Residential Tourism in Costa Blanca
We are flocking to Spain for our holidays in greater numbers
than ever before. But forget the old annual fortnight's package
holiday. Now we want to hop on a low-cost flight to our own home
in Spain - preferably, for two thirds of us, on the Costa Blanca
or Costa del Sol - and we want to visit it at least four times a
year with friends and family. These are the findings of a new
report by Lighthouse Spain, which caters for 'residential
tourists': people who have shifted from spending package
holidays to buying a holiday home there instead.
While the Spanish property and construction markets boom, along
with local services catering for residential tourists such as
furniture shops, supermarkets and restaurants, many hoteliers
are hanging up their room keys in despair as they watch 14
million Brits each year head to Spain, only to see 4.1 million
of them last year stay in a property belonging to friends or
relatives instead of in a hotel.
"Spain is by far the number one destination for residential
tourists and the Costa Blanca is particularly popular because of
its excellent year-round climate, good infrastructure and
extensive expat communities," says Shaun Powell, Managing
Director of Lighthouse Spain, which works with a network of
ethical Spanish estate agents to sell holiday homes to British
and other Northern European buyers.
"In Costa Blanca, especially in the south of the region, you
still have a large choice of properties available from 100,000
euros, so people who have been priced out of the Costa del Sol
can still afford a Spanish holiday home on a popular coastline,"
adds Powell. "Home owners have the added benefit of being able
to rent out their home to other holidaymakers so their property
is a source of enjoyment and investment."
The Costa Blanca has been a bastion of package tourism since the
1960s. But now it has become a hub of residential tourism, with
Alicante airport witnessing passenger numbers from the UK rise
by 30% in 2003.
Colin Pinfold from Sutton on Sea, Lincolnshire, is a typical
residential tourist. Having spent many package holidays on the
Costa Blanca in the past, he and his wife now want to retire
there permanently and have just bought a 140,000 euro townhouse
in Torrevieja through Lighthouse Spain.
"I've been looking at the Costa Blanca since the children left
home and when we went out there recently the agent was
brilliant. He drove us everywhere for five days, took us for
meals, sorted out a lawyer and opened a bank account," says
Pinfold. "We're moving out there as soon as we've sold our house
in England and we'll see our kids and grandkids far more. It
takes them five hours to drive to see us in Sutton on Sea. It'll
be quicker for them to fly to Alicante."
Jackie Gulliford, who works at Oxford University, and her
husband, a teacher, are looking at properties with Lighthouse
Spain in southern Costa Blanca with good rental potential. "We
used to own a property near Cadiz with another couple, but after
23 years we sold our share as they wanted to let it out and I
felt there weren't enough visitors to that area to make it
worthwhile. So now we're buying on our own in the Costa Blanca
as prices are reasonable and it should be easy to let out. It
would also be a good place to spend winters when we retire."
While Benidorm, with its long sandy beaches and year-round
entertainment, remains a thriving resort for foreign and Spanish
tourists, surrounding coastal and inland towns which have been
little-known to the average British holidaymaker are starting to
figure on the residential tourist's map.
As prices in prime coastal locations such as Calpe and Javea
approach those on the Costa del Sol - with seaview villas from
600,000 euros and apartments from 350,000 euros - inland towns
and villages within easy access of the coast's facilities are
growing in appeal for foreign buyers.
"Hotels are becoming non-existent in some places as more
foreigners buy properties as a holiday base instead," says Tom