Buenas Noches Property Prices 2026: Notarial EUR/m2 on Estepona's Western Edge
Registered notarial sale prices for Buenas Noches, Estepona in 2026: what apartments and villas at the western boundary with Casares sold for at the notary.
In Buenas Noches, the registered sale price, what buyers actually paid at the notary, averaged 2,364 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 2,446 EUR/m2 and villas at 2,249 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). New-build villa data is not available for this zone. These are real closing prices, not asking prices, and they place this westernmost Estepona district at the lower end of the municipality’s notarial price range, consistent with its position at the quiet boundary with Casares Costa.
What did property actually sell for in Buenas Noches in 2026?
Registered notarial sales in the zone averaged 2,364 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026: 2,446 EUR/m2 for apartments, 2,249 EUR/m2 for all villas, 2,249 EUR/m2 for resale villas, and n/a 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 western-edge residential area actually changed hands for.
| Property type | Registered price (EUR/m2), Buenas Noches, June 2026 |
|---|---|
| All property types | 2,364 |
| Apartments | 2,446 |
| All villas | 2,249 |
| Resale villas | 2,249 |
| New-build villas | n/a |
Source: listyco notarial data, 2026-06 (Consejo General del Notariado). The new-build villa figure is n/a because too few registered new-build villa transactions fell in the zone this month to report a reliable figure, a pattern shared with most Costa del Sol residential zones.
What kind of place is Buenas Noches and who buys there?
Buenas Noches is a small, well-established residential district on both sides of the A-7 coastal road at the far western edge of Estepona municipality, roughly 5 km west of Estepona town along the coast towards Sabinillas and Puerto de la Duquesa. It is the furthest district in West Estepona, bounded to the east by the Arroyo la Galera stream and the Bahia Dorada district, and to the west by the Casares Costa district of Casares municipality. The boundary between Estepona and Casares is barely marked on the coast road, save for where the older constructions thin out; it sits roughly 100 metres west of the Buenas Noches petrol station.
The zone sits in the shadow of the Los Reales de Sierra Bermeja mountains, whose red hue at sunset gives the area its distinctive evening character, and the coastline here looks west toward the Rock of Gibraltar and, on clear days, the silhouette of North Africa. The beaches are coarse, dark-sanded and pebbled: Playa de la Galera, a quiet 2 km stretch between the Bahia Dorada headland and the Torre de la Sal, is the main local beach, known for the Islote de las Palomas, a small steep-sided rocky islet just below the low-water mark. The shoreline is rocky and natural rather than the groomed urban beaches of central Estepona, which reinforces the area’s quiet, established-residential character.
The housing stock reflects the district’s history. Residences range from individual villas on the coast and mountainside to well-established urbanisations such as Galera Homes, Jardines de Nueva Galera and Galera Park, many offering holiday rentals alongside permanent homes. The built environment is mature and low-rise, with no single flagship development defining the zone, in contrast to the gated golf communities or frontline-beach complexes that anchor other Estepona districts. The postcode 29693 covers the area, and the zone had an estimated 1,064 residents as of January 2025, up from 458 in 2010, according to the Instituto Nacional de Estadistica’s local population estimates. The population is mixed: 588 Spanish nationals and 476 foreign citizens (INE, 2024 estimates), a near-even split that reflects the district’s draw among both local families and international residents seeking a quieter, lower-density setting away from the town centre.
The buyer profile is distinct from the beachfront premium zones to the east. Buenas Noches attracts permanent residents and long-term second-home owners who prioritise space, tranquillity and a lower entry price over walkable proximity to Estepona’s restaurants and marina. The district has a locally based estate agent, Marco Properties, and a long-standing family-run hotel, the Piedra Paloma, opened by the Carmona family, whose original supermarket and Restaurant La Galera, founded in 1971, still operates at the hotel’s ground level. The E-1 microbus service runs along the A-7 from Buenas Noches through the western districts into Estepona town centre, and the Senda Litoral coastal path connects the area on foot or by bike toward Puerto Estepona. For the wider municipal context, see the Marbella vs Estepona property comparison.
What drives prices in Buenas Noches?
Four structural factors shape the EUR/m2 figure in this zone, and understanding them is essential to reading the registered average correctly.
Peripheral position at the municipal boundary. Buenas Noches sits at the far western edge of Estepona, where the municipality meets Casares Costa. Peripheral position is the primary structural factor here: the zone is roughly 5 km from Estepona town centre and sits beyond the chain of beachfront and golf-adjacent districts that command higher prices. On the Costa del Sol, price per square metre falls with distance from the marina and town-centre amenity cluster, and Buenas Noches occupies the furthest point along that gradient within Estepona. The registered all-type figure of 2,364 EUR/m2 reflects that peripheral position.
Homogeneous mid-market stock. The narrow spread between apartments (2,446) and villas (2,249) is the key structural signal in this zone. In premium beachfront pockets such as Seghers and Playa del Cristo, the apartment figure can exceed the villa figure by a wide margin, driven by beachfront apartment scarcity. In low-density villa enclaves, the villa figure can exceed the apartment figure by a wide margin, driven by land scarcity. In Buenas Noches, neither premium operates: the housing stock is a balanced mix of apartments, townhouses and villas on similar modest plots, sharing the same location attributes, so the per-square-metre rates cluster within a tight band. A buyer shopping here should read the all-type average (2,364 EUR/m2) as a reliable benchmark for the zone, because no single property type carries dominant transaction weight or a structural premium.
Mature, built-out supply with limited new construction. The n/a for new-build villas confirms that this is a resale market. The housing stock was built out across the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, and new construction is limited to individual renovation, modernisation and occasional infill projects. Recent new-build apartment promotions in the broader West Estepona area, including developments marketed under the Buenas Noches label with sea views, sit at the edges of the zone and do not meaningfully expand the registered transaction pool for the established residential core. Scarcity is not the driving force here; the zone has available stock at a lower price than the beachfront and golf districts to the east, and that availability is what keeps the registered average in the modest tier. For the full acquisition-cost breakdown, including the 7 per cent Andalusian ITP on resales, see the cost of buying guide.
Estepona’s westward growth trajectory. The municipality reached 79,593 residents on the 2025 padron (SIMA), up from roughly 67,000 a decade earlier, a 17.8 per cent population increase over 2014 to 2024 (SIMA). The town recorded 727 new-build and 2,436 resale property transactions in 2024 (SIMA), with 27,729 main family dwellings counted in the 2021 census. That growth has pushed demand westward along the coast, and the western districts, including Buenas Noches, have absorbed spillover buyers priced out of the town-centre and beachfront zones. The Senda Litoral coastal path, which now connects Casares and Estepona through a new footbridge over the Arroyo la Jordana, has improved the perceived connectivity of the western edge, though the fundamental position at the municipal boundary remains the defining constraint on price.
How does Buenas Noches compare to neighbouring zones?
Buenas Noches occupies the lower price tier among Estepona’s notarial zones, and its position reflects the combination of peripheral location and homogeneous mid-market stock that no premium beachfront or golf zone shares.
To the east along the same coastline, Seghers and Playa del Cristo sits well above Buenas Noches on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). The difference reflects the direct beachfront-and-marina position of Seghers, minutes from the Old Town, compared with the peripheral, low-density residential character of Buenas Noches at the far western boundary. A buyer choosing between the two is trading beachfront immediacy and walkable town access for space, quiet and a materially lower entry price.
Further east, Estepona Centre registers above Buenas Noches on the same notarial measure. Estepona Centre covers the urban grid around the historic core, where commercial streets, restaurants and the Plaza de las Flores sit within a short walk, while Buenas Noches is a residential district 5 km west with no comparable town-centre amenity. The price gap reflects that difference in walkability and amenity density.
Estepona Golf, also in West Estepona, registers above Buenas Noches. The difference reflects the golf-adjacency premium that an 18-hole course provides, a value driver that Buenas Noches lacks. A buyer weighing the two is choosing between golf-course proximity and a quieter, lower-priced residential setting at the municipal edge.
To the west, across the municipal boundary, Casares Pueblo in the neighbouring municipality of Casares sits in a similar modest price tier on the same notarial measure. Casares Pueblo is a hilltop white village inland from the coast, while Buenas Noches is a coastal-edge residential district, but both share the structural position of being away from the premium beachfront and marina zones that command the highest prices on the western Costa del Sol. A buyer comparing the two is choosing between inland village character and coastal-edge residential access, at a similar entry price.
Why are registered prices lower than asking prices?
The notarial average of 2,364 EUR/m2 sits below the asking-price headlines buyers encounter in listings. This gap is structural and common across the Costa del Sol, and it is especially pronounced in mid-market residential zones like Buenas Noches.
Asking prices for apartments and townhouses in the zone typically start above EUR 300,000, and contemporary villas marketed in the area are listed at higher levels still. 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, resales 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. In a homogeneous mid-market zone where the housing stock spans several decades and no single development sets a premium anchor, the registered average captures the full range, pulling the figure below the curated asking-price feeds that show only the better-presented properties.
For the national market trajectory, Tinsa’s IMIE Local Markets reported 15.2 per cent year-on-year growth in the second quarter of 2026, the highest rate since the third quarter of 2006, published on 30 June 2026 (Tinsa, IMIE Local Markets Q2 2026). The monthly IMIE General stood at 15.4 per cent year-on-year in May 2026 (Tinsa, IMIE General). The INE Housing Price Index recorded 12.9 per cent year-on-year growth in the first quarter of 2026, with new homes up 9.1 per cent and used homes up 13.5 per cent (INE, HPI Q1 2026, base 2025, published 8 June 2026). These national figures frame the broader Spanish market context in which this zone’s local figures sit, though the registered notarial figure for Buenas Noches remains the most reliable benchmark for what actually closed in this specific zone.
How should a buyer read the Buenas Noches data?
The registered figures confirm this zone’s position as a modest-tier residential district at Estepona’s western boundary, below the beachfront, town-centre and golf-adjacent zones on the same notarial measure, driven by its peripheral location and homogeneous mid-market stock. The all-type average of 2,364 EUR/m2 is a reliable benchmark for a buyer shopping here, because the narrow apartment-villa spread means no single property type carries a structural premium that would distort the blended figure.
The n/a for new-build villas tells a buyer that this is a resale market. The zone was built out across earlier decades, and new construction is limited to individual renovation, modernisation and occasional infill. A buyer seeking new-build supply in the municipality should look to the eastern and central zones, covered in the Estepona Centre price post, where development activity is concentrated.
The narrow spread between apartments and villas is the key analytical signal. In a homogeneous mid-market residential zone where both property types sit on similar plots and share the same location attributes, the per-square-metre rate clusters within a tight band regardless of property type. This is the opposite of the pattern seen in premium beachfront pockets, where apartment scarcity drives a wide apartment premium, or in low-density villa enclaves, where land scarcity drives a wide villa premium. A buyer comparing Buenas Noches with those zone types should understand that the tight spread here is a signal of balanced, mid-market stock, not of underpricing, and that the lower entry price reflects peripheral position and available supply rather than a discount on quality.
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 Buenas Noches in 2026?
- Registered notarial sales averaged 2,364 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 2,446 EUR/m2 and villas at 2,249 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). These are closing prices recorded at the notary, not asking prices from portals.
- Why is the spread between apartments and villas so narrow in Buenas Noches?
- The narrow gap between the apartment figure (2,446) and the villa figure (2,249) reflects a homogeneous mid-market residential zone where both property types sit on similar modest plots and share the same location attributes. Unlike prime beachfront pockets where apartment scarcity drives a premium, Buenas Noches has a balanced mix of townhouses, villas and apartments that price within a tight band.
- Why are registered prices lower than what I see listed online?
- Asking prices reflect what sellers hope to achieve. Registered notarial prices capture every signed transaction across the full mix of older stock, resales and transfers. The gap is common across the Costa del Sol because portal listings show only properties actively for sale, while the notarial average includes every completed transaction regardless of how it was marketed.
- How does Buenas Noches compare to neighbouring zones?
- Buenas Noches sits at the lower end of Estepona's notarial price range, below the beachfront and town-centre zones further east. To the west, Casares Pueblo in the neighbouring municipality registers in a similar modest tier. A buyer choosing Buenas Noches is trading town-centre proximity and premium beachfront for space, quiet and a lower entry price.
- What is the difference between the notarial figure and asking prices?
- The notarial figure (2,364 EUR/m2) is a registered sale price for the zone, the most reliable public signal of what actually closed. Asking prices are the negotiation starting point set by sellers and agents. The gap between them reflects negotiation outcomes and the variety of properties that transact, including older stock that would never appear in a prime listing feed.
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
- Housing Price Index (HPI). Base 2025. First Quarter 2026 — INE
- SIMA - Estepona (Malaga), ficha municipal — Instituto de Estadistica y Cartografia de Andalucia
- Tinsa IMIE General, May 2026: +15.4% — Tinsa