Buying Guide · 9 min
How to Plan a Property Viewing Trip to Costa Blanca
2 June 2026 · Hansson & Hertzell
A well-organised viewing trip is the difference between finding your dream property and wasting a week. Here's how to plan, what to bring, and what to do before and after.
# How to Plan a Property Viewing Trip to Costa Blanca
For most international buyers, the property viewing trip is the moment when the abstract idea of owning in Spain becomes real. Done well, it is an efficient and enjoyable process that leads to a confident purchase. Done poorly, it is an exhausting blur of similar-looking apartments that ends in either impulsive decisions or complete paralysis.
Having guided hundreds of buyers through the Costa Blanca property journey, here is what we have learned about making a viewing trip count.
Before You Fly: Do Your Research
A viewing trip is not the time to start your research — it is the time to complete it. Before you book flights, you should already have answered:
- What is my absolute maximum budget? (including purchase costs of 10–13%)
- What type of property am I looking for? (apartment, villa, townhouse)
- Do I want sea views, golf access, beach proximity, town centre?
- Which areas of the Costa Blanca fit my lifestyle? (north vs south, urban vs rural)
- Am I buying to live in, for holidays, to rent out, or all three?
The answers to these questions determine which properties and areas we show you. The more specific you can be, the more productive the trip.
Choosing the Right Time of Year
Viewing trips work well almost year-round on the Costa Blanca, but there are better and worse times:
October–November and February–March are often ideal. The weather is pleasant (15–22°C), the areas are not overrun with tourists, prices are in regular negotiation mode, and sellers are typically motivated. You also get a realistic sense of what it is like outside peak season.
July–August is tricky. Tourist season means some areas feel artificially lively. Prices are often firmer. Heat makes viewing physically tiring. Sellers may not be in a hurry.
December–January is underrated. Some of the best deals are done in winter. Sellers who have had properties on the market through the summer without success are often highly motivated.
How Many Properties Can You See Per Day?
Three to five viewings per day is the effective maximum. Beyond that, properties blur into each other. Your notes become unreliable. Energy and enthusiasm drop. It is better to do three excellent viewings with time to explore each neighbourhood than eight rushed ones.
A typical viewing trip is 3–5 days. Day one and two for viewing properties. Day three for revisiting favourites. Day four (optional) for due diligence on a shortlist.
What to Bring
- Camera/phone: Photograph everything, including the view from each room, the communal pool, the parking, and the surrounding streets
- Notepad: Write down your immediate impression while standing in each property — this is more reliable than memory later
- A trusted companion: Two sets of eyes catch different things. One person talks to the agent while the other examines the details
- Relevant documents: If you might want to make an offer, bring your NIE (if you have one) and be prepared to provide proof of funds. Sellers take offers more seriously when they come with evidence of financial readiness
What to Look For (That Photographs Don't Show)
Properties always look better in listing photographs. When viewing in person, pay attention to:
- Orientation: South-facing terraces get sun all day; north-facing ones are often cold in winter
- Noise: Traffic from nearby roads, proximity to bars or restaurants, aircraft flight paths
- Condition of common areas: A neglected communal pool or deteriorating building exterior can indicate poor management or underfunded community fees
- Window and door quality: Old single-glazed windows make Spanish winters colder and summers louder
- Building moisture: Damp patches or efflorescence on walls, musty smells, stains on ceilings
- Mobile signal and internet: Important if you plan to work remotely or rely on streaming
After the Viewing: The Follow-Up Process
If a property interests you, the next steps are:
- Ask the agent for the full legal pack: nota simple (land registry extract), community of owners' minutes for the last 2 years, IBI bills, community fee receipts
- Check the nota simple for any charges or encumbrances (mortgages, liens, easements)
- Instruct an independent lawyer to review the documentation
- If satisfied, submit a written offer
Do not feel pressured to make an offer on the day. A legitimate seller will wait a reasonable period for a serious buyer to do proper due diligence. If an agent tells you the property will be gone tomorrow, treat that as a signal, not a fact.
Organising Your Trip Through Hansson & Hertzell
We arrange viewing trips for buyers throughout the year. We recommend contacting us at least two weeks before your planned trip so we can shortlist appropriate properties, organise your schedule efficiently, and ensure owners and keys are available. We provide free transport between viewings in our company vehicle.
Our goal is not to sell you any property — it is to help you find the right one. We would rather send you home without a purchase and have you return with more clarity than rush you into the wrong decision.
