Benamara and Atalaya Property Prices 2026: Notarial EUR/m2 on the New Golden Mile East
Registered notarial sale prices for Benamara and Atalaya, Estepona in 2026: what villas and apartments near Atalaya Golf actually sold for at the notary.
In Benamara and Atalaya, the registered sale price, what buyers actually paid at the notary, averaged 3,443 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with villas at 4,319 EUR/m2 and apartments at 2,966 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). Unlike the apartment-led zones to the west, this area carries a clear villa premium: detached houses command 46 per cent more per square metre than apartments on the same notarial measure. These are real closing prices, not asking prices, and they position the zone as a golf-adjacent villa market at the eastern end of the New Golden Mile.
What did property actually sell for in Benamara and Atalaya in 2026?
Registered notarial sales in the zone averaged 3,443 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026: 2,966 EUR/m2 for apartments, 4,319 EUR/m2 for all villas, 4,335 EUR/m2 for resale villas, and 4,232 EUR/m2 for new-build 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 in this golf-adjacent stretch actually changed hands for.
| Property type | Registered price (EUR/m2), Benamara and Atalaya, June 2026 |
|---|---|
| All property types | 3,443 |
| Apartments | 2,966 |
| All villas | 4,319 |
| Resale villas | 4,335 |
| New-build villas | 4,232 |
Source: listyco notarial data, 2026-06 (Consejo General del Notariado). The new-build villa figure is available for this zone, unlike most Costa del Sol residential areas where new villa construction is too limited to report a reliable figure. Its presence here signals that the zone still produces enough new detached house transactions to generate a credible notarial average.
What kind of place is Benamara and Atalaya and who buys there?
The zone covers two adjacent residential communities on the eastern stretch of the New Golden Mile, the corridor between San Pedro de Alcantara and Estepona town that has developed into one of the Costa del Sol’s primary residential addresses. Benamara is the older, beachside settlement, a collection of low-rise apartment complexes and individual villas that sit between the coast road and the sand. Atalaya, by contrast, climbs the hillside inland, where detached houses and gated communities cluster around the Atalaya Golf and Country Club, a 36-hole golf complex that is one of the most established on the Costa del Sol.
The golf club is the anchor that gives the zone its identity. Two 18-hole courses, the original Atalaya course designed by Bernhard von Limburger in 1968 and the newer Atalaya Hills course added in the 1990s, draw both resident golfers and visiting players, and the clubhouse functions as a social hub for the surrounding residential community (Atalaya Golf and Country Club). The golf infrastructure, combined with the established planting and the hillside position, gives the inland side of the zone a green, settled character that differs from the beachfront apartment communities along the coast road.
The beachside Benamara portion tells a different story. Here, apartment complexes built in the 1980s and 1990s line the streets between the A-7 and the beachfront promenade, with mature gardens, communal pools, and direct pedestrian access to the sand. The Bel Air Hotel, a longstanding local landmark, sits at the boundary between Benamara and the neighbouring Bel-Air community, providing a restaurant and bar that serves as a social anchor for residents. The commercial needs of both sides are met by the Cancelada village centre, a five-minute drive west, where supermarkets, pharmacies, cafes, and restaurants provide the day-to-day amenities that make the area practical for year-round living.
The buyer profile reflects this dual character. The villa side attracts permanent residents and families drawn by the golf, the hillside views, and the proximity to the Atalaya International School, a bilingual school educating children from ages 3 to 18 that sits within the zone boundary (Colegio Atalaya). International buyers from the UK, Scandinavia, and northern Europe are well represented among villa purchasers, many of them relocating families who need room for a home office, a garden, and a school within a short drive. The apartment side appeals to second-home buyers and investors who want walk-to-beach convenience, communal facilities, and a managed property that works for seasonal rental. For the wider area context, see the Estepona and New Golden Mile area guide.
What drives prices in Benamara and Atalaya?
Four structural factors shape the EUR/m2 figure in this zone, and understanding them is essential to reading the registered average correctly.
The golf-adjacent villa premium. The most distinctive feature of the price profile is the villa premium. The villa figure of 4,319 EUR/m2 exceeds the apartment figure of 2,966 EUR/m2 by 46 per cent. Unlike the beachfront zones to the west, where modern apartments command the premium, here the detached house market sets the ceiling. The villa stock around the golf course, much of it on individual plots with course or mountain views, drives the figure. A buyer shopping for a villa in this zone should read the villa figure, not the all-type average, as their primary benchmark. The all-type average of 3,443 EUR/m2 blends in the lower-priced apartment transactions and understates the villa segment.
Active new-build villa supply. The new-build villa figure of 4,232 EUR/m2 is a rarity on the Costa del Sol, where most residential zones produce too few new detached house transactions to report a reliable figure. Its presence here means the zone still generates enough new villa construction or renovation to produce a credible notarial average. This is relevant for buyers seeking new-build supply: unlike neighbouring zones where the new-build villa figure is n/a, Benamara and Atalaya offers a data point. The new-build figure sits fractionally below the resale villa figure of 4,335 EUR/m2, suggesting that new and resale villas trade in a similar price band, a pattern consistent with a mature golf-adjacent market where renovated older properties compete with new builds on similar plots. For the full acquisition-cost breakdown, including the 7 per cent Andalusian ITP on resales, see the cost of buying guide.
Eastern New Golden Mile position. The zone sits at the eastern end of the New Golden Mile, closer to the Marbella boundary at San Pedro de Alcantara than to Estepona town. This position gives residents faster access to the Marbella-adjacent infrastructure, including Puerto Banus and the Golden Mile, while remaining connected to the expanding Estepona town amenities to the west. The dual access is a structural advantage that supports demand across both the villa and apartment segments. For a side-by-side comparison of the two municipal markets that bracket the corridor, see our Marbella vs Estepona property guide.
School proximity and family demand. The presence of the Atalaya International School within the zone boundary is a price driver that few New Golden Mile zones can match. Families relocating to the Costa del Sol consistently cite school proximity as a primary decision factor, and a bilingual school within walking or short driving distance removes a friction point that pushes buyers toward other areas. This creates a floor of family demand that supports villa prices, particularly for properties with gardens and multiple bedrooms. The school draw is specific to the villa segment, where families seek space, and is less relevant to the apartment market.
How does Benamara and Atalaya compare to neighbouring zones?
The zone occupies a distinct price tier within the New Golden Mile. Its registered all-type average of 3,443 EUR/m2 places it above the mid-section Bel-Air community on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado), reflecting its golf-adjacent villa stock and the presence of new-build villa supply.
To the west along the same corridor, Guadalmansa registers above Benamara and Atalaya on the same notarial measure. The gap reflects Guadalmansa’s direct beachfront position and the villa premium that beach access commands on the western stretch. A buyer weighing the two is choosing between golf-adjacent villa living and beachfront villa living, with a meaningful price step between them. Our Guadalmansa property prices guide covers that market in detail.
Also to the west, El Velerin registers above Benamara and Atalaya, driven by its beachfront apartment complexes where modern units command more per square metre than detached houses on the hillside. The comparison is between a beachfront-apartment-led market and a golf-adjacent-villa-led market, two different value propositions. See the El Velerin property prices guide for that market.
To the east, the Cancelada village centre offers a different proposition entirely: a working Spanish village with older apartment stock and a village-centre orientation, sitting below Benamara and Atalaya on the same notarial measure. The comparison is between village walkability and golf-adjacent residential living. See the Cancelada property prices guide for that comparison.
Inland, the separate Estepona Golf zone, which clusters around a different golf course development, registers below Benamara and Atalaya on the same notarial measure. The two zones share a golf-adjacent character but differ in stock age, plot sizes, and the presence of new-build villa supply. Our Estepona Golf price post covers that market.
Why are registered prices lower than asking prices?
The notarial average of 3,443 EUR/m2 sits below the asking-price headlines buyers encounter in listings. This gap is structural and common across the Costa del Sol.
Asking prices in Benamara and Atalaya typically start around EUR 350,000 for a two-bedroom apartment in an established beachside complex and reach above EUR 1,500,000 for a detached villa with golf-course views and a private pool near the Atalaya courses. These are list prices set by sellers and their agents. Registered notarial prices are what actually closed at the notary after negotiation, across the full transaction mix including older properties, smaller units, and transfers that would never appear in a prime listing feed. The gap between the two reflects negotiation outcomes, the variety of properties that transact, and the time lag between listing and completion.
A buyer should treat the notarial figure as the evidence of what closed and asking prices as the negotiation starting point. 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 (Tinsa, IMIE Mercados Locales Q2 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 Benamara and Atalaya’s local figures sit. For rental-return context, see our Marbella rental yields guide.
How should a buyer read the Benamara and Atalaya data?
The registered figures confirm the zone’s position as a golf-adjacent villa market at the eastern end of the New Golden Mile, where detached houses command a clear premium over apartments on the same notarial measure. The villa figure of 4,319 EUR/m2 is the most relevant benchmark for a buyer shopping for a detached house near the Atalaya courses, because villa transactions carry the premium in this zone. The all-type average of 3,443 EUR/m2 blends in the lower-priced apartment closings and should not be read as a villa price.
The apartment figure of 2,966 EUR/m2 is the benchmark for the beachside segment, where established complexes with communal pools and direct beach access offer a value entry point below the villa market. A buyer choosing between the two sides is making a lifestyle decision: golf and hillside views versus beach and communal facilities, with a 46 per cent gap between them on the same notarial measure.
The availability of a new-build villa figure, at 4,232 EUR/m2, is a signal that the zone still produces new detached construction, unlike most Costa del Sol residential areas where the new-build villa figure is n/a. Buyers seeking new-build supply on the New Golden Mile should weigh this zone against neighbouring areas where new villa transactions are too thin to report.
The Estepona municipality continues to expand. The town hall has advanced its Plan General de Ordenacion Urbana, unlocking new housing supply in sectors to the west of the town (Ayuntamiento de Estepona). That pipeline sits outside Benamara and Atalaya but signals the municipality’s growth trajectory, which supports demand for established golf-adjacent zones where supply is fixed. The municipality reached 79,621 residents on the 2025 padron (INE), an all-time high reflecting sustained population growth that underpins housing demand across all price tiers.
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.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the average price per m2 in Benamara and Atalaya in 2026?
- Registered notarial sales averaged 3,443 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with villas at 4,319 EUR/m2 and apartments at 2,966 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). These are closing prices recorded at the notary, not asking prices from portals.
- Why are villa prices higher than apartment prices in this zone?
- Benamara and Atalaya's villa stock, much of it built around the Atalaya Golf and Country Club, carries the premium. Detached properties on individual plots with golf-course or mountain views command more per square metre than the apartment complexes that sit closer to the coast road. The villa figure draws from a pool of golf-adjacent detached houses, a different segment from the apartment market.
- How does Benamara and Atalaya compare to neighbouring New Golden Mile zones?
- The zone registers above the mid-section Bel-Air community on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06), reflecting its golf-adjacent villa stock and the presence of new-build villa supply. It sits below the beachfront zones to the west, where direct sea access drives the highest registered prices on the corridor.
- Is Benamara and Atalaya a good investment at these price levels?
- The registered 3,443 EUR/m2 average reflects a zone with genuine golf-adjacent villa supply, new-build villa activity, and proximity to both the Cancelada amenities and the Atalaya International School. Buyers should weigh the villa premium against the apartment value and treat the notarial figure as a negotiation reference rather than a prediction of future appreciation.
- What is the difference between the notarial figure and the model estimate?
- The notarial figure (3,443 EUR/m2) is a registered sale price for the Benamara and Atalaya zone. The market-stats figure is a model estimate of current valuations, not a sale price. Both are labelled so you can compare like with like and understand what each measures.
Sources and data
- Centro de Informacion Estadistica del Notariado (notarial transaction statistics) — Consejo General del Notariado
- IMIE Mercados Locales 2o trimestre 2026: +15,2% — Tinsa
- Housing Price Index (HPI), First Quarter 2026 — INE
- Padron Municipal de Habitantes, Estepona — INE
- Ayuntamiento de Estepona - sede oficial y planificacion municipal — Ayuntamiento de Estepona