Area Guide

Nueva Andalucía

Nueva Andalucía — Golf Valley, Marbella

Nueva Andalucía is Marbella's Golf Valley — a sprawling, leafy residential district set inland from Puerto Banús, framed by the iconic profile of La Concha mountain. It is the largest and most self-contained neighbourhood in the Marbella municipality, and the area of choice for a wide range of buyers who want space, community, excellent schools and easy access to the coast — all without the Golden Mile price tag.

01

Overview

Nueva Andalucía overview

Nueva Andalucía is the largest residential district within the Marbella municipality, covering approximately 10 square kilometres of valley floor, hillside and open countryside. It is home to around 18,000 registered residents — a number that reflects a genuinely year-round community rather than a seasonal resort population. Its nickname, the Golf Valley, is well earned: three championship courses — Aloha, Las Brisas and Los Naranjos — sit at the heart of the area, their fairways woven between residential streets and villa developments.

What makes Nueva Andalucía work as a place to live, rather than simply a place to own property, is the completeness of what it offers. It has its own commercial centre, supermarkets, international schools, medical facilities, tennis and padel clubs, restaurants and cafés. Residents rarely need to leave for daily life. And yet Puerto Banús is five minutes away, Marbella town centre is under ten, and the AP-7 is close enough that Málaga Airport is comfortably under an hour.

The dominant view from almost everywhere in the area is La Concha — the distinctive peak of the Sierra Blanca that rises to just over 1,200 metres directly to the north. It is one of the most recognisable skylines on the Costa del Sol and functions, for residents, as a constant orientation point. The mountain also provides a degree of natural shelter from northerly winds, contributing to the mild microclimate the valley enjoys.

02

Location & Access

5 min

to Puerto Banús

10 min

to Marbella centre

45 min

to Málaga Airport

10 km²

total area

Nueva Andalucía location

Nueva Andalucía sits directly north of Puerto Banús and west of Marbella town, bounded by the Sierra Blanca foothills to the north and the AP-7 motorway to the south. San Pedro de Alcántara lies 5 kilometres to the west, and the Benahavís municipal border is reached a short distance into the hills above the golf courses. The area is officially part of the Marbella municipality but is widely regarded — and marketed — as its own distinct residential zone.

Getting in and out is easy. The main access from the AP-7 is via the Puerto Banús junction, with secondary access from the N-340 coastal road. Within the area, the road network is well maintained and mostly straightforward, though some of the upper villa zones have narrower lanes that require familiarity. Internal traffic is calm for most of the year, picking up noticeably in July and August.

Málaga Airport is approximately 45 minutes by road via the AP-7 under normal conditions. Gibraltar Airport is around an hour to the west. Those with access to private aviation find the proximity to both convenient, and Marbella's own helipad infrastructure — particularly at La Zagaleta, just above the area — adds a further option for regional travel.

03

History

Nueva Andalucía owes its existence almost entirely to one man: José Banús. In 1964, Banús — already the developer behind Puerto Banús marina — promoted the urbanisation of the valley immediately inland as a luxury residential and tourist destination. The land had previously been used primarily for agriculture, and the transformation into what we recognise today began with the development of the area's first golf courses.

Real Club de Golf Las Brisas was among the earliest to open, establishing the Golf Valley identity that has defined Nueva Andalucía ever since. Over the following decades, Aloha Golf Club and Los Naranjos Golf Club followed, cementing the area's reputation as one of the finest concentrations of golf on the Costa del Sol. Residential development grew steadily around the courses, attracting wealthy Europeans — particularly Scandinavians, British and Germans — who were drawn by the combination of sport, climate and a lifestyle that felt genuinely removed from the pressures of their home countries.

By the 1980s and 1990s, Nueva Andalucía had developed a strong international community character that it retains to this day. The infrastructure followed the residents: international schools, specialist shops, medical facilities and restaurants all arrived to serve a population that increasingly lived here year-round rather than seasonally.

04

Areas & Sectors

Nueva Andalucía areas and sectors

Nueva Andalucía is large enough to contain meaningfully different sub-areas, each with its own atmosphere and property profile. Understanding these distinctions helps significantly when searching for the right home.

La Campana
The commercial and social hub of Nueva Andalucía, centred on Centro Plaza — the area's main shopping and dining complex. La Campana is the most animated corner of the valley, with cafés, restaurants, supermarkets and the Saturday market all within walking distance. Property here tends toward apartments and townhouses rather than standalone villas, and it is popular with those who want the feel of a village centre.

Golf Valley Core — Las Brisas, Los Naranjos & Aloha
The three championship courses and their surrounding villa developments form the heart of what most people picture when they think of Nueva Andalucía. Frontline golf villas with direct fairway access, established gardens and significant plot sizes define this zone. It is the most prestigious residential address within the area and commands the highest prices accordingly.

La Alzambra & Los Naranjos Hill
Well-maintained gated communities on the eastern flank of the valley, offering a mix of villas, townhouses and apartments. Popular with families, particularly those with children at Aloha College nearby.

Monte Halcones & Upper Valley
The higher reaches of Nueva Andalucía, bordering Benahavís, where larger plots and more dramatic mountain views are available. More rural in character, with a greater sense of space and separation from the valley floor. Increasingly popular with buyers who want proximity to the coast without sacrificing peace and privacy.

Marbella Arena & Southern Edge
The southernmost strip of Nueva Andalucía, adjacent to the Puerto Banús bullring (now the Marbella Arena venue) and the N-340. Convenient for Puerto Banús but busier and less residential in character than the valley interior.

05

Property Types

Property types in Nueva Andalucía

Nueva Andalucía has the most varied property stock of any single area in the Marbella municipality — which is one of the reasons it attracts such a broad range of buyers. From frontline golf villas on plots of 2,000 m² or more to compact apartments in well-run gated communities, there is a property type for almost every lifestyle and budget within the luxury market.

Detached villas are the defining property type and the primary aspiration for most buyers here. The finest are the frontline golf villas — large, well-positioned homes with direct views over the fairways, established gardens, private pools and often generous terracing designed around outdoor living. Style ranges considerably, from traditional Andalucian architecture with terracotta and white render to boldly contemporary builds with glazed facades, flat roofs and architectural pools. New-build villas in the upper valley and hillside positions increasingly tend toward the contemporary.

Townhouses and semi-detached villas are abundant in Nueva Andalucía's gated communities — many of which were developed in the 1980s and 1990s and have since been extensively renovated. Well-run complexes with communal gardens, pools and on-site management appeal strongly to families and buyers who want the feel of a house without the maintenance responsibility of a standalone property.

Apartments and penthouses are concentrated around La Campana and the golf course perimeters. Quality varies from older resale stock with dated interiors to new-build complexes offering contemporary finishes, resort-style amenities and rooftop terraces with mountain or sea views. Penthouses with south-facing terraces and open vistas over the valley are particularly sought after.

06

Property Prices

From €300K

entry level (apartment)

€1M–€4M

mid-range (villa)

€8M+

top end

Nueva Andalucía consistently offers better value per square metre than the Golden Mile or beachfront Marbella — a fact that draws buyers who want comparable quality and lifestyle at a more accessible price point. That said, the top end of the market here has moved substantially in recent years, and the finest frontline golf villas now command prices that would previously have been associated only with the coast.

Apartments begin from around €300,000 for older resale stock in established complexes, rising to €600,000–€1.2M for quality new build or well-renovated penthouses. Townhouses typically range from €500,000 to €1.5M depending on size, condition and community. Detached villas start from around €1M for older properties in need of work, with mid-range well-finished villas sitting between €2M and €4M. The finest frontline golf villas on Las Brisas or Aloha — recently built or comprehensively renovated — trade from €5M upwards, with occasional outliers at €8M or more.

New-build developments across the valley have raised the general standard of the market considerably, and buyers purchasing resale properties are frequently benchmarking against new-build quality. The gap between well-renovated resale and new build has narrowed, creating opportunities for buyers who identify older properties in strong positions.

07

Rental Market

Nueva Andalucía has a strong and diversified rental market. The combination of golf, family infrastructure and proximity to Puerto Banús generates demand from several distinct tenant profiles — and crucially, demand that extends well beyond the summer peak season.

Short-term holiday rentals are active from April through October, with villas near the golf courses particularly popular with groups organising golf holidays. Larger villas with pools, south-facing terraces and easy access to Puerto Banús command strong weekly rates in high season. As with all short-term rental activity in the Marbella municipality, the VFT licence requirement from the Junta de Andalucía must be factored into any investment purchase.

The long-term rental market is arguably the more reliable income stream in Nueva Andalucía. Families relocating for the international schools — Aloha College in particular — rent for full academic years and often renew. Executives, golf enthusiasts and remote workers who want year-round base also generate consistent demand. Well-presented three- and four-bedroom villas in good communities rarely sit empty for long. Monthly rents for quality villas range broadly from €3,000 to €8,000 depending on size, condition and position.

08

Investment

Nueva Andalucía represents one of the most dependable investment propositions on the Costa del Sol. Its appeal is broad-based — it does not rely on any single buyer profile or use case — and its infrastructure is mature and self-sustaining in a way that supports long-term value rather than fashion-driven demand.

The area's proximity to Puerto Banús and Marbella, combined with its own strong amenity base, means it benefits from the wider Marbella market's momentum without being fully priced at Golden Mile levels. Buyers who identify well-located properties — particularly those with strong golf views, good south-facing orientation, or proximity to Aloha College — have historically seen solid capital appreciation alongside reliable rental income.

New-build activity across the valley has been substantial in recent years and shows no sign of abating. Plots in desirable positions continue to attract developer interest, and the resulting pipeline of new product is steadily raising the overall quality benchmark of the area. For investors looking at new build for rental or resale, the Golf Valley core — frontline Las Brisas, Los Naranjos and Aloha positions — remains the most consistently liquid part of the market.

09

Lifestyle & Character

Lifestyle in Nueva Andalucía

Nueva Andalucía has a particular quality that is difficult to define but immediately felt: it is a genuinely inhabited place. Unlike some luxury residential areas that feel emptied out between seasons, the Golf Valley has a resident community that is present and active year-round. Cafés in La Campana fill with regulars in February. School pick-ups animate the side streets at four o'clock every weekday. The Saturday market draws people from across the western Costa del Sol.

Mornings here tend to start on the golf course or on a run through the valley lanes, with La Concha catching the early light above. Afternoons settle into the terrace rhythm that defines Andalucian life at its best — long lunches, unhurried coffee, the particular quality of stillness that comes from being sheltered from the coast by a mountain. Evenings, when the mood calls for it, are a short drive to Puerto Banús or a walk to one of the valley's own restaurants.

The social fabric is strongly international but genuinely community-oriented. Residents describe it as one of the more naturally sociable areas on the coast — large enough to offer variety, compact enough that you know your neighbours. The concentration of families with children in international schools creates a particular kind of social connective tissue that many expatriate communities elsewhere lack.

10

Golf

Golf in Nueva Andalucía

Golf is not merely an amenity in Nueva Andalucía — it is the founding logic of the area. The three main courses define the landscape, shape the property values, provide the social infrastructure for a significant proportion of residents, and collectively make this the finest concentration of golf in the Marbella municipality.

Real Club de Golf Las Brisas is the most prestigious of the three. Founded in 1968 and redesigned by Robert Trent Jones Sr., it hosted the World Cup of Golf in 1973 and 1989 and the Spanish Open in 1979 and 1983. A par-72 championship course of considerable difficulty, it is a private members' club with a long waiting list and a clubhouse that serves as one of the area's premier social venues.

Aloha Golf Club, designed by Javier Arana and opened in 1975, is a par-72 course set among particularly mature and beautiful parkland. Its generous fairways make it accessible to a wide range of handicaps while still presenting a genuine challenge. The club has hosted the PGA European Tour and has one of the strongest social memberships in the area.

Los Naranjos Golf Club was designed by Robert Trent Jones Sr. and opened in 1977. A par-72 course notable for its water features — including several lakes that come into play on multiple holes — it is generally considered the most playable of the three for mid-handicap golfers. The clubhouse and restaurant are popular with both members and visitors.

Beyond the main three, Magna Marbella Golf offers an 18-hole course nearby, and Dama de Noche provides a unique 9-hole floodlit course that allows evening play — one of very few such facilities in the region.

11

Sports & Leisure

Beyond golf, Nueva Andalucía has a well-developed sports infrastructure that caters to a resident population that takes its leisure seriously.

Tennis & Padel
The Manolo Santana Racquets Club is the area's premier facility — more than six tennis courts across multiple surfaces (hard, clay and grass), four padel courts, a full fitness centre, pool, yoga and aqua gym. It is named after Spain's most celebrated tennis player and has a strong membership and coaching programme. Tennis Brothers Marbella Club offers five hard courts with a focus on player development. Real Club Padel Marbella has nine padel courts and is one of the most active padel venues on the coast. Aloha Tennis Club and several other smaller clubs are distributed across the valley's residential communities.

Fitness & Wellness
A growing number of high-quality fitness studios, pilates and yoga spaces have opened in and around La Campana over the past five years, reflecting the shift toward year-round residency and the expectations that come with it. Several of the golf clubs also offer gym facilities to members.

The Casino
The Casino of Marbella, located at the southern edge of Nueva Andalucía, offers gaming alongside a restaurant and hosts temporary exhibitions and events throughout the year.

Marbella Arena
The former Puerto Banús bullring has been repurposed as a multi-format open-air events venue — concerts, sporting events, gastronomy festivals and cultural programming. It operates primarily through the summer and is one of the more distinctive social amenities of the area.

Lago de las Tortugas
The Turtle Lake — actually a reservoir — is a genuinely pleasant local amenity: a green, quiet space popular with families for picnics, walks and relaxed afternoons. Home to turtles, ducks and an atmosphere entirely at odds with the gloss of Puerto Banús a few minutes away.

12

Beaches & Nature

Nueva Andalucía is an inland area, but the beaches of Puerto Banús are reached in under five minutes by car. The Playa de Puerto Banús and the beaches immediately east and west offer a good length of sand with the marina as a backdrop — animated in summer, calm and walkable in the off-season. The beach clubs associated with the marina district are among the most well-known on the coast.

For nature, the Sierra Blanca foothills immediately above the valley provide the most immediately accessible green space. Marked trails climb from the upper residential zones toward the ridgeline, with views extending south to the Mediterranean and north into the Serranía de Ronda. The contrast between the manicured golf valley and the wilder mountain terrain above is one of the more genuinely distinctive qualities of living here.

The Turtle Lake within the valley itself offers a quiet green counterpoint to the more structured leisure of the golf clubs, and the general landscape of the area — mature trees, well-maintained communal gardens, the green corridors between golf fairways — gives Nueva Andalucía a consistently pleasant, leafy quality that distinguishes it from more densely developed coastal zones.

13

Dining & Shopping

Nueva Andalucía's dining scene is anchored by La Campana and Centro Plaza, where a concentration of cafés, restaurants, tapas bars and international cuisine serves the resident community year-round. Breathe, a restaurant with a rooftop cocktail bar and terrace garden, is one of the area's better-known addresses. The golf club restaurants — particularly Las Brisas and Aloha — are reliable options for lunch and post-round dining with views over the fairways. Several well-regarded Japanese, Italian and contemporary Spanish restaurants have established themselves in the valley over the past decade.

For the full range of dining and nightlife, Puerto Banús is five minutes away and provides almost everything — hundreds of restaurants across every cuisine and price point, beach clubs, bars and the particular energy of the marina in high season.

Shopping within Nueva Andalucía is practical rather than aspirational: Centro Plaza has supermarkets, pharmacies, banks, a post office, hairdressers and a collection of independent shops sufficient for daily needs. The Saturday market at Centro Plaza is a genuine local institution, drawing residents from across the western Costa del Sol for fresh produce, clothing, and crafts. For luxury retail, Puerto Banús is the natural destination — with every major fashion house represented along the marina frontage.

14

Schools & Education

Schooling is one of Nueva Andalucía's most significant assets for families, and access to Aloha College in particular is a primary driver of property decisions across the valley.

Aloha College is the area's flagship international school, offering the International Baccalaureate across primary and secondary to a student body that is genuinely international in composition. It has a strong academic reputation and a well-developed social and sporting programme. Its position within the valley — walkable or a very short drive from most of the residential communities — makes it the natural choice for families relocating to Nueva Andalucía.

The American College of Marbella, located within Nueva Andalucía, is the first North American High School and University in Andalucía, offering a US curriculum from middle school through to the first two years of university. It is particularly relevant for American families or those targeting US university entry.

Svenska Solan Marbella in La Alzambra is a small Swedish-curriculum school for ages 3–12, reflecting the size and engagement of the Scandinavian community within the valley.

A number of other international schools — including Laude San Pedro International College and Swans International School in Sierra Blanca — are within easy driving distance, giving families a genuine range of curricular choice within a compact geography.

15

Healthcare

Healthcare provision for Nueva Andalucía residents draws on the wider Marbella network. There are several private GP practices and specialist clinics within or immediately adjacent to the valley, and the commercial areas around Puerto Banús provide physiotherapy, dentistry, aesthetic medicine and other specialist services in good concentration.

For more significant medical needs, Hospital Ochoa in Marbella town centre is the main private hospital and is under 15 minutes by road. Hospital Costa del Sol, the public hospital on the eastern approach to Marbella, is also accessible in a similar timeframe. Both provide a reliable standard of care for the conditions that most commonly arise in daily life, and private health insurance — widely used by the international community — provides access to the full range of specialist consultations and procedures.

16

Who Lives Here

Nueva Andalucía has one of the most internationally diverse resident populations of any single neighbourhood on the Costa del Sol. Scandinavians — Swedes and Norwegians particularly — have been established here in significant numbers since the 1970s and 1980s, and their presence is still deeply felt: Swedish and Norwegian are genuinely useful languages in the valley's cafés and school gates. Svenska Solan exists because the community is large enough to support its own curriculum school.

British buyers represent the other historically dominant group and are well distributed across all price brackets, from apartment complexes around La Campana to larger villas in the golf course frontline zones. German, Belgian and Dutch communities have long been active here. More recently, Middle Eastern, American and Latin American buyers have arrived in growing numbers, drawn by the same combination of golf, climate, schools and lifestyle that brought earlier waves of European buyers.

Spanish residents — both local Marbellíes and Madrid or Barcelona-based families with second homes — are also present, more so in the upper valley communities and newer developments. The overall demographic is weighted toward families with children and golf-playing adults of retirement or semi-retirement age, though the rise of remote work has brought a younger professional cohort that is changing the social composition of the area in interesting ways.

17

Family Life

Family life in Nueva Andalucía

Nueva Andalucía is consistently rated one of the best areas on the Costa del Sol for families with children, and it is not difficult to see why. Aloha College is at the centre of social life for a significant proportion of the valley's families, providing not just education but a year-round schedule of events, sports fixtures and community activity that gives family life here a structure and rhythm it might otherwise lack in a purely residential area.

Beyond school, the options for children are extensive and close to hand. The golf courses offer junior academies. The Manolo Santana Racquets Club runs tennis and padel programmes for all ages. The Turtle Lake provides a safe, car-free natural space for younger children. Puerto Banús beaches are five minutes away for summer afternoons. The general atmosphere of the area — quiet streets, gated communities, low traffic — gives children an unusual degree of freedom to move around independently as they get older.

The social environment for families is warm and well established. The concentration of international families — many of whom moved here specifically for the schools — creates strong social bonds that frequently extend well beyond the school years. Nueva Andalucía has an unusually high rate of families who arrive intending to stay for a few years and end up staying permanently, which is itself a measure of how well the area works for daily family life.

18

Buying in Nueva Andalucía

Nueva Andalucía is one of the most active property markets on the Costa del Sol by transaction volume, and the breadth of stock — from under €400,000 to over €8M — means there is meaningful competition at multiple price points simultaneously. In the frontline golf villa segment and in new-build developments from established developers, well-priced properties move quickly.

The legal and planning history of properties in Nueva Andalucía requires the same care as anywhere in the Marbella municipality. The area expanded rapidly through the 1980s and 1990s, and while the majority of properties are fully regularised, it is essential to appoint an independent lawyer to verify planning status, community obligations and any encumbrances before proceeding. Some older villa developments in the upper valley have community infrastructure that was established informally and may carry complications — due diligence is as important here as anywhere.

Community fees vary considerably across the area. In the well-managed gated communities around the golf courses, fees are often significant but reflect genuine value: maintained roads, 24-hour security, communal pool and garden management. In less structured older urbanisations, fees may be lower but community maintenance more variable. Understanding what you are paying for — and whether it is being well managed — is an important part of any purchase decision.

Purchase costs follow the standard Spanish framework: 7% transfer tax on resale, 10% VAT on new build, plus notary, registry and legal fees — typically adding 10–12% in total to the purchase price. Non-resident buyers should obtain a NIE before completing and are advised to open a Spanish bank account at an early stage of the process. We are happy to guide you through each step.

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