Dramatic footage posted on social media website X shows the moment a deluge of muddy flood water inundates Íllora, while onlookers film the carnage from a distance.
Raging torrents surrounded properties as they surged past brick buildings, leaving many cars at a standstill.
The downpour triggered a yellow weather alert, which followed evacuations after the town was left saturated.
The Sun are reporting emergency services responded to 15 separate weather related calls in Íllora alone.
More than 10 homes and garages were left flooded as water gushed throughout Granada.
One onlooker told the Spanish Eye ‘It only lasted 20 minutes, but it was terrifying’.
The local newspaper is reporting the town was hit with up to 60 litres of rain in under an hour.
The destruction left by Storm Alice is the latest to batter Spain’s eastern coast and islands for more than two weeks, leaving popular British holiday spots completely inundated.
Wild weather saw Catalonia declare a state of emergency for five districts including in Tarragona which bore the brunt of the downpours
Torrential rain also brought public transport to a halt, with a train travelling through the Mediterranean corridor from Barcelona and Valencia being suspended, leaving around 3000 travellers stranded. This is some of the damage left behind in Freginals, south of Barcelona
Tarragona in Catalonia issued a red alert warning locals to brace themselves for 180mm of rain in 12 hours earlier this week.
More than one thousand residents in Catalonia were forced to evacuate after record breaking rain in the area
Earlier this week, a red alert was issued in Valencia, where muddy rivers caused by flash flooding left drivers trapped and cars submerged.
Wild weather saw Catalonia declare a state of emergency for five districts, including in Tarragona, which bore the brunt of the downpours.
The city also issued a red alert warning locals to brace themselves for 180mm of rain in 12 hours.
Torrential rain also brought public transport to a halt, with a train travelling through the Mediterranean corridor from Barcelona and Valencia being suspended, leaving around 3000 travellers stranded.
Spain’s Prime Minister, Pedro Sanchez is urging the public to take ‘great caution’, while officials have repeated warnings of ‘extraordinary danger’ with Storm Alice.
Travellers heading to Spain are being urged to check their flight and rail updates regularly in case on any disruptions while weather warnings continue across the majority of Spain.