San Fernando ground-floor bungalows in Cox
Cox — San Fernando, Costa Blanca South — Inland
- San Fernando gives this ground-floor bungalow a specific Cox viewing brief
- Use the live price block as the source of truth before comparing total cost
- 2-3 bedrooms and 62-99 m² make storage and guest use worth testing
- Beach around 25.0 km means the real route should be timed in person
- Q1 2026 links the decision to legal, payment and handover planning
- Solarium, garden, gated community and communal pool add appeal, with ownership costs to confirm
Available properties
5 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)
AEMET · ROJALES (19 km) · normals 1991-2020 (10 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 Cox
Precios muy accesibles, comunidad cercana íntima, acceso a Torrevieja 9km.
More about CoxSpecifications
| Primary type | Ground floor bungalow |
| Bedrooms | 2–3 |
| Built area | 62–99 m² |
| Usable area | 55–90 m² |
| Terrace | 7–73 m² |
| Year built | 2025 |
| Energy rating | B / B |
| Available properties | 5 |
| Town | Cox |
| District | San Fernando |
| Province | Alicante |
| Postal code | 03350 |
Energy performance
B / B
High energy class: low consumption.
About San Fernando ground-floor bungalows in Cox
The clearest question is whether the facts support repeat use. San Fernando is listed in Cox with 5 active units, 2-3 bedrooms, 62-99 m² and Q1 2026. Current cost guidance should come from the live price block rather than copied figures in the text, because availability and unit mix can change before a buyer is ready to reserve. That makes the page useful for buyers comparing ground-floor bungalows for sale in Cox, while the town page should still carry the broader location decision.
Location needs to be tested through ordinary access. The Beach is around 25.0 km away. Local anchors include Supermercado La Cruz at 2577 m, Consultorio Médico de Rédovan at 3062 m and Caja Rural at 2704 m. For a UK buyer, Alicante-Elche (ALC) is about 55 minutes by car, so arrival rhythm belongs in the same decision as the live cost position and floor plan.
The specification points to solarium, garden, gated community and communal pool. Those features can improve comfort, but they also raise practical questions about community fees, cleaning, maintenance, insurance and security when the property is empty. A serious viewing connects every attractive feature to a running-cost or management question, then checks the live price block against the specific unit being discussed.
Inside Cox, this ground-floor bungalow has to win against homes with a similar budget, format and handover position. The useful comparison is not the whole coast, but the homes a buyer would genuinely view in the same trip. That keeps the shortlist grounded and avoids choosing only from photographs or a figure that may no longer match the available unit.
The second pass is deliberately practical. Check what would make this option easier to own: lower maintenance, better storage, stronger outdoor use, simpler access to services or a clearer total cost after completion. If those points are weak, the buyer has a reason to keep comparing, even when the development looks attractive at first glance.
For Cox, this matters because one development listing cannot prove the whole area. The buyer should compare San Fernando by live availability, property type, services, handover timing and the route they will actually use. A viewing brief should separate what is fixed from what is unit-specific. Fixed points include town, delivery context and the broad service map; unit-specific points include orientation, floor level, terrace usability, views, parking, storage and the final included specification.
That distinction matters for Cox buyers because two homes in the same development can feel very different. A lower-maintenance unit may suit lock-up-and-leave ownership, while a larger or more exposed option may need more furnishing, cooling, cleaning and security planning. The strongest decision is made when the live price block, legal pack and chosen unit all tell the same story.
Layout & design
The plan needs to be walked as a sequence of small routines. The published 2-3 bedrooms and 62-99 m² should be checked against storage, terrace access, orientation, parking, lift or stair use and how guests move through the home. A buyer should picture arrival with luggage, cooking, laundry, work calls, closing the property for several weeks and returning in another season.
For owner use, comfort depends on shade, ventilation, noise control and enough space for belongings. For guest or rental use, the same plan needs durable finishes, secure owner storage, easy cleaning access and clear community rules. If solarium, garden, gated community and communal pool is included, ask what is standard, what is optional and how annual costs are split.
Q1 2026 also changes the layout decision. A later handover gives time for solicitor review, furniture planning and currency timing; a nearer handover makes readiness, snagging and supplier access more urgent. The layout works best when it does not rely on optimistic assumptions about storage, guest numbers or future rental turnover.
The final layout check is unglamorous but important. Where do suitcases, beach equipment, spare linen, cleaning supplies and locked owner items go. If those answers are missing from the plan, ownership usually feels less simple after completion.
A careful plan review should also include internet setup, air-conditioning use, furniture delivery and access for trades. Those first-month details are often where overseas ownership becomes easy or frustrating.
The plan should also be checked against the buyer's likely travel pattern. Short visits need fast arrival, easy unpacking and simple closing; longer stays need better storage, work space, laundry habits and room separation. Those practical details often decide whether the published layout feels generous or tight after completion.
Who is this for?
The best-fit buyer has a clear use pattern before reserving. This ground-floor bungalow can suit someone who wants Cox through a concrete product rather than a vague coastal idea. The strongest scenarios are repeat holidays, longer winter stays, family visits, partial relocation or a rental plan checked conservatively.
The budget should be built from the live price block, then tested against purchase costs, legal fees, furniture, community charges, insurance, utilities, maintenance and travel. UK buyers should also consider currency timing and non-resident tax, because those details can change how comfortable the purchase feels after completion. The live block is the reference point for the unit price; the buyer still needs an all-in ownership model before reserving.
It is less suitable for buyers who need effortless beach access without testing the route, complete cost certainty on day one or rental income to make the purchase affordable. Rental can be assessed, but only after tourist-licence rules, community permission, tax, cleaning, management, empty weeks and owner-use dates are checked.
The next step is the exact unit plan, current availability, payment schedule, community-fee estimate, included specification and a viewing brief for the surrounding streets. When those facts agree with the live price block, the property can move from interesting to genuinely shortlistable. The buyer should pause if the legal pack, cost estimate or exact unit choice is vague, because attractive homes still need facts behind the reservation decision.

















