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The headline: a calmer, pricier, more selective market
Marbella finished 2025 with roughly 7% year-on-year price growth across prime segments, substantially below the double-digit surges of 2022–2023, and for the first time in four years, broadly in line with wage and rental growth in the region. The market is not cooling; it is maturing. Transaction volume across the wider Costa del Sol is down around 9% on 2024, while average sale price per square metre in Marbella proper is up to roughly €4,900 for resales and €6,300 for new builds, with the Golden Mile and La Zagaleta pulling well above those numbers.
What changed between 2024 and 2026 is the buyer mix. The speculative cohort, buyers chasing capital gains on off-plan units, has mostly left. The buyers we meet today are families and end-users planning to occupy for at least part of the year, and the sales cycle has lengthened from around 6 weeks in 2023 to 10–14 weeks today. That is a healthy shift, not a warning sign. The underlying structural demand for Marbella property, tax-friendly residency routes, year-round climate, international schools, and the arrival of direct flights from more secondary European airports, has not weakened.
Area by area: where prices moved in 2025
The Golden Mile posted the strongest 2025 growth among Marbella’s core sub-markets, up roughly 9% year-on-year for beachfront stock, driven by a thinner supply of front-line apartments and a steady flow of international buyers relocating from London, Dubai, and northern Europe. Stock above €5M is turning over in under 90 days on average, with the Puente Romano beachfront band clearing at record numbers.
Nueva Andalucía and the Golf Valley saw steadier growth of around 6%. Family villas in quiet urbanisations near La Quinta and Aloha are selling at or near asking within a month of listing, these are the homes with international school buyers behind them. Apartment stock in central Puerto Banús is more mixed: turnkey units in premium blocks move fast, while dated resale apartments are having to discount to clear.
Estepona and the New Golden Mile: the stretch between Marbella and Estepona town, now represent the best risk-adjusted value on the coast. Prices are still around 30% below comparable stock in the Golden Mile, while new-build quality has caught up substantially. This is where we are sending buyers who want a €1–2M budget to actually buy a property that feels like Marbella rather than a compromise.
La Zagaleta and the ultra-prime inland estates (El Madroñal, Sierra Blanca) are in a different market entirely. Liquidity is thin — 3–6 transactions per quarter across each estate, but prices achieved for vendor-ready homes are at all-time highs. There is a waiting list of buyers for finished, high-specification resales, and very little for anything that needs a refurbishment project.
Who is buying Marbella property in 2026
British buyers remain the largest single group at roughly 22% of international transactions on the Costa del Sol, down from around 27% pre-Brexit but holding steady since 2023. Scandinavian buyers (Sweden, Norway, Finland) make up around 18% collectively and are the single most active cohort in the €1.5–4M villa band. We are also seeing increased volume from Germany, the Netherlands, the United States and: a newer trend — Mexico and Brazil.
The closure of Spain’s Golden Visa in April 2025 did not materially slow the buyer pipeline. Our experience is that the buyers who were using the Golden Visa route have mostly moved to the Non-Lucrative Visa or Digital Nomad Visa, and those who were not eligible for either have simply kept buying without a residency hook. If you assumed the Golden Visa closure would knock 20% off the market, that did not happen.
2026 outlook: stability, not stagnation
Our base case for the next twelve months is 3–5% price growth in prime Marbella, with stronger growth in the Golden Mile and Estepona new-build bands and flat-to-slightly-negative numbers in dated resale stock that needs capex. Transaction volume should recover modestly from 2025’s dip as buyers who sat out the ECB rate cycle return to the market.
We do not expect a correction. The structural supply constraint in prime Marbella, very limited developable land, strict heritage protections on the old town and beachfront, and planning timelines that stretch into five years for major new-build projects, will keep a floor under prices even if buyer volume softens.
Frequently asked
Questions buyers ask us about this
How much has Marbella property gone up in the last five years?
Across prime Marbella, resale prices are up approximately 45–55% in nominal terms between 2020 and 2026, with most of that growth concentrated in 2021–2023. The Golden Mile, La Zagaleta and Sierra Blanca ran hotter, with increases closer to 60%, while dated resale apartment stock in central Marbella and Puerto Banús has lagged at around 30%. New-build prices have risen roughly in line with resales, though the specification ceiling has risen with them, so headline per-square-metre numbers can overstate the underlying inflation.
Is now a good time to buy in Marbella?
For end-users with a 5+ year horizon, yes. The market has shifted from the frenzied pace of 2022–2023 to a calmer cycle where buyers have time to view multiple properties, negotiate properly, and conduct thorough due diligence. Mortgage rates for non-resident buyers have come off their peak, inventory has widened slightly, and motivated vendors in the resale market are now negotiable on asking prices for the first time in three years. For pure speculative investment, the case is weaker, yields have compressed and capital appreciation from here is likely to be slower than 2021–2024.
Which Marbella area has the best capital appreciation prospects?
Estepona and the New Golden Mile stretch remain our highest-conviction area for medium-term capital appreciation. Prices are still approximately 30% below comparable Marbella stock, new-build quality is now on par with the Golden Mile, the A-7 motorway improvements have cut the drive to Marbella old town to under 15 minutes, and the local town hall has been unusually pro-development. Our view is that the current Estepona/Marbella price gap will close by around 50% over the next five years. For buyers focused on prestige rather than appreciation, the Golden Mile remains the safest store of value on the coast.
What is the average price per square metre in Marbella in 2026?
Averages are misleading in Marbella because the distribution is bimodal, but as rough benchmarks: central Marbella town around €4,900/m² for quality resale and €6,300/m² for new builds; the Golden Mile around €8,500/m² for resale and €11,000–14,000/m² for prime new developments; Puerto Banús around €7,000/m² for beachfront apartments; Nueva Andalucía around €4,500/m² for villas; Estepona around €3,800/m² for quality new-build coastal stock. La Zagaleta, Sierra Blanca and the very top of the Golden Mile routinely trade at €15,000–20,000/m² for finished homes.
How long does it take to sell a property in Marbella in 2026?
For well-priced, well-presented resale stock in prime Marbella the average time on market is around 75–90 days. Overpriced or dated stock is taking 6–9 months and typically only clears after one or two price reductions. The best agents in Marbella now recommend vendors do a soft launch of 2–3 weeks with their own off-market buyer book before going public on the portals, which has become a meaningful differentiator in how quickly a home sells.
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