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Playa Bajadilla and Puertos Property Prices 2026: Notarial EUR/m2 at Marbella's Port Edge
Registered notarial sale prices for Playa Bajadilla and Puertos, Marbella, June 2026: what apartments and villas near the port and old town actually sold for.
Photo by Milan Trninic on Unsplash
On Marbella’s port edge, registered sale prices in Playa Bajadilla and Puertos averaged 4,763 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 4,758 EUR/m2 and resale villas at 4,875 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). New-build villa prices are n/a for the zone this month. The striking feature here is convergence: villa and apartment figures sit remarkably close to each other, a rarity on the Costa del Sol where the two property types usually diverge sharply. This zone, wedged between Marbella’s old town and its fishing port, produces a price structure shaped by centrality rather than resort luxury.
What did property actually sell for in Playa Bajadilla and Puertos in 2026?
Registered notarial sales averaged 4,763 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026: 4,758 EUR/m2 for apartments and 4,875 EUR/m2 for resale villas (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). New-build villa data is n/a this month. These are the prices recorded at the notary when a deed is signed, the most reliable public signal of what a home in this central Marbella strip actually changed hands for.
| Property type | Registered price (EUR/m2), Playa Bajadilla and Puertos, June 2026 |
|---|---|
| All property types | 4,763 |
| Apartments | 4,758 |
| Resale villas | 4,875 |
| New-build villas | n/a |
Source: listyco notarial data, 2026-06 (Consejo General del Notariado). New-build villas are n/a because too few registered new-build villa sales fell in the zone this month to report a reliable figure.
What kind of place is Playa Bajadilla and Puertos and who buys there?
Playa Bajadilla and Puertos is the coastal strip where Marbella’s old town meets its working port. The zone takes its name from two overlapping anchors: La Bajadilla beach, roughly 700 metres of golden sand that stretches from the fishing port’s breakwater toward the west, and the Puerto Deportivo de Marbella, the oldest of the city’s marinas, sitting right on the Paseo Maritimo. The Junta de Andalucia lists the Puerto Deportivo as the town-centre harbour whose leisure and dining possibilities are as wide as Marbella itself.
The Paseo Maritimo runs the full length of Marbella’s coastline, more than six kilometres from the fishing port through the centre and westward toward Puerto Banus. Residents of this zone can walk the promenade in both directions: toward the old town’s Plaza de los Naranjos and its 16th-century Town Hall to the northwest, or along the seafront toward the marina and the beaches to the east. That walkability is the zone’s defining asset.
The residential fabric here is denser and more urban than the villa estates of Nueva Andalucia or the beachfront low-rises of the Golden Mile. Apartment towers, many built in the 1970s and 1980s during Marbella’s first high-rise wave, line the seafront behind the promenade. Further inland, toward the old town, the streets narrow into a mix of townhouses, smaller apartment blocks and a handful of detached villas on compact plots. The building stock is mature: this is not a zone of new developments but of established residences that have housed local families and long-term international residents for decades.
The buyer profile reflects that centrality. Spanish families who want to live in Marbella year-round, within walking distance of schools, shops, the daily market and the old town, form a strong share of demand. International buyers here tend to be practical rather than aspirational: they want a genuine Marbella address, not a resort postcode, and they accept smaller footprints for the privilege of walking to dinner, the beach and the port without starting a car. Holiday-home buyers who prioritise rental potential also feature, because the zone’s central position and beach access command steady seasonal demand.
Why do villa and apartment prices converge in this zone?
The near-parity between the apartment figure (4,758 EUR/m2) and the villa figure (4,875 EUR/m2) is the most unusual feature of this zone’s data. In most Marbella sub-areas, the two property types sit far apart. Here they meet, and three factors explain why.
Compact beachfront apartments carry the apartment figure upward. The seafront towers along the Paseo Maritimo are not large by Marbella standards, typically between 80 and 150 square metres, but their beachfront position and promenade frontage push their absolute values high. The per-square-metre figure rises because the total price is spread over a smaller footprint. This is the same dynamic that lifts the Golden Mile’s apartment figure, but at a lower absolute level because the zone lacks the hotel-anchored luxury positioning of the Puente Romano and Marbella Club stretch to the west.
Central villas sit on tighter plots than resort estates. The villas near the port and old town are not the sprawling plot-based properties of Sierra Blanca or La Zagaleta. They are town-centre villas on compact parcels, many original builds renovated over the years, with built areas that keep the per-square-metre figure in a similar range to the beachfront apartments. The villa figure of 4,875 EUR/m2 reflects this stock: central, convenient, but without the land premium that drives villa prices skyward in gated estates further inland.
The built-out character limits extreme values. The n/a for new-build villas signals that this is a mature, largely developed zone. New construction is rare and typically involves one-off replacements rather than estate-scale projects. Without a stream of newly built luxury villas setting fresh price benchmarks, the registered figures reflect the existing stock rather than a new-build premium, keeping both tiers anchored to the established market.
What drives prices in Playa Bajadilla and Puertos?
Three forces shape the registered average, and a buyer who understands them reads the numbers differently.
Centrality is the prime driver. The zone sits within walking distance of Marbella’s old town, with its Plaza de los Naranjos, the Moorish castle walls, the Iglesia de la Encarnacion and the daily market. Properties that can reach these amenities on foot carry a location premium that has nothing to do with resort facilities and everything to do with urban convenience. This is the pull for year-round residents who want Marbella as a lived-in town, not a holiday backdrop.
Port and beachfront proximity. La Bajadilla beach, with its shallow waters and family-friendly profile, and the Puerto Deportivo, with its restaurants, bars and boat activity, create a waterfront amenity cluster that supports demand. The fishing port adds an authentic working-harbour character that distinguishes this stretch from the manicured resort zones. Buyers who value that genuineness, and the seafood restaurants that line the port approach, pay for proximity to it.
Limited supply of beachfront land. As with all central Marbella seafront, no new beachfront can be created. The existing apartment towers occupy the prime frontage, and redevelopment is rare because the land beneath them outvalues the buildings. This supply ceiling keeps beachfront apartment prices structurally firm and makes the registered apartment figure one of the more stable in the municipality.
How does Playa Bajadilla and Puertos compare to its neighbours?
The zone’s registered all-type average of 4,763 EUR/m2 places it in the mid-range of Marbella sub-areas on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado).
To the west, the Marbella Golden Mile registers higher per square metre, driven by its hotel-anchored beachfront and the Puente Romano and Marbella Club resort ecosystem. The Golden Mile sells a walk-to-the-beach-club lifestyle; Playa Bajadilla sells a walk-to-the-old-town lifestyle. Buyers choosing between the two weigh resort glamour against urban authenticity, and the price difference reflects that trade.
Also west along the coast, Casablanca sits at Marbella’s price summit, a beachfront zone where registered prices run higher still. Playa Bajadilla offers a more accessible entry point to central Marbella beachfront living without the premium attached to the Casablanca address.
Inland, the Huerta Belon and Calvario zone borders the old town’s eastern edge, with a different mix of apartments and townhouses. Buyers weighing the two areas compare the port-edge beachfront position of Playa Bajadilla against the old-town-adjacent residential character of Huerta Belon.
Further north, the Valdeolletas, Las Cancelas and Xarblanca residential belt offers larger plots and a quieter setting away from the coast. Buyers who want space and privacy over walkability gravitate there, while those who prioritise beach and town access stay in Playa Bajadilla.
Why are registered prices lower than asking prices and valuation estimates?
Registered notarial prices sit below both asking prices and valuation estimates because they capture every signed deed across the full transaction mix, including older resales and transfers, rather than the prime, newly listed stock that drives the headlines. A model estimate from listyco market-stats places current valuations around 9,870 EUR/m2 (model estimate, not a sale price), with high confidence across 38 property valuations. Asking prices on portals run higher still (asking, not closing). The 4,763 EUR/m2 registered average is the figure that reflects completed sales.
These two numbers answer different questions. The notarial figure tells you what closed; the model estimate gauges current value across the standing housing stock. Read together they form an honest range: what sellers ask, what the stock is estimated to be worth, and what actually sold. For national context, the INE Housing Price Index for Q1 2026 reports a 12.9 per cent annual increase in Spanish house prices, with new houses up 9.1 per cent and used houses up 13.5 per cent (INE, IPV, Q1 2026). That national figure spans the full market, including lower-priced inland areas, which is why it sits well below this zone’s registered average.
How should a buyer read these numbers?
Anchor your negotiation to the 4,763 EUR/m2 registered average: it is what comparable homes actually closed at. Treat asking prices as the seller’s opening bid and the model estimate as a valuation guide for the standing stock. A buyer who starts from the registered figure, then adjusts for beachfront position, a sea view, a renovated interior or a walk-to-port location, works from what the market did rather than what it hopes to do. The n/a on new-build villas does not mean new villas are cheap; it means the new-build market here is too thin to benchmark, so any new-build price you encounter is a one-off asking price rather than a comparable registered sale.
The convergence of villa and apartment figures here is the zone’s signature. If you are weighing a beachfront apartment against a central villa, the data says you are choosing between two similarly priced tiers per square metre, not between a cheap and an expensive option. The decision is about lifestyle and footprint, not about which property type carries a price advantage. For the full acquisition-cost breakdown, including the 7 per cent Andalusian ITP on resales, see the cost of buying guide. And for the holding-tax obligations that follow any non-resident purchase, the non-resident property holding taxes guide lays out the annual liabilities.
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Frequently asked questions
- What is the average price per m2 in Playa Bajadilla and Puertos in 2026?
- Registered notarial sales averaged 4,763 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 4,758 EUR/m2 and resale villas at 4,875 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). That is what actually closed at the notary, not an asking price.
- Why do villa and apartment prices converge in this zone?
- Most Marbella zones show villas well above or below apartments per square metre. Here the two sit remarkably close to each other because the zone mixes compact beachfront apartment towers, which push the apartment figure up, with central villas on tighter plots near the port, which keep the villa figure from running away. The result is a convergence that reflects the central, built-out character of this strip.
- How much do new-build villas cost in Playa Bajadilla and Puertos?
- For June 2026 the new-build villa figure is n/a for the zone: there were too few registered new-build villa transactions to publish a reliable price, so no number is shown rather than an estimate. This is a mature, built-out area where new villas are rare one-off replacements rather than estate projects.
- How does Playa Bajadilla compare to the Marbella Golden Mile?
- Playa Bajadilla and Puertos sits east of the Golden Mile, closer to the old town and the fishing port. The Golden Mile registers higher per square metre on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06), driven by its hotel-anchored beachfront. Playa Bajadilla trades some of that premium for central-town walkability and proximity to the port and old town.
- What is the difference between the notarial figure and the model estimate?
- The notarial figure (4,763 EUR/m2) is a registered sale price recorded at the notary. The market-stats figure (around 9,870 EUR/m2) is a model estimate of current valuation across the standing stock, a different measure. Both are labelled so you can compare like with like.
Sources and data
- Centro de Informacion Estadistica del Notariado (notarial transaction statistics) · Consejo General del Notariado
- Precio vivienda en la ciudad de Marbella · Tinsa
- Indice de Precios de Vivienda (IPV), Q1 2026 · INE
- Puerto Deportivo de Marbella · Junta de Andalucia