Property investment in Cabo Roig starts from a verified entry point of €399,000, according to veritySpain project data, with the one analysed development scoring 8.2 out of 10 on veritySpain's editorial scale. That score reflects a disciplined appraisal of build quality, location fundamentals and market positioning. Cabo Roig sits on the southern Costa Blanca, within the municipality of Orihuela Costa, a stretch of the Alicante coastline that has attracted northern-European buyers since the 1970s. The area is not an emerging market in the speculative sense: infrastructure is mature, golf courses are established and the rental economy is shaped largely by seasonal tourism. Investors considering Cabo Roig are therefore underwriting a known quantity, not a frontier bet.
Location fundamentals and buyer profile
Cabo Roig anchors the Orihuela Costa strip between Campoamor and La Zenia, roughly 45 kilometres south of Alicante city and 20 minutes from Murcia-Corvera airport. Two commercial airports within reasonable range are a meaningful practical advantage for northern-European buyers. Transport matters: buyer pools thin rapidly on stretches of coast that require a transfer hub rather than a direct flight. Ownership here skews heavily toward British, German and Scandinavian nationals. That demographic shapes everything from property management expectations to the depth of the short-term rental market, because visitors tend to return to the same coast year after year. It does not, however, insulate the market from currency volatility. Sterling weakness post-2016 measurably cooled British purchasing power, and any investor reliant on sterling income streams should factor that in.
Supply, pricing and the data caveat
One project analysed by veritySpain at €399,000 is a thin data point. It would be wrong to infer from a single listing what the broader Cabo Roig resale or new-build market is doing. Transaction volumes and price movements across the municipality are tracked by Registradores de España, whose quarterly reports cover Alicante province and give a regional picture, though not always granular enough for a single urbanisation. New-build supply on the southern Costa Blanca has been rising since roughly 2021, when planning activity resumed after a post-pandemic pause. More supply, relative to a buyer pool that has not grown at the same pace, applies some pressure to developer pricing power. That is the regional context. Investors should not extrapolate it mechanically onto a single project without inspecting that project's specific submarket, phase timing and completion date.
Rental economics: what the data can and cannot say
Rental yields in coastal Spain vary substantially by management quality, occupancy strategy and property type. No hard yield figure for Cabo Roig can be stated here without fabricating a number. What is reliably true: Orihuela Costa has one of the Costa Blanca's more developed short-term rental infrastructures, with a year-round complement of golf visitors supplementing summer peak demand. Winter occupancy is the critical variable. Properties marketed only to sun-seekers face three to four low-demand months. Golf proximity mitigates that seasonal drag. A new build at €399,000 carries IVA at 10 percent on top of the purchase price, a known and material cost not always foregrounded in developer marketing. Gross yield must be modelled against that higher acquisition cost, not just the headline price.
Regulatory and tax framework
Spain imposes a 3 percent withholding on non-resident property sales, applied against the purchase price at the time of sale, reconciled later against actual capital gain. Non-residents also pay annual imputed income tax on Spanish property, even when it sits empty. These are not obscure edge cases: they affect the net return on any investment held and then sold. Rental licence requirements vary by autonomous community; Valencia's short-term rental framework has been tightening, with a cap-and-licence model introduced in recent years. Investors must verify whether a specific Cabo Roig unit carries or can obtain a tourist rental licence before modelling income. Orihuela's local planning rules can be more restrictive than the regional minimum, so municipal-level due diligence is not optional.
Key takeaways
- veritySpain scores the one analysed Cabo Roig project at 8.2/10, with an entry price of €399,000.
- Location within Orihuela Costa gives dual-airport access, a practical advantage for northern-European buyers.
- Transaction and price data should be verified through Registradores de España quarterly reports, not extrapolated from a single listing.
- Rental income modelling must account for seasonal occupancy patterns, IVA at 10 percent on new builds, and tourist licence availability.
- Spanish non-resident tax obligations, including imputed income tax and the 3 percent withholding on sale, meaningfully affect net investment returns.
The market in numbers
New-build projects in Cabo Roig
View allFrequently asked questions
Is Cabo Roig a good place to invest in property?
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Cabo Roig offers a mature coastal market on the southern Costa Blanca, with established infrastructure and a strong northern-European buyer profile. veritySpain scores the one analysed project at 8.2/10. It is not a speculative frontier market, so returns depend on buy price, management quality and tax efficiency rather than capital appreciation alone.
What is the average property price in Cabo Roig?
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veritySpain's current project data shows a price point of €399,000 for the one analysed new-build development. Broader resale market pricing across Orihuela Costa varies significantly by type, condition and location within the urbanisation. Quarterly data from Registradores de España provides the most reliable provincial benchmark.
What rental yield can I expect from a Cabo Roig property?
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No precise yield figure can be stated without fabricating a number. Orihuela Costa has an established short-term rental market, supported by golf tourism that extends beyond summer. Gross yield must be modelled against the full acquisition cost, including 10 percent IVA on new builds, management fees and the cost of obtaining a tourist rental licence.
Do I need a tourist rental licence to rent out my Cabo Roig property?
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Yes. Valencia's autonomous community requires a tourist rental licence for short-term lets, and Orihuela's municipal rules can add further restrictions. Buyers should confirm whether a specific unit carries an existing licence or can obtain one before completing a purchase, as not all new developments automatically qualify.
What taxes apply to non-resident property investors in Spain?
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Non-residents face several obligations: IVA at 10 percent on new builds at purchase, annual imputed income tax on vacant Spanish property, rental income tax on gross receipts, and a 3 percent withholding deducted from the sale price when eventually selling. These costs materially affect net investment returns and should be modelled before committing.
How does Cabo Roig compare to other Costa Blanca investment locations?
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Cabo Roig sits within a mature, well-serviced part of Orihuela Costa, with golf courses, two nearby airports and an established resale market. Compared to more northern Costa Blanca towns, the southern stretch tends to attract a broader international buyer mix. Supply growth in the area since 2021 means investors should not assume automatic price appreciation.
What airports serve Cabo Roig?
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Cabo Roig is served by two airports: Alicante-Elche, roughly 45 kilometres north, and Murcia-Corvera, approximately 20 minutes away to the south. Dual-airport access is a practical advantage for resale and rental liquidity, as it broadens the pool of visiting buyers and short-term tenants who can reach the property on direct flights.

