Lifestyle

Culture, language and community for retirees

Local festivals, learning Spanish, joining clubs, religion, volunteering — the soft infrastructure that turns 'living in Spain' into 'belonging in Spain'.

Local festivals, learning Spanish, joining clubs, religion, volunteering — the soft infrastructure that turns 'living in Spain' into 'belonging in Spain'.

Last updated 29 June 2026

The festival calendar is your social calendar

Spanish life is organised around fiestas, and on the Costa Blanca they are extraordinary: Hogueras de San Juan (Alicante, June), Moros y Cristianos (Alcoy, Villajoyosa, Altea, July-October), Bous a la Mar (Dénia, July), Las Fallas (Valencia, March), and town patron saints all summer. Attending — not as a tourist but as a neighbour — is the fastest way to be recognised on your street.

Get a copy of your town's fiestas patronales programme each year (free at the town hall). Volunteer for an event, walk in your barrio's parade, donate to the comparsa (Moros y Cristianos club). Within two years you'll be invited to the casals.

Learning Spanish (and how much Valencian you need)

LevelHowMonthsCost
A1-A2 (survival)Town-hall EPA classes, Duolingo + iTalki6-9€0-€300
B1 (conversational)Group class 2x/week + tandem partner12-18€600-€1,200
B2 (fluent enough for medical/legal)Intensive course + immersion24-36€1,500-€3,000
Valencian basicsOptional — useful for older neighbours and signage3-6Free at AVL

Clubs and communities that actually matter

  • Casa de Cultura (every town) — free concerts, exhibitions, language exchanges.
  • Nordic clubs (Albir, Alfaz, Torrevieja) — Norwegian/Swedish/Finnish schools, churches and seniors' centres.
  • U3A (University of the Third Age, Costa Blanca branches) — daytime lectures, hikes, crafts, in English.
  • Royal British Legion (Costa Blanca branches) — veterans, social events, Remembrance Sunday.
  • International choirs — Altea, Jávea, Calpe and Albir all have established choirs taking new members.
  • Lions, Rotary, Round Table — strong on the Costa Blanca with bilingual chapters.
  • Padel/golf/walking clubs — pure-Spanish or pure-expat, both work for integration if you commit.

Religion and spirituality

Catholicism is culturally dominant but personally light — most fiestas have a religious origin even where attendance is low. Anglican, Catholic-in-English, Dutch Reformed, Lutheran (Nordic), evangelical and a small Jewish community all hold weekly services along the coast. Buddhist meditation groups meet in Altea and Dénia. Most parishes welcome retirees regardless of practice level.

Volunteering and purpose

  • Animal rescue (APASA Dénia, AAUR Alfaz, K9 Club Calpe) — always need foster homes, transport drivers, dog walkers.
  • Food banks (Cáritas, Caixa Popular) — sorting, delivery, second-hand shops.
  • School language assistant — town halls run reading-buddy programmes for primary kids.
  • Hospital visiting — Pastoral de Salud volunteers welcome retirees with basic Spanish.
  • Environmental clean-ups (Limpia Litoral, beach groups) monthly along the coast.

The integration test

Year-three check-in

Three years after moving, you should be able to tick: I order in Spanish without switching to English; I have at least one Spanish friend I see monthly; I attend at least one fiesta in my street; I read local news (Información, Levante-EMV). If you tick 0-1 of these, you're living in an expat bubble — fine, but vulnerable when the bubble shrinks (illness, bereavement).

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