Market
Puente Romano Property Prices 2026: Notarial EUR/m2 at Marbella's Priciest Address
Registered notarial sale prices for Puente Romano, Marbella in 2026: what apartments on the Golden Mile's prime resort address actually sold for at the notary.
Photo by Vita Vilcina on Unsplash
In Puente Romano, the registered sale price, what buyers actually paid at the notary, averaged 16,889 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 16,889 EUR/m2 and villa figures not available (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). These are real closing prices, not asking prices, and they confirm Puente Romano as the highest-priced notarial zone on the Costa del Sol, a prime resort-adjacent address where every registered transaction this period was an apartment.
What did property actually sell for in Puente Romano in 2026?
Registered notarial sales in the zone averaged 16,889 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026: 16,889 EUR/m2 for apartments, n/a for all villas, n/a for new-build villas, and n/a for resale villas (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). These are the prices recorded at the notary when a deed is signed, the most reliable public signal of what a home on this stretch of the Golden Mile actually changed hands for.
| Property type | Registered price (EUR/m2), Puente Romano, June 2026 |
|---|---|
| All property types | 16,889 |
| Apartments | 16,889 |
| All villas | n/a |
| Resale villas | n/a |
| New-build villas | n/a |
Source: listyco notarial data, 2026-06 (Consejo General del Notariado). The all-type and apartment figures are identical, which means every registered transaction in the zone this period was an apartment. All three villa metrics are n/a because too few registered villa transactions fell in the zone to report a reliable figure, a pattern that reflects the extreme scarcity of villa sales in this pocket rather than an absence of villas. The villas that exist here are held as long-term holdings, and they rarely come to market.
What kind of place is Puente Romano and who buys there?
Puente Romano is a beachfront zone on Marbella’s Golden Mile, the 4.5-kilometre coastal corridor running from the historic old town to Puerto Banus. The area takes its name from the Puente Romano Beach Resort, a complex designed by architect Melvin Villarroel and first built as a residential apartment development in 1974, then converted to a hotel in 1979 (Wikipedia, Club de Tenis Puente Romano). The tennis club within the resort grounds opened the same year under the initial management of Bjorn Borg, and has since hosted Davis Cup ties and the Andalucia Tennis Experience. That origin story matters for prices: the resort established the area as Marbella’s benchmark for luxury hospitality, and the residential property around it has traded at a premium ever since.
The resort itself is now a sprawling gastronomic and lifestyle destination with more than 20 restaurants and bars, including Nobu, the Sea Grill, La Petite Maison, COYA, Cipriani and the Chiringuito beach club (Puente Romano Beach Resort, puenteromano.com). A Nobu Hotel operates as a hotel-within-a-hotel concept within the grounds, adding a second luxury brand to the address. The Six Senses spa and the tennis club round out the amenity offer. This concentration of five-star infrastructure is what distinguishes the Puente Romano zone from the wider Golden Mile: the resort is both the anchor and the amenity, and residential buyers are paying for proximity to it.
The buyer profile is exclusively international and ultra-prime. UK, Scandinavian, Middle Eastern and northern European HNW buyers dominate, drawn by the beachfront location, the security of gated communities, and the walkability of the Golden Mile promenade. Second-home buyers and permanent residents coexist, but the price entry point filters for buyers with substantial resources. The zone sits at the top of the Marbella market, above the Golden Mile corridor average and well above the working Spanish neighbourhoods further inland. For the wider area context, see the Marbella Golden Mile property prices guide.
What drives prices in Puente Romano?
Three structural factors shape the EUR/m2 figure in this zone, and understanding them is essential to reading the registered average correctly.
The resort anchor. The Puente Romano Beach Resort is the single most important price driver in the zone. The resort’s Michelin-level dining, tennis facilities, spa and beach club create a level of amenity density that no other residential pocket on the Costa del Sol can match. Residential property within walking distance of this infrastructure commands a premium that is structural, not cyclical. Buyers are paying for the lifestyle package the resort delivers, not just for bricks and land. This is why the zone registers above neighbouring Golden Mile areas on the same notarial measure.
Extreme supply scarcity. The zone is a finite beachfront strip between the coast road and the sea, and it is almost entirely built out. The apartment stock dates from the 1974 origins through subsequent phases, with limited room for net-new construction. The n/a for all villa metrics is itself a supply signal: the villas that exist here are trophy assets held across generations, and they do not transact often enough to register a reliable notarial figure. When a villa does come to market, it is a rare event, not a recurring supply stream. This fixed-supply condition is what supports the 16,889 EUR/m2 apartment figure, which is roughly four times the broader Marbella market on the same registered-sale measure. For the full acquisition-cost breakdown, including the 7 per cent Andalusian ITP on resales, see the cost of buying guide.
The Golden Mile position. The Golden Mile’s history as Marbella’s original luxury address, dating to the 1950s when Prince Alfonso de Hohenlohe founded the Marbella Club Hotel, established the corridor’s reputation decades before the Puente Romano resort was built. The zone inherits that pedigree. The Golden Mile’s beachfront promenade connects the area to the old town in one direction and Puerto Banus in the other, giving residents walkable access to both the historic centre and the marina without needing a car. This connectivity, combined with the beachfront position, is the third pillar of the price structure.
How does Puente Romano compare to neighbouring zones?
Puente Romano occupies the top price tier within the Golden Mile’s beachfront belt. Its registered all-type average of 16,889 EUR/m2 places it above every other notarial zone on the Costa del Sol on the same registered-sale measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). The comparison is between the resort-adjacent prime pocket and the wider Golden Mile corridor, where the marina-front and beachfront positions command different premiums.
To the west, Puerto Banus offers a marina-front proposition. The marina zone registers below Puente Romano on the same notarial measure, reflecting the difference between a marina-adjacent commercial address and a resort-anchored residential pocket. A buyer weighing the two is choosing between Puerto Banus’s marina immediacy and nightlife, and Puente Romano’s resort-anchored residential calm. See the Puerto Banus property prices guide for that comparison.
Eastward, the Nagueles zone sits at the Marbella-town end of the Golden Mile, a residential area that registers below the Puente Romano pocket. The comparison is between the resort-adjacent address and the established residential section of the corridor. Our Nagueles property prices guide covers that market. Further west, the Nueva Andalucia golf valley offers a different proposition entirely: golf-adjacent residential living at a lower price tier. See the Nueva Andalucia property prices guide for that market, and the Marbella rental yields guide for what buy-to-let returns look like across these zones.
Why are registered prices the right benchmark for this zone?
The notarial average of 16,889 EUR/m2 is the only registered-sale figure available for this zone (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). Asking prices in listings for apartments near the Puente Romano resort typically start well above EUR 1,000,000 for a two-bedroom unit and reach several million for a penthouse or frontline beach apartment. These are list prices set by sellers and their agents, and they sit above the registered notarial prices because they reflect the negotiation starting point, not the closing outcome.
The gap between asking and registered is structural across the Costa del Sol, but it is particularly wide in ultra-prime pockets like Puente Romano, where the limited transaction volume means each registered sale carries disproportionate weight. A buyer should treat the notarial figure as the evidence of what closed, and asking prices as the negotiation starting point. The absence of villa figures is a signal, not a gap: it tells the buyer that the villa market here is effectively closed, with supply held off-market by owners who do not need to sell.
For the national market trajectory, Tinsa’s IMIE Local Markets index reported 15.2 per cent year-on-year growth in the second quarter of 2026, the highest rate since the third quarter of 2006 (Tinsa, IMIE Mercados Locales Q2 2026, published 30 June 2026), and the INE Housing Price Index stood at 12.9 per cent year-on-year in the first quarter of 2026 (INE, IPV Q1 2026), national figures that frame the broader Spanish market context in which Puente Romano’s local figures sit.
How should a buyer read the Puente Romano data?
The registered figures confirm Puente Romano’s position as the Costa del Sol’s priciest notarial zone. The all-type average of 16,889 EUR/m2 is an apartment-only figure, and a buyer should read it as the registered market clearing price for resort-adjacent apartments, not as a blended figure across property types. The villa market is effectively invisible in the registered data, which means a buyer seeking a detached villa in this pocket will find no reliable notarial benchmark. The transaction volume is too thin.
The Marbella municipality continues to grow, reaching 166,999 residents on the 2024 padron (Ayuntamiento de Marbella), with nearly 30 per cent of residents foreign-born. That population growth underpins housing demand across all price tiers, but in a zone where supply is fixed by the beachfront position, the built-out nature of the strip, and the trophy-asset character of the villa stock, demand growth translates into price resilience rather than new supply. This is the structural condition that defines the Puente Romano market: a fixed-supply address at the top of the Costa del Sol price hierarchy, where the registered apartment figure is the benchmark and the villa market is a private affair between owners who rarely sell.
This guide is general information, not legal or tax advice. Rules change and individual circumstances differ. Verify current requirements with an independent lawyer (abogado) or tax advisor (gestor/asesor fiscal) before acting.
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Frequently asked questions
- What is the average price per m2 in Puente Romano in 2026?
- Registered notarial sales averaged 16,889 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 16,889 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). These are closing prices recorded at the notary, not asking prices from portals. Villa figures are not available for this zone, as no standalone villa transactions registered separately.
- Why are all villa figures n/a for Puente Romano?
- The villa, new-build villa and resale villa metrics are all n/a because too few registered villa transactions fell in the zone this month to report a reliable figure. The all-type and apartment figures are identical at 16,889 EUR/m2, meaning every registered sale was an apartment. Villas in this area are rarely transacted, held as long-term holdings by their owners.
- How does Puente Romano compare to other Golden Mile zones?
- Puente Romano registers the highest notarial EUR/m2 on the Costa del Sol at 16,889, well above neighbouring Golden Mile zones on the same registered-sale measure. The comparison is between the resort-adjacent prime pocket and the wider Golden Mile corridor, where the marina-front and beachfront positions command different premiums.
- What is Puente Romano and where is it located?
- Puente Romano is a beachfront zone on Marbella's Golden Mile, the 4.5-kilometre coastal corridor between the historic old town and Puerto Banus. The area takes its name from the Puente Romano Beach Resort, designed by architect Melvin Villarroel, first built as apartments in 1974 and converted to a hotel in 1979.
- Is Puente Romano a good investment at these price levels?
- The registered 16,889 EUR/m2 figure reflects a prime resort-adjacent zone with extremely limited transaction volume and no villa sales. Buyers should weigh the scarcity value of the address against the highest entry price on the coast. Treat the notarial figure as a negotiation reference, not a prediction of future appreciation.
Sources and data
- Centro de Informacion Estadistica del Notariado (notarial transaction statistics) · Consejo General del Notariado
- IMIE Mercados Locales 2 trimestre 2026: +15,2% · Tinsa
- Indice de Precios de Vivienda (IPV), Primer trimestre 2026 · INE
- El Padron de Marbella mantiene su crecimiento sostenido y se situa en 166.999 habitantes a finales de 2024 · Ayuntamiento de Marbella
- Club de Tenis Puente Romano · Wikipedia
- Dinner and Drinks at Puente Romano Marbella · Puente Romano Beach Resort