Market
Torrecilla-La Cañada Property Prices 2026: Notarial EUR/m2 in Marbella's Northern Residential District
Registered notarial sale prices for Torrecilla-La Cañada, Marbella, June 2026: what apartments actually sold for near La Cañada shopping centre.
Photo by Sebastien Devocelle on Unsplash
In Torrecilla-La Cañada, a residential barrio in Marbella’s Pueblo district, the registered sale price, what buyers actually paid at the notary, averaged 3,389 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 3,349 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). Villa prices are n/a for the zone this month. The detail that defines this zone: it is an apartment-dominant residential area anchored by La Cañada, the largest shopping centre in Malaga province, where buyers trade sea views and old-town charm for commercial convenience, road connectivity and a practical Marbella-town base at a mid-market price point.
What did property actually sell for in Torrecilla-La Cañada in 2026?
Registered notarial sales averaged 3,389 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026: 3,349 EUR/m2 for apartments (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). Villa, new-build villa and resale villa figures are all 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 northern Marbella district actually changed hands for.
| Property type | Registered price (EUR/m2), Torrecilla-La Cañada, June 2026 |
|---|---|
| All property types | 3,389 |
| Apartments | 3,349 |
| Resale villas | n/a |
| New-build villas | n/a |
Source: listyco notarial data, 2026-06 (Consejo General del Notariado). Villa figures are n/a because the district is apartment-dominant residential stock, so too few registered villa transactions fell in the zone this month to report a reliable figure.
What kind of place is Torrecilla-La Cañada and who buys there?
Torrecilla-La Cañada is a residential barrio in Marbella’s Pueblo district, positioned in the north-central part of the municipality between the old town to the south and the A-7 motorway to the east. The zone takes its name from the La Cañada area, home to the Parque Comercial La Cañada, the largest shopping centre in Malaga province. General de Galerias Comerciales inaugurated the complex in May 1997, and it now houses 270 stores across 120,475 m2 of built surface with 3,900 parking spaces. The shopping centre is the commercial anchor that gives the zone its identity: residents here live within walking distance of the principal retail, cinema and dining concentration on the Costa del Sol, a convenience that few Marbella districts can match.
To the south sits La Ermita, Marbella’s long-standing industrial estate, a zone of warehouses, car showrooms and workshops that has been earmarked for eventual relocation and urban regeneration for over a decade. To the west lies Bello Horizonte, an established residential neighbourhood of townhouses and family homes set on quiet streets, a 20-minute walk from the beach. The A-7 motorway forms the eastern boundary, giving the zone direct road access to Malaga, Estepona and the wider Costa del Sol, while the AP-7 toll road is a short drive north.
The housing stock is overwhelmingly apartment and townhouse, built primarily in the 1990s. The notarial data confirms this: the all-types figure sits just 40 EUR/m2 above the apartment figure, a gap so narrow it signals that registered transactions were almost entirely apartments, with villas contributing nothing to the monthly average. The buyer profile reflects this practical, well-connected position. The zone appeals to Spanish families and long-term residents who value proximity to the shopping centre, schools and daily services without needing to drive into the old town for errands. It also attracts international relocators seeking a genuine Marbella-town base with road connectivity rather than a gated resort enclave, buyers who prioritise convenience and accessibility over beachfront prestige. Marbella’s population reached 166,999 at the end of 2024 according to the town hall’s padron figures, with nearly 90 per cent of new residents arriving from outside Spain, and the northern districts like Torrecilla-La Cañada absorb much of that year-round residential demand.
Why are there no villa prices for Torrecilla-La Cañada?
The absence of villa figures is structural, not a data gap. Three factors explain it.
The zone is apartment and townhouse stock. Torrecilla-La Cañada was developed primarily in the 1990s as residential apartment blocks and townhouse communities, not as villa plots. There are no detached housing estates or large villa parcels in this position. The notarial data reflects what actually transacts, and what transacts here is apartments and the occasional townhouse.
The built-out residential core leaves no room for villa development. Unlike the hillside zones of Sierra Blanca or La Zagaleta where villa plots define the landscape, the northern central districts were developed as dense residential blocks along the streets radiating from the shopping centre. New construction in this position is renovation and replacement of existing apartment buildings, not villa development. The n/a for new-build villas signals that this is a renovation market within an established apartment typology, not a zone where villa supply exists at any price point.
The data correctly reports the absence. The villa, new-build villa and resale villa figures are all null for this zone, which accurately reflects the apartment-only transaction volume. A reader evaluating this zone should understand that the n/a is the answer, not a missing data point: there is no villa market here to price.
How does Torrecilla-La Cañada fit within the Marbella market?
Torrecilla-La Cañada occupies a mid-market position in the central Marbella constellation, above the most urban-core districts but below the historic centre and the beachfront premium zones. The Plaza de Toros district, the apartment-dominant urban core around Marbella’s old bullring at the eastern edge of the old town, registers below Torrecilla-La Cañada on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06), because it sits further from the commercial anchor and lacks the shopping-centre proximity premium. The Marbella Pueblo historic centre, where development within the protected old-town walls is effectively barred, registers above Torrecilla-La Cañada, reflecting the scarcity value of historic-centre stock.
Buyers weighing Torrecilla-La Cañada against the Plaza de Toros district are choosing between shopping-centre convenience and old-town walkability; buyers weighing it against Marbella Pueblo are choosing between modern residential practicality and historic-centre scarcity. Neither comparison involves the beachfront, because Torrecilla-La Cañada is an inland zone. The Marbella Golden Mile property prices guide covers the beachfront zone in detail, and the Nueva Andalucia prices guide covers the golf-valley residential zone to the west. Marbella’s registered prices grew 20.53 per cent year on year in the first quarter of 2026, to an average of 3,641 EUR/m2 (Tinsa), against a national year-on-year rate of 15.2 per cent in the second quarter (Tinsa IMIE Mercados Locales, Q2 2026, published 30 June 2026), the highest national rate since the third quarter of 2006. Torrecilla-La Cañada’s notarial figure sits below the Marbella municipal average, reflecting its inland residential position without the beachfront or historic-centre premium.
What is the gap between registered and asking prices?
Asking prices on listing portals regularly sit above registered sale prices across the Costa del Sol, because sellers list optimistically and negotiated discounts, financing conditions and time-on-market pressures pull the final notarial figure down. Torrecilla-La Cañada is no exception. A model estimate places current valuations around 7,916 EUR/m2 across the zone (listyco market-stats, model estimate, not a sale price), well above the notarial sale figure of 3,389 EUR/m2. The gap reflects two different measures: the notarial figure captures what actually closed at the notary this month, while the model estimate reflects the broader standing stock and current listing sentiment. Buyers should treat the notarial figure as the ground-truth comparable and the model estimate as a valuation context, never confusing the two.
For buyers evaluating a property in Torrecilla-La Cañada, the notarial figure is the benchmark. A seller asking substantially above the registered per-square-metre rate for a comparable apartment is pricing above what the market has actually delivered at the notary, and the negotiation should reflect that. The cost of buying guide covers the full acquisition cost structure, and the Marbella rental yields guide covers what buy-to-let actually returns by area for owners considering letting.
What drives prices in Torrecilla-La Cañada up or down?
Three factors move the needle in this specific zone.
La Cañada shopping centre as the commercial anchor. The shopping centre is the single largest amenity in the zone, drawing year-round footfall from across the Costa del Sol, not just seasonal tourist traffic. Apartments within walking distance of its retail and service density carry a practical premium over properties in quieter residential streets further from the complex. The town hall approved a major expansion of the centre in August 2025, adding substantial new retail space, which reinforces the commercial anchor’s pull on surrounding residential demand. When the commercial core draws more businesses and visitors, the surrounding residential stock benefits from the amenity uplift at a lower entry point than the beachfront itself.
A-7 motorway connectivity. The zone’s eastern boundary is the A-7, the coast road that runs the full length of the Costa del Sol. This gives residents direct access to Malaga city and its airport to the east, Estepona and Gibraltar to the west, and the inland towns via the A-355 to Ojen. For relocators who need to commute or travel frequently, the road access is a structural advantage that pure beachfront zones, with their narrower street access and seasonal congestion, do not match. The connectivity premium is most visible in the apartment segment, where practical buyers value drive-time to the airport and to Malaga above sea views.
The Arroyo Segundo transformation. In September 2025 the town hall approved the first planning step for a new neighbourhood in Arroyo Segundo, 365,000 m2 of land bordered by La Cañada to the north, La Ermita to the south, Bello Horizonte to the west and the A-7 to the east (Ayuntamiento de Marbella). The project includes 1,330 homes, 532 of them social housing, a 90,000 m2 multi-purpose fairground, green areas and a freight transport centre. The development will create new road connections between La Cañada and the A-7, and between Las Albarizas, the industrial estate and Bello Horizonte. For Torrecilla-La Cañada, the adjacent transformation is a double-edged signal: new infrastructure and housing supply could ease the tight residential market, while the fairground and commercial development could further strengthen the zone’s commercial gravity. The project is years from completion, but the planning approval itself signals that the town hall sees this northern corridor as the next phase of Marbella’s urban growth, which anchors long-term residential demand in the surrounding zones.
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 Torrecilla-La Cañada in 2026?
- Registered notarial sales averaged 3,389 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 3,349 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). That is what actually closed at the notary, not an asking price. The all-types figure sits just 40 EUR/m2 above apartments, confirming the market is almost entirely apartment transactions.
- Why are there no villa prices for Torrecilla-La Cañada?
- The villa, new-build villa and resale villa figures are all n/a for this zone in June 2026. Torrecilla-La Cañada is an apartment-dominant residential barrio built mostly in the 1990s, with apartment-block and townhouse stock rather than detached villa plots, so too few registered villa transactions fell in the zone this month to report a reliable figure. No number is shown rather than an estimate.
- How does Torrecilla-La Cañada compare to other Marbella zones?
- Torrecilla-La Cañada registers above the Plaza de Toros district and below the Marbella Pueblo historic centre on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06), reflecting its position as a practical residential area near the shopping centre rather than a beachfront or historic-centre enclave. Buyers here pay for commercial convenience and road connectivity, not for sea views or old-town charm.
- What is the difference between the notarial figure and the model estimate?
- The notarial figure (3,389 EUR/m2) is a registered sale price recorded at the notary. The market-stats figure (around 7,916 EUR/m2) is a model estimate of current valuation across the standing stock, a different measure, which is why the two differ. Both are labelled so you can compare like with like.
- Is Torrecilla-La Cañada a good area for rental investment?
- The proximity to La Cañada shopping centre and the A-7 motorway supports practical rental appeal for long-term residents, though owners must comply with Andalusia's VFT registration and 60 per cent community approval rules for short lets. The Marbella rental yields guide covers what buy-to-let actually returns by area for owners considering letting.
Sources and data
- Centro de Informacion Estadistica del Notariado (notarial transaction statistics) · Consejo General del Notariado
- Precio vivienda en la ciudad de Marbella · Tinsa
- IMIE Mercados Locales Q2 2026 · Tinsa
- Cifras oficiales de poblacion de los municipios espanoles: Revision del Padron Municipal · INE
- El Ayuntamiento impulsa la transformacion urbanistica de 365.000 metros cuadrados de suelo en Arroyo Segundo · Ayuntamiento de Marbella
- Parque Comercial La Cañada · General de Galerias Comerciales