
Solar potential
Source: European Commission PVGIS-SARAH3 (2005-2023)
Investment & lifestyle
About Benissa
Escasez tierra disponible. Precios €3,200-4,500/m² con crecimiento 7-9%.
More about BenissaSpecifications
| Primary type | Villa |
| Bedrooms | 3 |
| Built area | 139–227 m² |
| Usable area | 120–170 m² |
| Terrace | 68–156 m² |
| Year built | 2025 |
| Estimated delivery | Q4 2027 |
| Energy rating | B / B |
| Available properties | 2 |
| Town | Benissa |
| Province | Alicante |
| Postal code | 03720 |
Energy performance
B / B
High energy class: low consumption.
About Cala Advocat villas in Benissa with live price check
The viewing brief here is narrow and concrete. These villas in Benissa should be assessed with the live price block as the source of truth, alongside 2 active units, 3 bedrooms and 139 m². This gives the page a concrete job: turn the headline into a buyer checklist and separate real fit from generic interest in Spanish property.
The practical setting around Cala Advocat villas needs its own test, especially for overseas ownership. The beach is 0.8 km. For UK buyers, the best evidence is whether the area still feels manageable when the trip is short, luggage is involved and the weather is less ideal. The route to the coast, local services and parking rhythm should be checked at normal use times, not only during a polished viewing slot.
Specification is strongest when the buyer understands what is included, optional and recurring. Solarium and storage can add comfort and appeal, especially for part-year ownership, but each item has a running-cost or management side. The right question is not whether the feature sounds premium; it is whether it makes ownership easier for this buyer.
The strongest case for Cala Advocat villas in Benissa is made on the ground, not in the brochure. During a viewing, the buyer should test how the route feels at a normal hour, where groceries or cafes fit into the week, and whether the property still feels practical when guests, luggage and maintenance are part of the picture. That keeps the page tied to real use.
For buyers using cash from the UK, currency timing can matter almost as much as the asking figure. A small exchange-rate move can change the sterling budget, especially once taxes, notary, registry, legal fees and furniture are added. The cleaner route is to treat the live price block as the commercial source of truth, build a complete purchase budget around it, then decide whether the lifestyle gain still justifies the total.
For owners who may let the property occasionally, the compliance route must be checked before income is discussed. Tourist licence rules, community permission, tax treatment, cleaning capacity and furnishing durability all shape the model. Cala Advocat villas in Benissa should be treated as a home first, with letting only as a controlled supporting scenario.
If the buyer expects guests, the property should be tested as a shared space. Bathrooms, storage, terrace use and parking need to make sense when the home is full, not only when it is viewed empty. Before any reservation conversation, the buyer should re-check the live price block, request current availability and make sure the legal pack reflects the exact unit being discussed.
Layout & design
The layout check starts with the exact unit, not the development name. The published 3-bedroom mix and 139 m² area should be tested against storage, terrace access, light, orientation, parking and how guests will move through the home. A buyer should walk through arrival, cooking, laundry, work calls, closing the property for several weeks and returning with luggage. Those small routines often reveal more than the headline surface figure.
For owner use, comfort depends on shade, ventilation, noise, usable outdoor space and whether the furniture plan leaves enough storage. For guest or rental use, the same plan needs durable finishes, simple cleaning, secure owner cupboards and clear community rules. If the property includes features such as solarium, storage, the buyer should ask what is included, what is optional and how annual costs are split. The goal is not to avoid every cost, but to know which costs belong to this home before signing.
Completion timing also shapes layout decisions. Buyers with time before handover can plan furniture, legal checks and snagging, while buyers needing quick occupation may find the wait awkward. A UK buyer should connect the plan to the payment schedule, mortgage or funds proof, currency timing and solicitor review. The property works best when the layout supports the intended use without needing optimistic assumptions about storage, guest numbers or future rental turnover.
The final layout check is practical: measure where suitcases, beach equipment, golf bags, cleaning supplies and owner items would live. If the property will be empty for part of the year, shutters, access, ventilation and key holding also belong in the decision. These details are rarely dramatic, but they decide whether ownership feels simple after completion.
Who is this for?
This villa fits buyers who want Benissa through a concrete product rather than a vague coastal idea. It can suit owners who value Cala Advocat for repeat stays, family visits or a more structured base in Spain, provided the exact unit matches the budget and use pattern. The strongest buyer will compare total cost, not just the headline shown in the live price block: purchase costs, legal fees, furniture, community charges, insurance, utilities, maintenance and travel all belong in the same calculation.
It is less suitable for buyers who need effortless beach access, a large choice of alternative units, immediate certainty on every cost or a purchase justified mainly by brochure images. A rental discussion is reasonable only when it has been modelled carefully: tourist-licence route, community permission, tax, cleaning, management, furnishing wear, empty weeks and the owner's own peak-season use all matter. The sensible next step is to request the exact unit plan, current availability, payment schedule, community-fee estimate and included specification, then compare those facts with similar homes in the same budget band.
The buyer should move forward only when the viewing notes, legal pack and running-cost estimate all tell the same story. If one of those three pieces is missing, the property may still be attractive, but it is not ready for a confident reservation.













