MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals
Published February 2026
Nueva Andalucia sits in a natural valley just behind Puerto Banus, home to five championship golf courses that have earned it the nickname "Golf Valley." Technically part of the Marbella municipality, it has long held its own distinct identity as the coast's most popular residential neighbourhood for families, retirees, and long-term international residents. With an estimated population of around 20,000, it is a genuine community — not a holiday resort that empties in winter.
The area is walkable to Puerto Banus marina from its lower slopes, yet the atmosphere could not be more different. Where Puerto Banus trades on glamour and nightlife, Nueva Andalucia offers calm, tree-lined streets, well-maintained urbanisations, and a neighbourhood feel that the flashier parts of Marbella sometimes lack. Centro Plaza is the commercial heart — a well-established hub with supermarkets, banks, restaurants, a gym, and everyday services that mean you rarely need to leave the area. Aloha College, one of the top international schools on the entire coast, is right here, making it the default choice for families who want British or IB-curriculum education for their children.
The property stock is a mix of established urbanisations from the 1980s and 1990s — many renovated to a high standard — and newer luxury developments with contemporary architecture. This maturity is actually an advantage: the communities are proven, the gardens are lush, the infrastructure works, and you know exactly what you are buying into. For UK buyers seeking the Marbella lifestyle without the Marbella price tag, Nueva Andalucia consistently offers the best balance of quality, convenience, and value on the western Costa del Sol.
Best Areas to Buy in Nueva Andalucia
Las Brisas
The most prestigious address in Nueva Andalucia. Situated around the Robert Trent Jones-designed Real Club de Golf Las Brisas — which hosted the World Cup of Golf in 1973 and 1989 — this area is characterised by established villas on generous plots, quiet residential streets, and mature gardens. Many properties have been extensively renovated to contemporary standards while retaining their spacious plots. A calm, exclusive neighbourhood that attracts long-term residents rather than holiday visitors.
Prices: £500,000 - £5,000,000+
Aloha
Centred around Aloha Golf Club and Aloha College, this is Nueva Andalucia's most popular area for families. The proximity to the school — children can walk or cycle — is a major draw for British and international families. A mix of apartments in well-run urbanisations, townhouses, and detached villas. The area has a relaxed, community-oriented atmosphere with good access to Centro Plaza's shops and restaurants.
Prices: £350,000 - £3,000,000
Los Naranjos
Positioned around Los Naranjos Golf Club, this area offers an excellent mix of apartments and villas at more accessible price points than Las Brisas or Aloha. Frontline golf apartments here represent some of the best value in the Golf Valley. The urbanisations are well-established with mature landscaping, communal pools, and good community management. Popular with both permanent residents and investors seeking rental income from golf tourists.
Prices: £258,000 - £2,000,000
La Quinta
A golf resort area surrounding the 27-hole La Quinta Golf and Country Club, designed by Manuel Pinero. The area offers a varied mix of apartments, townhouses, and villas within landscaped grounds. Slightly elevated from the main valley floor, many properties enjoy panoramic views towards the coast and La Concha mountain. A good choice for buyers who want resort-style amenities and a sociable golfing community.
Prices: £250,000 - £1,500,000
Centro Plaza area
The commercial and social hub of Nueva Andalucia. Living near Centro Plaza means walkable access to supermarkets, restaurants, banks, a gym, hairdressers, and everyday services — a genuine convenience that car-dependent areas cannot match. Properties here are mainly apartments and townhouses in established urbanisations. Ideal for those who value a walkable lifestyle over frontline golf or panoramic views.
Prices: £258,000 - £1,200,000
El Herrojo
A gated hillside community on the border with Benahavis municipality, offering luxury villas with exceptional privacy, 24-hour security with manned gates, and panoramic sea and mountain views. The elevated position provides a sense of seclusion while remaining just 10-15 minutes from Puerto Banus and Centro Plaza. One of the most exclusive addresses in the wider Nueva Andalucia area, attracting buyers who want space, security, and statement architecture.
Prices: £800,000 - £8,600,000+
Why Buy in Nueva Andalucia?
- Five championship golf courses — Aloha, Las Brisas, Los Naranjos, La Quinta, and the newly remodelled Real Club de Golf Las Brisas, all within a compact valley. No other neighbourhood in Europe offers this density of top-tier golf.
- Aloha College — One of the coast's top international schools, offering British curriculum, IGCSE, and IB Diploma for ages 3-18, located right in Nueva Andalucia.
- Walking distance to Puerto Banus — Lower Nueva Andalucia is a short walk from the marina, its restaurants, designer shops, beach, and nightlife — without the noise and premium of living in Puerto Banus itself.
- Strong community feel — This is a genuine neighbourhood with year-round residents, not a seasonal resort. Over 50 nationalities are represented, with a particularly strong British, Scandinavian, and Dutch contingent.
- Excellent restaurants and amenities — Centro Plaza and the surrounding area offer a wide range of dining, from casual cafes to quality international restaurants, alongside supermarkets, banks, and everyday services.
- Mature urbanisations with proven track records — Established communities from the 1980s-90s mean lush gardens, tested infrastructure, transparent community fee histories, and no construction-phase surprises.
- Good value compared to Golden Mile and Sierra Blanca — Equivalent properties in Nueva Andalucia typically cost 20-40% less than on the Golden Mile, with the same proximity to Puerto Banus and superior access to golf, schools, and everyday amenities.
- Strong rental demand — Golf tourists, families visiting Aloha College, and long-stay visitors create year-round rental demand — not just the summer holiday peak seen elsewhere.
- One of the most liquid property markets on the coast — Nueva Andalucia has consistently high transaction volumes, meaning properties sell relatively quickly and there is always buyer demand. This liquidity makes it easier to buy and sell compared to more niche locations.
- Year-round international community — Unlike seasonal resort areas, Nueva Andalucia has a permanent population that keeps restaurants, clubs, and social life active throughout the year.
Costs and Taxes
Nueva Andalucia falls within the Marbella municipality, so standard Andalucia tax rates apply. Budget 10-14% on top of the purchase price for total buying costs:
| Cost | Resale Property | New Build |
|---|---|---|
| Purchase Tax | ITP: 7% | IVA: 10% + AJD: 1.2% |
| Notary Fees | 0.1-0.5% | 0.1-0.5% |
| Land Registry | 0.1-0.3% | 0.1-0.3% |
| Legal Fees | ~1% + IVA | ~1% + IVA |
| Total | ~10-11% | ~13-14% |
For a £430,000 (€500,000) resale apartment in the Aloha area, expect to pay approximately £43,000-47,000 (€50,000-55,000) in buying costs. For a new-build at the same price, budget closer to £56,000-60,000 (€65,000-70,000) due to the higher IVA rate. Use our cost calculator for an exact breakdown tailored to your purchase.
Annual running costs include IBI (council tax) of £500-2,000 depending on property value, community fees of £50-350/month for apartments in urbanisations (covers pools, gardens, security, and building maintenance), and basura (rubbish collection) of approximately £100-200/year. If you are a non-resident, you will also pay income tax on a deemed rental value even if the property sits empty. See our complete costs and taxes guide for full details.
Lifestyle in Nueva Andalucia
Life in Nueva Andalucia is centred around golf, family, and the easy proximity to everything the western Costa del Sol offers — without the intensity of living in Marbella centre or Puerto Banus itself.
Golf — This is the defining feature of the area. Real Club de Golf Las Brisas is the jewel — a Robert Trent Jones masterpiece that hosted the World Cup of Golf in 1973 (won by Nicklaus and Miller) and 1989 (won by Australia). Aloha Golf Club, Los Naranjos, and La Quinta are all championship-standard courses. Green fees across the valley range from £60 to £200 depending on the course and season, with annual memberships available at most clubs. For serious golfers, there is simply no better address in Europe.
Dining — Centro Plaza and the surrounding streets have a strong restaurant scene, from Starz Cafe (a social hub with excellent terrace dining) to quality Mediterranean, Japanese, and Thai restaurants. For a more upscale evening, Puerto Banus marina is a five-minute drive with dozens of waterfront restaurants. El Patio de Mariscal in Marbella old town (15 minutes) offers a memorable Andalucian dining experience. For everyday eating, there is no shortage of casual options at every price point.
Puerto Banus — The famous marina is Nueva Andalucia's nearest neighbour, just 5-10 minutes by car or a walk from lower Nueva Andalucia. Designer shops, beach clubs, a cinema, and one of Spain's liveliest nightlife scenes are all on your doorstep — close enough to enjoy, far enough away that it doesn't disturb the residential peace of the Golf Valley.
Family Life — Aloha College is the anchor institution, offering British curriculum, IGCSE, and International Baccalaureate for ages 3-18, with fees from approximately £5,000-12,000 per year. The school draws families from across the coast, and many specifically choose Nueva Andalucia to be within walking or cycling distance. Laude San Pedro International College is just 10 minutes away as an alternative. The residential streets are safe and quiet, and many urbanisations have communal play areas and pools.
Healthcare — As part of Marbella municipality, Nueva Andalucia residents access the same hospitals: Costa del Sol Hospital (public, 24-hour A&E, 20 minutes east), Quironsalud Marbella (private, multi-speciality, English-speaking staff), and Hospital Ochoa (private, central Marbella). UK state pensioners with an S1 form can use the public system.
Practical Information
Getting There — Malaga Airport (AGP) is approximately 50 minutes by car via the AP-7 motorway. Daily direct flights operate from London (Gatwick, Heathrow, Stansted, Luton), Manchester, Birmingham, Edinburgh, Bristol, Leeds, and Glasgow. Flight time is approximately 2 hours 30 minutes. Budget airline returns typically cost £50-150 outside peak season.
Getting Around — A car is useful for reaching the beach, supermarkets beyond Centro Plaza, and the AP-7 motorway, but daily life in Nueva Andalucia is more walkable than many Costa del Sol locations. Lower Nueva Andalucia is walkable to Puerto Banus and Centro Plaza provides most everyday needs on foot. The AP-7 connects you to Malaga (50 min east) and Estepona (20 min west). There is no train service to this part of the coast, though it remains in long-term planning.
The 90-Day Rule — As a UK citizen, you can spend up to 90 days in any 180-day period in Spain without a visa. If you plan to spend more time, you will need a residency visa — the non-lucrative visa is the most common route for retirees and those not working in Spain. See our post-Brexit guide for full details on visas, healthcare access, and tax implications.
Language — Nueva Andalucia is one of the most international areas on the Costa del Sol. English is widely spoken in shops, restaurants, estate agencies, and professional services. You will also hear Swedish, Dutch, Norwegian, and German regularly — the area draws from across northern Europe. While you can manage entirely in English, basic Spanish enriches everyday interactions and is essential for dealings with the town hall and public administration.
Safety — Nueva Andalucia is very safe. The residential character, established communities, and high proportion of permanent residents create a settled, low-crime environment. Many urbanisations are gated with controlled access, and some of the larger communities employ private security patrols. Standard precautions apply — don't leave valuables visible in parked cars — but serious crime is rare.
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Useful Resources
- Step-by-step guide to buying property in Spain
- Complete breakdown of buying costs and taxes
- How to get your NIE number
- Spanish property cost calculator
- Glossary of Spanish property terms
Disclaimer
This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Property laws and tax regulations change frequently — always consult a qualified Spanish lawyer and tax advisor before making any property purchase decisions. Data sourced from Spanish Land Registry, Idealista, and MUNDO partner network. Last verified: March 2026.
