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The new-build landscape on the Costa del Sol in 2026
The Costa del Sol’s new-build market has matured dramatically since the pre-2008 era. The speculative developments that collapsed during the financial crisis have given way to a more disciplined market where developers pre-sell 60–80% of units before breaking ground, build to genuinely high specifications, and deliver on time more often than not. The current pipeline for 2026–2028 delivery includes an estimated 4,000–5,000 new residential units across the Marbella–Estepona corridor, with the majority concentrated in Estepona, the New Golden Mile, East Marbella, and Benahavís.
Price ranges for new-build stock in 2026: entry-level 2-bedroom apartments from €350K in Estepona and East Marbella, mid-range 3-bedroom apartments and penthouses from €600K–1.5M across most areas, premium villas in gated communities from €1.5–4M, and ultra-prime custom villas from €4M to €15M+. The new-build premium over comparable resale stock is approximately 15–25% depending on the area and specification, offset partly by lower maintenance costs, better energy efficiency, and a 10-year structural warranty.
How off-plan buying works in Spain: stage payments and legal protection
Buying off-plan in Spain follows a structured payment schedule. You sign a reservation contract and pay €6,000–20,000 to hold the unit. Within 30–60 days you sign the private purchase contract and pay 20–30% of the purchase price (minus the reservation deposit). During construction, you make 2–4 further stage payments totalling 10–20% of the price, triggered by construction milestones (foundations complete, structure complete, interior fit-out). The remaining 50–70% is paid on completion when you sign the escritura at the notary.
Spanish law provides strong protection for off-plan buyers through Ley 38/1999 (LOE) and subsequent regulations. Every developer must provide either a bank guarantee (aval bancario) or an insurance policy (póliza de seguro) covering all stage payments. If the developer fails to deliver the property or goes bankrupt, the bank or insurer must return your payments in full plus legal interest. This protection is not optional (it is a legal requirement) and your lawyer must verify that the guarantee exists and covers your specific payments before you send any money.
How to vet a developer before committing
The single most important due diligence step when buying off-plan is vetting the developer. Start with their track record: have they completed previous projects on time and to specification? Visit their completed developments, speak to residents, and check online reviews. A developer who has delivered three or more projects successfully on the Costa del Sol is a very different risk profile from a first-time developer, regardless of how attractive their brochure looks.
Beyond the track record, your lawyer should check: the developer’s registration in the Registro Mercantil (Spanish companies registry), their financial statements for the last 3 years, the building licence (licencia de obras) for the specific project, the bank guarantee or insurance policy covering buyer payments, and the project’s planning permission and environmental compliance. If any of these checks fail or the developer is reluctant to provide documentation, walk away. The Costa del Sol has enough good developers that you never need to take a risk on an unproven one.
Best areas for new developments in 2026
Estepona and the New Golden Mile have the densest new-build pipeline and the widest price range. This is where buyers with a €400K–1.5M budget will find the most choice. The quality of developments here has converged with central Marbella, and Estepona town hall’s faster planning process means developers can break ground 6–12 months sooner than equivalent projects in Marbella municipality.
East Marbella (Elviria, Hacienda las Chapas, Los Monteros) is the emerging frontier for premium new builds at €600K–2.5M, offering larger plots and lower density than the Golden Mile. Benahavís has limited new-build supply but what exists is typically high-end villa communities at €1.5–5M, appealing to buyers who want a mountain setting with golf course access. The Golden Mile itself has very few new-build opportunities because developable land is almost exhausted: the premium for a new-build unit here reflects scarcity as much as specification.
New-build costs vs resale: the tax difference matters
The tax structure for new builds differs from resale in a way that significantly affects your total cost. Resale purchases in Andalucía attract Transfer Tax (ITP) at 7% of the purchase price. New builds attract IVA (VAT) at 10% plus AJD (Stamp Duty) at 1.2%, totalling 11.2%. This means a new-build purchase costs approximately 4% more in tax than a resale of the same price, which translates to €40,000 extra on a €1M property.
This tax premium must be weighed against the new-build advantages: a 10-year structural warranty, 3-year habitability warranty, 1-year finishing warranty, no renovation costs, better energy efficiency (lower running costs), modern layouts with open-plan living, and typically easier mortgage approval. For many buyers the calculation still favours new-build, but the tax differential should be factored into any comparison.
Off-plan risks and how to mitigate them
The primary risks of buying off-plan are: delivery delays, specification changes, and developer insolvency. Delays of 3–6 months are common and 6–12 months is not unusual for complex projects. Your contract should include a penalty clause for delays beyond a defined long-stop date, and your lawyer should negotiate the right to rescind the contract with full refund if the delay exceeds 12–18 months.
Specification changes during construction are a grey area. Developers typically reserve the right to substitute materials of equivalent quality, but “equivalent” is subjective. Your contract should specify the key finishes (kitchen brand and model, bathroom fixtures, flooring type, appliance brands) and require written consent for any substitution. Developer insolvency is the worst-case scenario but it is protected by the mandatory bank guarantee, provided your lawyer verified that the guarantee exists and covers your specific payments. Never pay a stage payment without written confirmation from the guaranteeing bank.
Snagging and completion: the final steps
When the developer notifies you that construction is complete, you have the right to a snagging inspection (repaso de obra) before signing the escritura and paying the final balance. Engage an independent building surveyor; not the developer’s own quality team, to inspect the unit. Common snagging issues on the Costa del Sol include: uneven tiling, paint defects, window seal imperfections, plumbing leaks behind walls, underfloor heating zones not working, and electrical outlets not matching the specification. Most developers will remedy these within 2–4 weeks.
After completion, your property has three tiers of warranty: 1 year for finishing defects (paint, tiles, fixtures), 3 years for habitability issues (waterproofing, insulation, plumbing systems), and 10 years for structural defects (foundations, load-bearing walls, roof structure). Keep records of any defects reported and the developer’s responses. These warranties are legally enforceable and the developer cannot disclaim them.
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Is it safe to buy off-plan property in Spain?
Yes, provided your lawyer verifies the legal protections. Spanish law (Ley 38/1999) requires developers to provide bank guarantees or insurance policies covering all stage payments. If the developer fails to deliver, the bank must return your payments plus interest. Additionally, building warranties protect you for up to 10 years after completion. The key is engaging an independent lawyer who checks that the guarantees exist, the developer is financially sound, and the building licence is in order before you commit.
What is the typical payment schedule for off-plan property in Spain?
A typical payment schedule is: reservation deposit €6,000–20,000 on signing the reservation; 20–30% of the purchase price (minus the reservation) on signing the private contract; 10–20% in 2–4 stage payments during construction linked to milestones; and the remaining 50–70% on completion at the notary. The exact split varies by developer and project. Some developers offer more favourable schedules with only 10–20% during construction and 70–80% on completion, which reduces your financial exposure during the build.
How much more do new builds cost than resale in Spain?
New builds typically carry a 15–25% price premium over comparable resale stock per square metre, plus an additional 4% in tax (11.2% for new builds vs 7% ITP for resale in Andalucía). However, new builds require no renovation budget, have better energy efficiency, come with 10-year structural warranties, and tend to appreciate faster in the first 3–5 years. On a like-for-like total cost basis including renovation, the real premium is often closer to 5–15%.
Which area has the most new developments on the Costa del Sol?
Estepona and the New Golden Mile have the highest concentration of new developments on the Costa del Sol in 2026, with an estimated 2,000–2,500 units in the current delivery pipeline. This is followed by East Marbella (Elviria and Los Monteros) with approximately 500–800 units, and Benahavís with 200–400 units. The Golden Mile has very few new-build opportunities because developable land is virtually exhausted, any new project here commands a significant scarcity premium.
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