A data‑first look at a spacious LLiber detached house and how Molino Villas Costa Blanca converts local inventory into investable opportunities for international buyers.
Nestled in LLiber, this detached estate presents a case where scale, flexibility and location converge. Spanning 595 sqm of built area on a 10,700 sqm plot and priced at EUR 1,500,000, the property is a concrete example of the type of inventory Molino Villas Costa Blanca sources for international buyers seeking either a primary residence with rental upside or a small‑scale hospitality conversion.

As shown in the photos, the house’s clean contemporary lines and large glazed openings are the built expression of an investment brief that favours light, low‑maintenance finishes and flexible room layouts. Internally the property offers 12 bedrooms and 12 bathrooms across generous volumes — a configuration that supports multi‑family use, group lets or a boutique retreat. Molino Villas Costa Blanca selected this listing because it meets three practical criteria their international clients repeatedly prioritise: scale (space for guests and ancillary income), turnkey condition (modern 2010 build, furnished and air‑conditioned) and a plot that allows strategic development (pool already in place, plus room for pavilions or gardening projects).
Quick financials to orient an investor: at EUR 1,500,000 the price equates to roughly EUR 2,520 per sqm of living area and about EUR 140 per sqm of land. Those headline metrics are useful for comparables when underwriting capital value, but the real investor work is in modelling achievable income and operating costs for the chosen use case (long‑let family home vs. short‑let retreat vs. small B&B).

The property is presented with practical assets that matter to international owners: a private swimming pool, multiple terraces that orient to views, established garden areas and full furnishings. The inclusion of air conditioning and modern finishes (construction completed in 2010) reduces immediate capital expenditure for a buyer targeting rental income from day one. Photographs in the gallery highlight the principal entertaining spaces, the pool relationship to the terraces and the garden scale — all important when estimating guest capacity, seasonality and the types of experiences you can charge for.
Operational considerations an investor should test: how many of the 12 bedrooms can be legally and practically let at the same time under local planning rules; what utility and service arrangements (water, septic or mains sewer, waste collection) are required for higher occupancy; and whether any short‑let licensing applies in LLiber. Molino Villas Costa Blanca includes these checks in their vetting process and provides clear dossiers so buyers can price regulatory and operating risk into the yield model.

With a 25‑year track record operating from Xábia, Molino Villas Costa Blanca positions itself as a technically competent bridge between Spain’s regional markets and international capital. Their overall rating of 90.39/100 and an average client score of 4.8 reflect repeat business from investors and relocators who need dependable due diligence and an ability to translate local specifics into portfolio metrics. For a property like this, the agency’s value chain typically includes targeted market comparables, documented CAPEX histories, verified occupancy estimates and introductions to trusted local service partners (property managers, legal advisers, tax accountants).
Molino Villas Costa Blanca’s differentiators are procedural rather than promotional: they pre‑qualify supply against client use cases (long‑let, short‑let, conversion to hospitality), produce scenario tests for returns under multiple occupancy rates, and factor in jurisdictional cost items such as local property taxes and utilities. In practice this means their listing materials for the LLiber house include a plausible income sensitivity table, a short maintenance forecast and recommended repositioning steps — not just glossy photographs. The property images therefore function as both marketing and verification: where an exterior shot shows the pool and terraces, the accompanying agency dossier lists confirmed dimensions, recent servicing and known warranties.

LLiber is a small inland village that offers a different risk/return profile to coastal resorts. Key investment signals for international buyers are straightforward: lower acquisition prices compared with coast, year‑round domestic demand (vineyards, hiking, local gastronomy) and a niche short‑let seasonality that can be less volatile than beach towns. Transport links to larger centres and proximity to regional airports still dictate practical lettability — Molino Villas Costa Blanca flags these items and models transfer times and guest sourcing channels when advising clients.
What to look for in LLiber properties (actionable checklist): spacious plots that allow incremental development; modern mechanicals that reduce immediate CAPEX; documented access to mains utilities; and clear title with no unresolved rural use restrictions. For the featured property, the presence of an existing pool, terraces oriented to open views and the 2010 construction year all reduce short‑term expenditure and simplify fast‑start rental scenarios.
As demonstrated by the photos, the house’s layout provides distinct guest zones and private family wings — an important feature when projecting income from group bookings or blended uses. Molino Villas Costa Blanca’s local team will map those zones to realistic pricing assumptions (weekday vs weekend, low vs high season) and recommend a managerial model that matches investor capacity — hands‑off professional management for remote owners, or hybrid models for owners who want periodic use.
No investment is without trade‑offs. For large rural estates in Spain common risks include seasonal variability in demand, potential planning constraints on adding units, service costs for large plots and the need to confirm short‑let legality. Molino Villas Costa Blanca mitigates these by providing documented municipal contacts, recent utility bills, and references to local property managers so buyers can underwrite operating expenses rather than guess them.

This LLiber detached house is illustrative rather than definitive: it shows what disciplined sourcing and local knowledge can deliver — size, convertible space and an existing set of guest‑facing assets. Investors who prioritise income should ask Molino Villas Costa Blanca for a scenario model comparing at least three uses (primary residence with ad hoc letting; full‑time long lets; and boutique short‑let retreat) and for the agency’s empirical assumptions on occupancy and operating cost ratios. The images in the gallery will help you validate those assumptions visually, while the agency’s 25‑year presence in the region supplies the local contacts you will need to convert opportunity into net yield.
If you want a focused financial packet on this LLiber property — including a price‑per‑bedroom breakdown, a conservative rental yield scenario and an estimated total cost of ownership for the first five years — contact Molino Villas Costa Blanca in Xábia and request their investor dossier for the listing. Their role is to convert the visual evidence captured in the photos into a replicable, data‑driven investment thesis you can take to your advisory team.
Swedish financier who guided 150+ families to Spanish title deeds since relocating from Stockholm in 2012, focusing on legal and tax implications.
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