Guide · Areas
Nine places, one Costa del Sol.
From Estepona in the west to Mijas in the east, a working guide to the neighbourhoods LCBSE covers every day — written for buyers, not search engines.
Introduction
The coastline, street by street.
The Costa del Sol is often written about as a single place, but anyone who lives here knows it is really a chain of very different neighbourhoods laid out along roughly seventy kilometres of coastline. LCBSE covers nine of them in detail: Marbella, Puerto Banús, the Golden Mile, La Zagaleta, Sierra Blanca, Nueva Andalucía, San Pedro de Alcántara, Estepona and Mijas. Each one has its own character, its own price ceiling, its own mix of beachfront and hillside stock, and its own honest answer to the questions buyers actually care about — where do the children go to school, how long is the airport run, can you walk out for dinner, and what does the place feel like on a Tuesday in February rather than a Saturday in August.
This guide is written the way we brief clients in person. It is not a nav shell pointing at search results; it is the short version of what we would say over an espresso in the office on your first visit. Read it once, pick two or three areas that sound like you, and we will build a targeted viewing schedule around them. Property portals try to show you the entire coastline at once — we would rather start by ruling things out. The nine areas here are the ones worth spending your weekend on; everything else is either too new, too far inland or too compromised to justify a flight from London, Stockholm or New York. We revise this page quarterly because the coast genuinely moves — a restaurant opens, a school expands, an estate changes hands — and a guide that is twelve months out of date is worse than no guide at all. If you spot something wrong, or disagree with a call, tell us; most of what is here came out of arguments with clients over dinner.
The nine
Neighbourhoods, in LCBSE's words.

Marbella municipality
Marbella
The capital of the Costa del Sol — restaurants, beach clubs and year-round life.
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Marbella municipality
Puerto Banús
Marina-front apartments and penthouses at the heart of the region’s nightlife.
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Marbella municipality
Golden Mile
The four-kilometre stretch between Marbella and Puerto Banús. Classic luxury.
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Benahávís municipality
La Zagaleta
Europe’s most private gated estate. Two golf courses, full staff, helipad.
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Marbella municipality
Sierra Blanca
Hillside villas with panoramic sea views, five minutes from central Marbella.
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Marbella municipality
Nueva Andalucía
The Golf Valley , four championship courses and family-friendly urbanisations.
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Marbella municipality
San Pedro de Alcántara
A working Spanish town that has quietly become one of the coast’s best addresses.
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Estepona municipality
Estepona
The New Golden Mile, a revitalised old town and the coast’s best-value beachfront.
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Mijas municipality
Mijas
White-washed pueblo charm above the coast, with Mijas Costa beach below.
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San Roque municipality
Sotogrande
The Mediterranean’s original gated resort , polo, Valderrama and the yacht marina.
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Marbella municipality
Los Monteros
Marbella’s front-line beach community just east of the old town.
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Benahávís municipality
Los Flamingos
Resort-style living around the Villa Padierna Palace Hotel and three golf courses.
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Benahávís municipality
La Quinta
Hillside golf urbanisation above Nueva Andalucía with views over the Golf Valley.
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Benahávís municipality
El Madroñal
Private gated estate neighbouring La Zagaleta, with cork oak forests and mountain views.
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Marbella municipality
Guadalmina
Two golf courses, a Roman tower and one of Marbella’s oldest residential communities.
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Benahávís municipality
Benahávís
The restaurant village above Marbella, surrounded by gated estates and mountain golf.
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Manilva municipality
Manilva
The western gateway of the Costa del Sol — La Duquesa marina, vineyards and value.
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Marbella municipality
Marbella
Marbella proper is the anchor of the coast: a working Spanish city of 150,000 that happens to host the region’s best restaurants, beach clubs and private medical clinics. The old town keeps its Andalusian bones, while Marbella East offers family villas five minutes from international schools. Buyers who want life twelve months of the year, not just a summer rental, usually end up here first.
Marbella municipality
Puerto Banús
Puerto Banús is the loudest postcode on the coast, and that is exactly its point. Yachts, boutiques and nightclubs cluster around the marina; behind them sit some of the most in-demand apartment blocks in Europe. Stock is almost exclusively lateral flats and penthouses , buyers prize walkable access to the port and a rental yield driven by summer demand from the Gulf and Scandinavia.
Marbella municipality
Golden Mile
The Golden Mile runs four kilometres from Marbella’s old town west to Puerto Banús and concentrates the coast’s oldest money. Gated communities such as Altos Reales and Marbella Club sit in the mountains; front-line complexes like Puente Romano define beachfront living. Property here rarely turns over, and when it does, the buyers tend to have owned somewhere else on the coast first.
Benahávís municipality
La Zagaleta
La Zagaleta is the benchmark for private gated living in Europe — 900 hectares behind a single manned gate, two private golf courses, an equestrian centre and a helipad. Homes start at roughly eight million and run to forty. The estate attracts buyers who value absolute privacy over proximity to the beach, and who often already own lateral homes in London, Monaco or Geneva.
Marbella municipality
Sierra Blanca
Sierra Blanca sits directly above Marbella town, on the slopes of La Concha mountain. Large plots, mature gardens and south-facing sea views are the draw, and the drive to Puente Romano or the Golden Mile is typically under ten minutes. It is the closest high-end community to everyday Marbella life, which is why long-term residents tend to prefer it to the deeper inland estates.
Marbella municipality
Nueva Andalucía
Known locally as the Golf Valley, Nueva Andalucía wraps four championship courses — Los Naranjos, Aloha, Las Brisas and La Quinta , into a grid of family villas and mid-rise apartments. It is the softest landing on the coast for buyers with school-age children: international schools are a short drive, Puerto Banús is ten minutes away, and the urbanisations are genuinely quiet at night.
Marbella municipality
San Pedro de Alcántara
San Pedro was a working farming town twenty years ago; today it is arguably the most livable address on the western side of Marbella. A tunnelled boulevard buries the A-7, leaving a long pedestrian park leading to the beach. The town keeps an unpretentious Spanish feel , weekly market, butcher, school run , but sits four minutes from Puerto Banús and eight from La Zagaleta.
Estepona municipality
Estepona
Estepona has spent a decade quietly reinventing itself. The old town is now one of the prettiest in southern Spain, the New Golden Mile stretch between Estepona and Marbella has delivered a wave of considered new developments, and beachfront apartments remain, euro for square metre, the best value on the coast. Buyers who want genuine Spanish life with lower entry prices usually end up here.
Mijas municipality
Mijas
Mijas is actually two places: the white-washed mountain pueblo, popular with long-stay residents for its cooler summers and village life, and Mijas Costa below, a long beachfront strip of apartments, golf urbanisations and family villas. It sits twenty minutes from Málaga airport, which makes it the most practical choice on the coast for owners flying in frequently for long weekends.
San Roque municipality
Sotogrande
Sotogrande is the original luxury resort development on the Mediterranean, laid out in the 1960s by Joseph McMicking on 2,000 hectares of pine-and-cork forest west of Gibraltar. The estate contains five golf courses including Valderrama (host of the 1997 Ryder Cup), the Santa María Polo Club, an international school, a yacht marina and a separately gated inland community called La Reserva. Buyers here are usually different in kind from Marbella buyers , more British and northern European, more established, and happy to trade Marbella’s restaurant scene for genuine privacy and unrivalled sporting infrastructure. The drive to Marbella is 45 minutes; to Gibraltar airport 15; to Málaga airport just over an hour.
Marbella municipality
Los Monteros
Los Monteros is the most established beach community on the eastern side of Marbella, anchored by the legendary Los Monteros Hotel and its private beach club La Cabane. The neighbourhood is a grid of mature villa plots and low-rise apartment complexes on the front line of the beach, with the A-7 tucked behind. Families choose Los Monteros when they want a front-line beach address without paying Golden Mile prices . It is roughly 30–40% cheaper per square metre , and when they want to be on the right side of Marbella for international schools, the San Pedro tunnel, and the drive to Málaga airport.
Benahávís municipality
Los Flamingos
Los Flamingos is a gated golf resort on the New Golden Mile, anchored by the five-star Villa Padierna Palace Hotel and three golf courses designed around the surrounding hills. The development is relatively young , built from the late 1990s onwards , which means homes tend to be turnkey, modern in layout and generous in plot size. Buyers here are typically looking for a quieter, more resort-flavoured alternative to central Marbella, and the short drive to both Puerto Banús (15 minutes) and Estepona town (10 minutes) gives it two very different lifestyles within easy reach.
Benahávís municipality
La Quinta
La Quinta sits on the hills directly above Nueva Andalucía, wrapped around its namesake 27-hole golf course. The altitude gives La Quinta properties panoramic views south over the Golf Valley to the sea : a view that commands a meaningful premium over equivalent homes lower down. The neighbourhood is a mix of established family villas from the 1990s, a handful of contemporary new builds, and a cluster of low-rise apartment complexes. Access to the international schools of Marbella, to Puerto Banús (10 minutes) and to La Zagaleta’s gates (5 minutes) makes La Quinta one of the most practical luxury addresses on the western side of Marbella.
Benahávís municipality
El Madroñal
El Madroñal is the quieter, less-photographed neighbour of La Zagaleta : a 30-year-old gated estate spread across forested hills in the Benahávís foothills. Plots are large, typically 4,000–10,000 square metres, and many homes sit behind further private walls within the estate. The architecture is more traditional than La Zagaleta’s newer homes , more Andalusian córtijo and Moorish-influenced villas , and entry prices are meaningfully below comparable La Zagaleta stock, which makes El Madroñal attractive for buyers who want gated-estate privacy without the very top end of the market. The drive to Puerto Banús is 15 minutes down the winding Ronda road.
Marbella municipality
Guadalmina
Guadalmina, at the western edge of Marbella municipality next to San Pedro de Alcántara, is split into Guadalmina Baja (on the coast) and Guadalmina Alta (inland above the A-7). Baja is the more desirable side , large-plot villas on flat, tree-lined streets leading directly to the beach and to Guadalmina’s two 18-hole golf courses. The community has been lived in continuously since the 1960s, which gives it a settled, unshowy feel that contrasts sharply with the newer developments further west. Guadalmina attracts long-term residents who want a village-feel community with full walkable facilities, including a Roman-era watchtower on the beach.
Benahávís municipality
Benahávís
Benahávís is both a village and a municipality. The village itself is a small white-washed Andalusian pueblo in the Sierra de las Nieves foothills, famous for its restaurants (locals half-jokingly call it the “dining room of the Costa del Sol”). The municipality stretches south to the coast and contains most of the coast’s top gated estates — La Zagaleta, El Madroñal, Los Flamingos and Los Arqueros , which means a Benahávís address covers everything from a traditional village townhouse at €400,000 to a €20 million estate house on five private acres. For context-setting and SEO purposes, Benahávís is the umbrella area; buyers who want one of the specific estates should start on that estate’s own page.
Manilva municipality
Manilva
Manilva sits at the western end of the Costa del Sol, roughly halfway between Estepona and Sotogrande. The area centres on two draws: La Duquesa marina, a low-key port village with waterfront restaurants and a genuine sailing community, and the surrounding hillsides which produce some of Andalusia’s best sweet wine from Moscatel grapes. Property here delivers significantly more space per euro than Marbella or Estepona, making it the coast’s strongest value proposition for buyers who want a villa or townhouse within a thirty-minute drive of Puerto Banús but without the corresponding price premium. New-build activity has picked up substantially, with several mid-rise developments and villa projects now under construction around the marina and on the Manilva-Casares corridor.
How to read the grid
Three questions worth asking first.
Beachfront or hillside? Front-line apartments in Puerto Banús, the Golden Mile and Estepona mean walking to the sand and a built-in rental market; hillside villas in Sierra Blanca, La Zagaleta and Benahavís trade that for space, privacy and panoramic sea views. Then east or west: Marbella East and Mijas are closer to Málaga airport; Estepona and Benahavís are quieter and usually cheaper per square metre.
Finally, new money or old. Puerto Banús, Sierra Blanca and the newer Estepona developments are where the fresh capital lands — bolder architecture, higher turnover, shorter hold times. The Golden Mile, Nueva Andalucía and the oldest parts of Marbella town are slower, quieter and rarely come to market. Know which of the three you are before booking flights; it will rule out three or four areas immediately.
Frequently asked
What buyers ask us first.
- It depends on how you actually plan to use the property. Beachfront apartments along the Golden Mile, Puerto Banús and Estepona offer step-out access to the sand, stronger short-let demand and a life lived in flip-flops — but plots are small and views are lateral. Hillside villas in Sierra Blanca, La Zagaleta or Benahavís trade that immediacy for mature gardens, privacy and panoramic sea views, at the cost of a five to fifteen minute drive to the water. Families who live here full time almost always end up inland; buyers focused on rental yield or short holiday stays tend to favour front-line beach.
Still deciding
Not sure which area fits? Let us know the brief.
Tell us how you will actually use the home — school run, long weekends, rental yield, retirement. We will reply the same day with a shortlist of two or three areas worth flying out to see, a draft viewing schedule and honest notes on what each neighbourhood is like once the summer crowds have gone.