MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals
Published February 2026
If Marbella is the Costa del Sol's showpiece, Estepona is its best-kept secret — though that secret has been out for a while now. Over the past decade, this former fishing town 20 minutes west of Marbella has undergone one of the most remarkable urban transformations in Spain, earning it a finalist spot for the 2023 European City of the Year Award. Over 130 streets in the old town have been pedestrianised and lined with thousands of flowers, more than 60 large-scale murals cover building facades, and a stunning orchidarium sits in the heart of it all.
But Estepona is not just pretty. It is practical. Property prices run 30-40% lower than neighbouring Marbella for comparable quality, yet you are just a 20-minute drive from Puerto Banus and the Golden Mile. The New Golden Mile — the coastal stretch between San Pedro and Estepona — has become one of Europe's most active luxury development zones, with dozens of new-build projects delivering over the next two years.
For UK buyers, Estepona offers something increasingly rare on the Costa del Sol: the feeling of being in a real Spanish town, with a genuine old quarter, a working fishing port, a Sunday market, and locals who outnumber tourists — combined with world-class beaches, 11 golf courses within 20 minutes, international schools, and private hospitals with English-speaking staff. Malaga Airport is under an hour away, with daily direct flights from seven UK cities.
Best Areas to Buy in Estepona
Old Town (Casco Antiguo)
The heart of Estepona and the star of its transformation. Pedestrianised whitewashed streets lined with flowers, the famous Ruta de los Murales with 60+ painted facades, Plaza de las Flores, independent boutiques, and dozens of tapas bars and restaurants along Calle Real and Calle Terraza. Properties here are older townhouses and smaller apartments — charm over modern finishes. Popular with retirees and digital nomads who want to live embedded in real Spanish daily life. Walk to the beach, the port, and the Sunday market.
Prices: £129,000 - £430,000
New Golden Mile
The coastal stretch between San Pedro de Alcantara and Estepona town, featuring the highest concentration of new-build luxury developments on the western Costa del Sol. Modern apartment complexes with communal pools, gyms, and sea views. Beach clubs like Laguna Village and the new Sublim Beach Club at Playa del Cristo. Close to El Paraiso Golf and international schools. This is where most UK buyers in the £250,000-600,000 range are purchasing. Dozens of projects delivering in 2026-2027.
Prices: £215,000 - £1,200,000+
Estepona Port & Marina
The harbour area has been revitalised with restaurants, cafes, and a lively promenade. Front-line apartments here command premium prices for their marina and sea views. The Sunday Mercadillo del Puerto market brings the area to life every weekend. Steps from Playa de la Rada, Estepona's main 2.6km Blue Flag beach. The marina is currently undergoing an ambitious eco-friendly expansion with larger berths for luxury yachts, solar installations, and modernised facilities — which will further elevate this area.
Prices: £215,000 - £650,000
El Padron
A semi-rural enclave inland from the New Golden Mile, between the Padron and Castor rivers. Traditional Andalucian-style villas on generous plots with mature gardens, elevated positions offering panoramic sea and mountain views, and a peaceful countryside atmosphere just five minutes from the beach. Increasingly popular with families and nature lovers who want space, privacy, and a garden — things that are hard to find in coastal developments. Direct access to the AP-7 motorway.
Prices: £345,000 - £1,720,000
Cancelada
A well-established residential area centrally positioned on the New Golden Mile. Popular with families thanks to proximity to The International School Estepona and Mayfair School. A mix of established urbanisations and new developments, with good local amenities including supermarkets, restaurants, and a pharmacy. More affordable than the beachfront strip while still being a 5-minute drive to the coast. Strong community feel with a growing British contingent.
Prices: £172,000 - £600,000
Guadalmansa
The most exclusive beachfront neighbourhood in Estepona, and according to recent data, the most expensive per square metre in all of Andalucia at £5,200-5,600/m² (€6,000-6,500/m²). Gated communities with direct beach access, infinity pools, concierge services, and contemporary architectural design. Rental yields here are the highest in the region at 6.5%. Attracts international buyers from the UK, Scandinavia, and the Middle East seeking front-line beach luxury without the Marbella premium.
Prices: £600,000 - £4,300,000+
Why Buy in Estepona?
Estepona has been the standout performer on the western Costa del Sol over the past three years, with property values rising 8-10% annually and the premium Guadalmansa neighbourhood seeing over 50% appreciation in five years. Several factors drive this:
- The transformation effect — Mayor García Urbano's 15-year beautification project has turned Estepona from a pleasant but unremarkable town into one of the most desirable addresses on the coast. Over a million flowers planted, 60+ murals, a new public hospital, a renovated marina, and pedestrianised streets have fundamentally changed the town's identity and property values.
- New Golden Mile momentum — The coastal strip east of Estepona is attracting major developers delivering luxury apartments from £215,000 (€250,000) to £1.2 million+ (€1.4 million). This wave of investment is pulling prices upward across the whole municipality.
- Value gap with Marbella — Equivalent properties in Estepona typically cost 30-40% less than in Marbella, yet the towns are just 20 minutes apart. As Marbella prices climb beyond reach for many UK buyers, Estepona captures that demand at more accessible entry points.
- Strong rental yields — Holiday rental yields of 4-6% are standard, rising to 6.5% in beachfront locations like Guadalmansa — the highest in Andalucia. The town's growing reputation means occupancy rates have improved significantly.
- Infrastructure investment — A new public hospital opened in 2021, the marina is undergoing a major eco-friendly expansion, and the AP-7 motorway provides fast connections east to Marbella and Malaga, and west to Manilva and Gibraltar.
Estepona's sweet spot for UK buyers is the combination of authentic Spanish lifestyle, modern amenities, and prices that still leave room for capital appreciation. Unlike some Costa del Sol towns that peaked years ago, Estepona feels like it is still on the way up.
Costs and Taxes
Budget 12-14% on top of the purchase price for total buying costs in Estepona (same rates as all of Andalucia):
| 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 £258,000 (€300,000) resale apartment on the New Golden Mile, expect to pay approximately £26,000-28,000 (€30,000-33,000) in buying costs. For a new-build at the same price, budget closer to £34,000-36,000 (€39,000-42,000) 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 £300-1,500 depending on property value, community fees of £40-300/month for apartments in urbanisations, and basura (rubbish collection) of approximately £100-200/year. Non-residents pay income tax on a deemed rental value even if the property is empty — see our complete costs and taxes guide for full details.
Lifestyle in Estepona
Estepona has something that many Costa del Sol towns have lost: the rhythm of a real Spanish town. The old town still revolves around its plazas, its fish market, and its evening paseo — the tradition of strolling the promenade as the sun goes down. The British community is well-established but not dominant, which means you get the best of both worlds: English-speaking services when you need them, and authentic Spanish daily life the rest of the time.
Dining — The old town is packed with restaurants along Calle Real, Calle Terraza, and around Plaza de las Flores. Taberna Miguel is a long-standing favourite for traditional Andalucian cooking — enormous terrace, proper jamón ibérico, and revuelto (scrambled egg dishes) done right. The port area has its own strip of seafood restaurants. For something more upscale, the beach clubs along the New Golden Mile — Laguna Village, Sublim Beach Club, and the new Eva Beach Club — serve excellent food with your feet practically in the sand.
Beaches — Playa del Cristo is Estepona's gem: a sheltered 680-metre cove with crystal-clear water, perfect for families and protected from the Levante wind that batters exposed beaches. Playa de la Rada stretches 2.6km along the town centre with Blue Flag status, chiringuitos serving sardines and paella, and a modern promenade its entire length. Playa del Padron, east towards the New Golden Mile, is 14km of sand backed by beach clubs including the Sublim at Laguna Village.
Golf — Eleven courses sit within a 20-minute drive. Finca Cortesin hosted the 2023 Solheim Cup and is the area's most prestigious course. Valle Romano offers 18 holes with Sierra Bermeja views and green fees from £64-86 (€74-100). Estepona Golf, just a mile west of town, is the most affordable option — mountain views, honest golf, and none of the pretension.
Healthcare — Estepona has three hospitals: the public Hospital de Alta Resolución (opened 2021, 24-hour A&E), the private Hospiten Estepona (24/7, multi-lingual staff, 20+ specialities), and Vithas Xanit Estepona (30 specialities). The larger public Hospital Costa del Sol in Marbella is 20 minutes east. UK state pensioners with an S1 form can access the public system.
Schools — The International School Estepona (British curriculum, ages 2-12, fees from £4,000-7,500/year) and Mayfair School (British curriculum, ages 3-18) are both on the New Golden Mile. Queens British Grammar School offers IGCSE and A-Levels in town. For older children, Aloha College and Laude San Pedro are a 20-minute drive towards Marbella.
Practical Information
Getting There — Malaga Airport (AGP) is approximately 50 miles west, around 50-55 minutes 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 roughly 2 hours 30 minutes. Budget airlines keep fares competitive — returns for £50-150 are typical outside peak season. Gibraltar Airport is also about 50 minutes away and served by British Airways from London Heathrow, useful as an alternative in summer.
Getting Around — A car is recommended for the New Golden Mile and surrounding areas, though the old town, port, and beaches are all walkable. Estepona's bus station (Avenida del Litoral, near the Congress Centre) has regular services to Marbella, Fuengirola, and Malaga. The nearest train station is in Fuengirola, about an hour by bus — the rail network does not extend this far west. Taxis are reasonable and there are several local ride services.
Shopping — Four Mercadona supermarkets, plus Lidl, Aldi, and a large Carrefour hypermarket on the road towards Marbella. The old town has independent shops, and the port hosts the Mercadillo del Puerto market every Sunday morning (9am-2pm) — clothes, crafts, leather goods, and ceramics, combined with coffee at the harbour-side cafes. Wednesday mornings bring a separate fresh produce market.
The 90-Day Rule — As a UK citizen, you can stay up to 90 days in any 180-day period in Spain without a visa. For longer stays, you will need a residency visa — the non-lucrative visa is most common for retirees and remote workers. See our post-Brexit guide for full details on visas, healthcare access, and tax implications.
Language — English is spoken in estate agencies, international schools, private hospitals, and expat-oriented businesses, but less widely than in central Marbella. Learning basic Spanish enriches the experience considerably and is essential for dealings with the town hall (ayuntamiento) and public services. Most British residents get by with a mix of both.
Safety — Estepona is very safe. It consistently records some of the lowest crime rates on the Costa del Sol. The old town is lively but calm, and residential urbanisations typically have gated access and security. Standard precautions apply in summer around busy beach areas.
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
Are you a property agent in Estepona? List your properties on MUNDO and reach UK buyers actively searching for their Spanish home.
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.
