A modern villa on the hills of Kargicak, a private pool framed by trees, sea and city views from an elevated position and an interior that feels like a real family home: this fully furnished 4-bedroom, 315 m² luxury villa for sale in Kargicak Alanya speaks directly to buyers who live design-conscious lives in Istanbul, Ankara or Europe and want the same standard on the Mediterranean coast.
Kargicak is known for villas that stand above the coastline, not on it. This elevated position gives cleaner air, fewer crowds and a wider horizon. The villa sits on these hills around 1 km from the sea, high enough to enjoy a panoramic outlook and lower humidity than the seafront strip, close enough to reach the beach in a short drive.
Architecturally, the house moves far away from generic forms. A bold arched roof element rises behind the main volume and frames the building, giving it an almost loft-inspired silhouette. This gesture, combined with dark window frames, glass balustrades and stone cladding at ground level, pushes the home firmly into the modern luxury villa category.
From the street, the impression is clear: a contemporary villa with a strong identity, not just another house in a row. For buyers who care about architecture and want a home that reflects their taste as much as their budget, this first impression matters.
Boundaries around the villa use trees and walls to create a private envelope. The pool and terraces feel protected from outside eyes, which is a serious advantage for families, pet owners and high-profile clients. Elevated terrain gives the outdoor spaces a clear view over the coastal band rather than directly onto neighbouring windows.
Glass balustrades and long terrace lines frame the sea and city lights rather than blocking them. One of the upper terraces reads almost like a dedicated view platform, facing the water and horizon. With a strong outdoor furniture setup, this terrace can become both a daily living area and the signature marketing image of the property.
Inside, the main living room feels closer to an upscale city apartment than to a basic holiday house. Off-white L-shaped sofas sit on a wide rug, facing a stone-textured TV wall. Dark wood-look flooring grounds the space and gives depth to the neutral palette.
The style mixes modern lines with a touch of modern country and soft loft details. The result feels warm, ordered and calm. Nothing looks temporary or improvised. Buyers between 30 and 50 who are used to well-designed spaces in big cities will feel at home here from the first visit.
A staircase with glass balustrades rises from the lounge and doubles as an architectural feature. Instead of hiding the stairs, the design shows them, which helps place this villa in the “design-aware” category and not just the “big square metre” bracket.
The living area works because of the way textures and tones interact. Stone, wood, fabric and metal all appear, but each in the right quantity. Soft textiles on the sofas, the warmth of the floor, the cool solidity of the stone wall and carefully placed lighting create a timeless atmosphere rather than a seasonal one.
The colour scheme stays on a stable axis of grey, beige, black and white, with some wood and brass accents. This kind of palette ages well and welcomes personal additions: art, books, cushions, a piano or a statement armchair. Future owners can bring their own identity into the space without fighting against strong, dated colours.
The kitchen stands out as one of the most memorable parts of the villa. Lower cabinets in darker tones anchor the space, while cream or ecru upper units lighten the wall. Between them, patterned tiles bring a subtle Mediterranean and Aegean reference that fits the coastal setting without falling into clichés.
Golden and brass touches on the island and fittings add a modern-classic note. The overall result is a kitchen that feels both sophisticated and inviting — the sort of space where people actually enjoy cooking, talking and spending time, not just heating something quickly.
A generous island combines with a four-seat dining table to form the daily centre of the home. Family breakfasts, children’s homework, laptop work sessions and evening drinks flow naturally around this core. For guests, the space reads immediately as the heart of the house.
The kitchen communicates with the living room but does not fully merge into it. That slight separation helps daily life. Cooking, dishwashing and food preparation stay partially out of direct view from the lounge, so the main seating area can remain visually calm even when the kitchen is busy.
For both Turkish upper segment families and European or Russian buyers, this sort of kitchen answers a clear expectation: not only a holiday kitchenette, but a real home kitchen with enough storage, worktop and character to support year-round use.
Upstairs, the villa continues its “main residence” language. Four bedrooms give enough flexibility for a large family, a couple with several guest rooms or a combination of bedrooms and dedicated home offices. Nothing about the layout feels temporary or improvised.
Dark headboards, built-in wardrobes and LED strip lighting create a more hotel-style mood in the sleeping areas. Storage space is generous: cupboards, dressing zones and smart cabinetry allow full seasonal wardrobes and personal items to stay organised. For long-term residents, this level of storage is a serious advantage.
Colours in the bedrooms stay within the same grey-beige-black spectrum as the main living areas, which keeps the whole villa visually connected. A new owner can change textiles and a few pieces of furniture and still keep the overall story consistent.
Bathrooms use beige and brown tone ceramics paired with modern fittings. The effect feels warm and slightly classic, yet current enough that no urgent renovation appears necessary. Everything sits in a ready-to-use state, which is valuable for buyers who want to move in quickly or start a rental contract without construction delays.
Small updates — different mirrors, lighting or accessories — can fine-tune the atmosphere in future if desired. The essential structure and design already support a comfortable, upscale daily routine.
Outdoor life is one of the strongest themes of this villa. The private pool stretches along the terrace, surrounded by sunbathing areas and sitting corners. Trees and boundaries protect privacy while the elevated ground keeps the view open, so owners do not have to choose between being seen and seeing the sea.
Two balconies connect directly with interior spaces, while extended terraces run around the facade. Every level offers a slightly different angle on the coastline and city below, which makes both daytime and night-time use rewarding.
The upper terrace deserves special emphasis. This sea-facing platform works like an outdoor living room in its own right. A mix of lounge seating, dining table and sunloungers would easily turn it into the most frequently used space in the house during the warmer months.
Views stretch across the Mediterranean, over the neighbouring roofs and down to the coastal facilities. The combination of height, glass balustrades and the curved roof line framing the scene creates a sense of calm that is difficult to find in denser areas closer to the shoreline.
At ground level, the pool terrace already hosts tables and rattan-type seating, so the area is ready for immediate use. A few choices in textiles, plants and lighting can lift the setting into an upper-class outdoor room without heavy investment.
Families with children benefit from clear sightlines between the interior and the pool. Adults can keep an eye on swimming and play while still enjoying the comfort of indoor spaces. Couples who work from home can treat the terrace as a breakout space, stepping outside between calls for a swim or a short rest.
Kargicak sits above the coastal strip, and that elevated geography defines the lifestyle. Air moves more freely, evenings feel cooler, and the area stays quieter than the seafront promenade, especially in high season. This villa takes advantage of that hillside setting with its outlook and privacy.
The sea lies about 1 km away. For many buyers in the upper segment, especially those with a car, this distance is not a drawback but a filter. They trade direct promenade access for calm streets, cleaner air, wider views and much more private outdoor areas. A short drive leads to the beach, shops and restaurants, while daily life at home stays serene.
Proximity to the airport adds another strategic plus. Owners who travel often, or who expect family and guests to visit several times a year, save time and effort on transfers compared with more remote locations. That point also matters for long-term corporate tenants and expats.
Beyond the villa’s own features, the wider setup includes:
These elements keep the villa practical as well as beautiful, which matters for long-term living and for serious rental strategies.
The property targets a clear audience and does not try to be everything to everyone. The most natural buyers include:
All of these profiles share one idea: they want a villa in Kargicak that looks and feels like a carefully designed main home, ready to move into and use for many years.
From an investment angle, the numbers and facts line up clearly. The villa offers approx. 315 m² of space, four bedrooms, two bathrooms, private pool, sea and city views, two balconies, private parking and a building age of six years, all in a popular hillside part of Kargicak.
Fully furnished status allows immediate use, whether for personal living or rental. Buyers can move in and then gradually adjust textiles and selected items rather than starting from zero. For long-term or corporate rental strategies, the design language — more “home” than “holiday apartment” — suits tenants who sign one-year contracts and care about atmosphere as much as square metres.
A serious agent will highlight both strengths and neutral facts:
For buyers who think long term about both lifestyle and value preservation, these points often carry more weight than marketing slogans.
This villa counts among Kargicak’s modern, design-focused, fully equipped upper segment homes. Elevated position, sea and city views, a private pool, large terraces and a carefully composed interior come together in a package that feels ready for real life, not just short stays.
Luxury Estate Turkey specialises in connecting demanding local and international clients with villas and apartments in Alanya that combine architecture, comfort and sound investment logic. Each property is checked for legal status, building quality, layout, facility package and realistic rental or resale potential before being offered.
If this modern luxury sea-view villa in Kargicak Alanya matches your plans for a main residence, long-stay base or high-end rental asset, contact Luxury Estate Turkey today.
Request a detailed information file, book a live video tour or schedule a private viewing and take the next concrete step toward owning a design-aware home on the Alanya coastline.
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