€1,200 / mo
Flat / apartment in Avenida de Villajoyosa, La Albufereta, Alicante / Alacant
- Distrito 5 - Este, Alicante
- Rent ~€775/mo
- low expat community · Walkability 4/10
Your personalised cost comparison will appear here
What Distrito 5 - Este is actually like
The resident base is overwhelmingly Spanish — primarily middle-income families and working professionals who prioritise space and affordability over proximity to the city centre (RelocateIQ analysis, April 2026). Moralet and PAU-5 attract young couples buying their first home and established families upsizing from smaller central apartments. The community is tight-knit and locally oriented, with daily life revolving around neighbourhood schools, local bars, and weekend routines rather than tourist circuits.
Expat density is low by Alicante standards. The district counts 27 English-language services (RelocateIQ local data, April 2026), a functional number but thin compared to higher-density expat zones like Playa de San Juan or the city centre. The foreign residents who do settle here tend to be budget-conscious retirees or remote workers who have made a deliberate trade-off: less international infrastructure in exchange for significantly lower housing costs. There is no single expat café hub equivalent to what you find in more international districts — GLUTTONI CAFE and MO Specialty Coffee are the closest things to a regular meeting point for English-speaking residents.
Year-on-year purchase price growth reached 9.6%, and the three-year cumulative gain stands at 26% (Fotocasa, April 2026). This is meaningful appreciation, though moderated compared to the city-wide range of 13–18% YoY — a direct consequence of the district's Tier 3 suburban positioning. Forecasts project the average price per sqm reaching €2,090–€2,180 in 2026 (+7%) and €2,220–€2,330 in 2027 (+6.3%) (Fotocasa, April 2026), suggesting steady rather than speculative growth driven by first-time buyers, expanding new-build supply, and infrastructure improvements.
- ✓Families with children
- ✓Local workers
- ✓Budget-conscious retirees
- ×City centre lovers
- ×Transit dependents
- ×Nightlife seekers
- ×Tourist let investors
What life actually costs in Alicante
Monthly estimates · compared to London
Figures are city-level monthly estimates. Source: Numbeo Cost of Living Index 2024, updated quarterly.
How connected is Distrito 5 - Este?
What's on your doorstep
The Distrito 5 - Este property market
Calculators for your situation
What renting here actually involves
Spanish law limits deposits to 1 month's rent for residential properties. Landlords sometimes request an additional month as guarantee. Expect 1–2 months upfront: approximately €1,550 for this property.
Standard Spanish rental contracts run for 5 years minimum (7 if landlord is a company). You can leave after 6 months with 30 days notice. Contracts must be in Spanish — always use a bilingual version.
You will need an NIE number to sign a rental contract in Spain. Register on the Padrón (local census) within 3 months of arriving — this unlocks healthcare, schools and local services.
Everything you need to know about moving to Alicante
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