Listyco
Photo by Susan Flynn on Unsplash
Market

Punta Plata Property Prices 2026: Notarial EUR/m2 in Estepona's Premium Beachfront

Registered notarial sale prices for Punta Plata, Estepona in 2026: apartments at 5,686 EUR/m2 and resale villas at 9,656 EUR/m2, with zone and market context.

In Punta Plata, the registered sale price, what buyers actually paid at the notary, averaged 6,114 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 5,686 EUR/m2 and resale villas at 9,656 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). Current villa and new-build villa data is not available for this zone. These are real closing prices, not asking prices, and they confirm Punta Plata as the highest-priced notarial zone among its Estepona neighbours, where resale villas command a substantial step-up over the apartment-dominant transaction volume.

What did property actually sell for in Punta Plata in 2026?

Registered notarial sales in the zone averaged 6,114 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026: 5,686 EUR/m2 for apartments, 9,656 EUR/m2 for resale villas, n/a for all current 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 beachfront community actually changed hands for.

Property typeRegistered price (EUR/m2), Punta Plata, June 2026
All property types6,114
Apartments5,686
All villasn/a
Resale villas9,656
New-build villasn/a

Source: listyco notarial data, 2026-06 (Consejo General del Notariado). The all-villa and new-build villa figures are n/a because too few registered villa transactions fell in the zone this month to report a reliable figure, a pattern shared with most Costa del Sol residential zones where detached-property turnover is limited. The resale villa figure, drawn from a smaller pool of older detached transactions, reflects the premium that beachfront villas command in this walkable town-edge location.

What kind of place is Punta Plata and who buys there?

Punta Plata is a beachfront residential strip sitting on the eastern edge of Estepona town centre, running along the Mediterranean behind the Carrefour supermarket and the A-7 coast road. The zone takes its name from the low rocky promontory that marks the point where the Paseo Maritimo promenade begins its westward sweep toward the fishing port and the old town. From the beachfront here, residents look south across open water to Gibraltar and, on clear days, the North African coast, a panorama that distinguishes this stretch from the more enclosed coves further west along the New Golden Mile.

The zone is dominated by the Bahia de la Plata community, a gated beachfront development of apartment blocks set in tropical gardens with 24-hour security, heated indoor and outdoor pools, a full spa with jacuzzi and sauna, a gymnasium, a paddle court, and direct beach access through landscaped pathways. The community was built to appeal to international second-home buyers who want resort-grade facilities within walking distance of a working Spanish town, and that positioning continues to shape the transaction mix. Adjacent developments along the same beachfront strip extend the apartment-led character of the zone, with penthouse collections and renovated ground-floor units marketed to buyers who value proximity to the sand over standalone-villa privacy.

The buyer profile reflects that orientation. Punta Plata attracts established second-home owners and holiday-rental investors from the UK, Scandinavia, and northern Europe who want walkable beachfront living with resort amenities and the convenience of a real town on the doorstep. The walk from Bahia de la Plata to the centre of Estepona takes roughly 20 minutes on foot and three minutes by car, a proximity that places restaurants, bars, boutique shops, and the weekly market within easy reach without the need for a car. For the wider area context, see the Estepona and New Golden Mile area guide.

What drives prices in Punta Plata?

Four structural factors shape the EUR/m2 figure in this zone, and understanding them is essential to reading the registered average correctly.

Direct beachfront position with open sea views. Punta Plata sits directly on the Mediterranean with no road between the residential developments and the sand, a position that commands a consistent premium on the Costa del Sol. The open southern exposure delivers views to Gibraltar and the African coast that the more enclosed western beachfront zones cannot match. The registered apartment figure of 5,686 EUR/m2 reflects that beachfront position for the dominant property type, while the resale villa figure of 9,656 EUR/m2 captures the premium that detached properties on this strip command when they do transact.

Apartment-dominant transaction volume. The zone’s transaction mix is apartment-led, driven by the Bahia de la Plata community and adjacent beachfront blocks. The apartment figure of 5,686 EUR/m2 sits close to the all-type average of 6,114 EUR/m2, confirming that apartments carry the majority of transaction weight. A buyer shopping for an apartment in Punta Plata should read the apartment figure, not the all-type average, as their primary benchmark. The resale villa figure, drawn from a smaller transaction pool, reflects the premium detached properties command when they change hands on this beachfront strip.

Walkable town-centre proximity. Unlike the New Golden Mile communities further west, which sit 10 to 15 minutes by car from Estepona town, Punta Plata is within walking distance of the centre. That proximity is a genuine value driver: buyers who want the beachfront lifestyle without the isolation of a gated enclave far from amenities pay for the convenience. The zone attracts owners who use their properties year-round rather than only in peak season, which supports steady transaction volume across the calendar. For the full acquisition-cost breakdown, including the 7% Andalusian ITP on resales, see the cost of buying guide.

Premium beachfront scarcity. The supply of beachfront land on this stretch is fixed. The zone is fully built out, with no new residential land available between the A-7 and the shoreline. That scarcity supports the resale villa premium and limits the scope for new construction, which is reflected in the n/a for new-build villas. The town hall’s advancement of its Plan General de Ordenacion Urbana for the Arroyo Vaquero and Guadalobon sectors in early 2026 (Ayuntamiento de Estepona) will unlock new housing supply elsewhere in the municipality, but those pipelines sit outside Punta Plata and will not add beachfront stock to this fixed-supply zone.

How does Punta Plata compare to neighbouring Estepona zones?

Punta Plata occupies the top price tier among its Estepona neighbours on the same notarial measure. Its registered all-type average of 6,114 EUR/m2 places it above every adjacent zone (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado), and the gap is wide enough to reflect a genuine structural difference rather than transaction noise.

ZoneGap below Punta Plata (all types)CharacterPosition
Seghers and Playa del Cristo15% belowBeachfront, westClosest competitor
Casasola35% belowLow-density villa enclave, New Golden MileMid-range
Villacana, Costalita, Saladillo40% belowGated beachfront, New Golden MileMid-range
Estepona Puerto49% belowPort area, town-adjacentValue
Estepona Centre50% belowTown centre apartmentsValue
Bel-Air55% belowSet back from beach, New Golden MileEntry-level

Source: listyco notarial data, 2026-06 (Consejo General del Notariado). Gaps computed on the all-type registered average.

To the west along the beachfront, Seghers and Playa del Cristo sit closest to Punta Plata, roughly 15 per cent below on the all-type notarial average, though the composition differs. Seghers posts apartment prices that nearly match Punta Plata’s apartments, but its resale villa figure is less than half of Punta Plata’s 9,656 EUR/m2. The gap tells a buyer that the apartment premium for direct beachfront is comparable across both zones, but the detached-villa premium diverges sharply, reflecting Punta Plata’s rarer villa stock on a walkable town-edge strip. Our Seghers and Playa del Cristo price guide covers that market in detail.

Further west along the New Golden Mile, the combined Villacana, Costalita and Saladillo zone sits roughly 40 per cent below Punta Plata on the same notarial measure. The Costalita beachfront community offers a similar gated-apartment proposition but without the walkable town-centre access that drives Punta Plata’s premium. A buyer weighing the two is choosing between proximity to Estepona town and a quieter, more resort-isolated position further along the coast. Our Costalita price guide and Bel-Air price guide cover those markets.

Bel-Air, roughly 55 per cent below Punta Plata, represents the most affordable New Golden Mile comparison point. The gap reflects Bel-Air’s position set back from the beachfront, its mix of townhouses and mid-range apartments, and the greater distance from Estepona town centre. A buyer for whom budget is the binding constraint and who still wants New Golden Mile access could consider Bel-Air as a value entry point, accepting a longer drive to the beach and town.

To the east, Estepona Centre and Estepona Puerto sit roughly 50 per cent below Punta Plata. The difference reflects the transition from town-centre apartments, which include older stock and a broader transaction mix, to the premium beachfront strip with direct sand access and open sea views. A buyer choosing between the two is trading town-centre walkability for beachfront position. See the Estepona Centre price guide for that comparison.

Why are registered prices lower than asking prices and valuation estimates?

The notarial average of 6,114 EUR/m2 and the model estimate of 13,083 EUR/m2 (listyco market-stats, model estimate, not a sale price, high confidence across 91 property valuations) sit below the asking-price headlines buyers encounter in listings. This gap is structural and common across the Costa del Sol.

Asking prices in Punta Plata typically start above EUR 400,000 for a renovated two-bedroom apartment in the Bahia de la Plata community and reach well above EUR 1 million for a beachfront penthouse with panoramic sea views. 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 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.

The model estimate (13,083 EUR/m2) occupies a different position from both. It reflects current valuation across the standing housing stock, not a specific sale. A buyer should treat the notarial figure as the evidence of what closed, the model estimate as a valuation benchmark, and asking prices as the negotiation starting point. For the national market trajectory, Tinsa’s IMIE General index reported 15.4 per cent year-on-year growth in May 2026 (Tinsa, IMIE General), and Tinsa’s Local Markets index for the second quarter of 2026 reported 15.2 per cent year-on-year growth with a 3.7 per cent quarterly advance, the highest annual rate since the third quarter of 2006 (Tinsa, IMIE Mercados Locales Q2 2026). The INE Housing Price Index stood at 12.9 per cent year-on-year in the first quarter of 2026, with second-hand homes rising 13.5 per cent and new homes up 9.1 per cent (INE, IPV Q1 2026). These national figures frame the broader Spanish market context in which Punta Plata’s local figures sit.

How should a buyer read the Punta Plata data?

The registered figures confirm Punta Plata’s position as the premium beachfront zone on the eastern edge of Estepona town, above every neighbouring zone on the same notarial measure. The apartment figure of 5,686 EUR/m2 is the most relevant benchmark for a buyer shopping for an apartment in the Bahia de la Plata community or adjacent beachfront blocks, because apartment transactions carry the majority weight in this zone. The all-type average of 6,114 EUR/m2 reflects a blend of the apartment-dominant volume and the smaller pool of premium resale villa closings and should not be read as an apartment price.

The n/a for current villas and new-build villas tells a buyer that this is a resale and apartment market. The zone is fully built out, and new construction is limited to renovation and modernisation within the existing footprint. For active new-build supply on the Estepona beachfront, the development corridors further west offer options that Punta Plata cannot match. The Estepona Golf price post covers one of those zones.

The Estepona municipality continues to expand. The town hall advanced its Plan General de Ordenacion Urbana for the Arroyo Vaquero and Guadalobon sectors in early 2026, unlocking new housing supply (Ayuntamiento de Estepona). That pipeline sits outside Punta Plata but signals the municipality’s growth trajectory, which supports demand for established beachfront communities where supply is fixed. The municipality reached an estimated 81,741 residents in 2026 (INE padron projections), up from 79,621 on the 2025 register, reflecting sustained population growth that underpins housing demand across all price tiers.

Frequently asked questions

What is the average price per m2 in Punta Plata in 2026?
Registered notarial sales averaged 6,114 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 5,686 EUR/m2 and resale villas at 9,656 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 registered price 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 the properties actively for sale, while the notarial average includes every completed transaction regardless of how it was marketed.
Why is there no current villa figure for Punta Plata?
The all-villa and new-build villa figures are not available for this zone this month because too few registered villa transactions fell within the reporting period to produce a reliable number. The resale villa figure of 9,656 EUR/m2 is available and reflects the premium detached properties command on this beachfront strip.
How does Punta Plata compare to other Estepona beachfront zones?
Punta Plata's all-type average of 6,114 EUR/m2 places it above every neighbouring Estepona zone on the same notarial measure. Seghers and Playa del Cristo sit closest at roughly 15 per cent below, while Bel-Air on the New Golden Mile stands roughly 55 per cent below. The premium reflects Punta Plata's direct beachfront position and walkable proximity to Estepona town centre.
Is Punta Plata a good investment at these price levels?
The registered figures reflect a walkable beachfront zone with direct sea views, proximity to Estepona town centre, and established community facilities. Buyers should weigh the premium beachfront position and town-centre access against the apartment-dominant stock and limited new construction. Treat the notarial figure as a negotiation reference rather than a prediction of future appreciation.

Sources and data