After the Genoese attack, Ifach was to continue existing.
In 1418 Alfonso V of Aragon decided that the houses should be repaired, thanks to the request of Guillem Serra, inventoris aquarum, to whom he gave permission to repopulate and impose levies on bread, wine, meat and other products for the next 10 years.
The refusal of the jurors and residents of Calp was categorical, and they informed the monarch of the difficulties, which led to the definitive suspension of the works. However, in 1562, the Italian engineer Giovanni Baptista Antonelli recommended that Ifach be occupied with a view to defending the coast of Calp from attacks by Barbary pirates.
With the same idea in mind, the Marquis of Ariza, in 1637, tried to convert the church of Ifach into a fort. A few years later, Calp was attacked by pirates and completely razed to the ground.
In 1693, we know that Ifach was used as a prison since prisoners escaped from a prison ship, which has allowed us to discover the function of the remains of the destroyed village.