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Seghers and Playa del Cristo Property Prices 2026: Notarial EUR/m2 on Estepona's Western Beachfront

Registered notarial sale prices for Seghers and Playa del Cristo, Estepona in 2026: what apartments and villas near the marina sold for at the notary.

In Seghers and Playa del Cristo, the registered sale price, what buyers actually paid at the notary, averaged 5,197 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 5,645 EUR/m2 and villas at 4,022 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 beachfront pocket between Estepona marina and the Old Town among the higher-priced notarial zones on the Estepona coastline.

What did property actually sell for in Seghers and Playa del Cristo in 2026?

Registered notarial sales in the zone averaged 5,197 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026: 5,645 EUR/m2 for apartments, 4,022 EUR/m2 for all villas, 4,022 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 marina-side beachfront area actually changed hands for.

Property typeRegistered price (EUR/m2), Seghers - Playa del Cristo, June 2026
All property types5,197
Apartments5,645
All villas4,022
Resale villas4,022
New-build villasn/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 Seghers and Playa del Cristo and who buys there?

Seghers and Playa del Cristo is a beachfront residential pocket at the western edge of Estepona town, tucked between the Puerto Deportivo de Estepona marina and the historic Old Town centre. The zone takes its name from two overlapping references: the Seghers urbanizacion, a residential complex within the broader Puerto de Estepona urban development sitting just behind the beach, and Playa del Cristo, the 700-metre stretch of dark volcanic sand that curves around a sheltered bay immediately west of Punta de la Doncella and the marina (Turespana). El Cristo beach is known for its calm, protected waters, its semi-urban character with a Red Cross post, pedal-boat hire, children’s play areas, and a grove of trees that provides natural shade, making it the favoured family beach for local residents and the closest quality swim spot to the Old Town (Turespana).

The marina itself is a defining presence. The Puerto Deportivo de Estepona holds 443 moorings for boats 8 to 35 metres long and sits at the western end of the seafront promenade, roughly a kilometre from the town centre along Avenida del Carmen (Turismo Costa del Sol). It combines a working fishing port, where boats land their catch at the Lonja fish dock through the day, with a leisure harbour that hosts a Sunday tourist market, a cluster of restaurants, bars, and late-night venues. The fishing harbour retains its old-world character: La Escollera, a no-frills fish restaurant founded in 1940, sits at the dock and takes no reservations, and the fish auction is visible to visitors who keep their distance. The marina has been operated by Marina del Mediterraneo de Estepona, part of the D-Marin group since 2023, under a concession from the Agencia Publica de Puertos de Andalucia, and its 25-year concession expired in August 2023, with a bidding process for the next concession expected to bring phased redevelopment of the east and west sides (Turismo Costa del Sol).

Just inland from the marina, the Orchidarium of Estepona opened in March 2015 and houses approximately 4,000 orchids representing more than 1,000 species, making it the largest live orchid collection on public display in Europe (Visit Costa del Sol). The botanical garden, on Avenida de Espana near the port, is one of the town’s signature cultural attractions and sits within a short walk of the Seghers residential streets.

The buyer profile in this zone reflects its position. Seghers and Playa del Cristo attracts permanent residents and second-home buyers who want walkable proximity to both the beach and the Old Town’s restaurants, tapas bars, and the Plaza de las Flores. Unlike the gated-villa enclaves further west along the New Golden Mile, this is an integrated urban-beachfront setting where the marina, the fishing port, the beach, and the town centre are all within a few minutes on foot. International buyers from the United Kingdom, the principal country of origin for Estepona’s 22,778 registered foreign residents (SIMA, 2025), are well represented, alongside Spanish families who value the calmer waters of El Cristo for children. The zone’s character is more town-adjacent than resort-adjacent, and that distinction shapes both who buys and what they pay for. For the wider municipal context, see the Marbella vs Estepona property comparison.

What drives prices in Seghers and Playa del Cristo?

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

Direct beachfront and marina adjacency. The zone sits between El Cristo beach and the marina, a position that combines seafront access with harbour-side amenities in a single walkable area. On the Costa del Sol, direct beachfront position is the primary value driver, and here it is reinforced by the marina’s restaurants, the fishing port, and the Sunday market. The registered apartment figure of 5,645 EUR/m2 reflects that combined position for the dominant property type. Properties in developments such as Doncella Beach, a gated frontline-beach complex within the Seghers area, command the upper end of the range, while older apartments behind the front line trade closer to the zone average.

Apartment-led transaction volume with a beachfront premium. The apartment figure of 5,645 EUR/m2 exceeds the villa figure of 4,022 EUR/m2, an inversion that reflects the zone’s character as a built-out beachfront pocket where established frontline flats are scarce and tightly held. Apartments carry the majority of transaction weight here, and a buyer shopping for a flat should read the apartment figure, not the all-type average, as their primary benchmark. The villa figure, drawn from a smaller pool of detached properties on individual plots, sits below the apartment figure, reflecting the fact that the per-square-metre rate of a detached house on a full plot is structurally lower than that of a scarce beachfront apartment in a mature development.

Built-out supply and scarcity. Seghers and Playa del Cristo is a mature, largely built-out area within Estepona’s urban fabric. The marina concession is under review for phased redevelopment, but residential new construction in the immediate zone is limited to individual renovation and modernisation within the existing footprint. The n/a for new-build villas confirms this: the housing stock is established, and new supply does not meaningfully expand the transaction pool. Scarcity of frontline-beach apartments in a walkable, marina-adjacent setting is the structural force behind the apartment premium. For the full acquisition-cost breakdown, including the 7% Andalusian ITP on resales, see the cost of buying guide.

Estepona’s 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 underpins demand across all price tiers, and the beachfront zones closest to the town centre, where supply is most fixed, benefit disproportionately. The 82.5-kilometre distance to Malaga capital (SIMA, 2019) and the 16 nucleos that make up the municipality reflect a town that has expanded westward along the coast while retaining a compact historic core, of which Seghers and Playa del Cristo is the beachfront extension.

How does Seghers and Playa del Cristo compare to neighbouring zones?

Seghers and Playa del Cristo occupies the upper price tier among Estepona’s notarial zones, and its position reflects the combination of beachfront access and town-centre proximity that few other zones share.

To the west along the same coastline, Estepona Centre sits below Seghers and Playa del Cristo 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 compared with the more urban, mixed-use inland character of Estepona Centre, where commercial streets and residential blocks sit a short walk from the sea rather than directly on it. A buyer choosing between the two is trading beachfront immediacy against town-centre walkability and broader amenities.

Further west along the New Golden Mile, Costa Natura registers well below Seghers and Playa del Cristo on the same notarial measure. Costa Natura is a niche naturist-resort community at the far western boundary of Estepona, far from the town centre, while Seghers and Playa del Cristo is an integrated urban-beachfront zone minutes from the Old Town. The price gap reflects both location and community type: a specialised resort at the municipality’s edge versus a mainstream beachfront area at its core.

Guadalmansa, also on the New Golden Mile, shows the opposite structural pattern: a villa premium driven by beachfront land scarcity in a low-density setting. Seghers and Playa del Cristo shows an apartment premium driven by beachfront apartment scarcity in a high-density, built-out setting. A buyer weighing the two is choosing between a standalone villa on a large plot in a quieter corridor and a beachfront flat in a walkable marina-side location, with the per-square-metre dynamics shaped by those distinct stock profiles.

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

The notarial average of 5,197 EUR/m2 and the model estimate of 14,002 EUR/m2 (listyco market-stats, model estimate, not a sale price, three 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 Seghers and Playa del Cristo typically start above EUR 500,000 for a two-bedroom frontline-beach apartment and reach well above EUR 1 million for a penthouse or villa with direct sea views in developments such as Doncella Beach. 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 (14,002 EUR/m2) occupies a different position from both. It reflects current valuation across the standing housing stock, not a specific sale. The sample is small at three property valuations, which means the estimate carries lower statistical confidence than the notarial figure and should be treated as directional rather than definitive. A buyer should treat the notarial figure as the evidence of what closed, the model estimate as a valuation benchmark with limited sample depth, and asking prices as the negotiation starting point. 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 (Tinsa, IMIE Local Markets Q2 2026), and the monthly IMIE General stood at 15.4 per cent year-on-year in May 2026 (Tinsa, IMIE General), national figures that frame the broader Spanish market context in which this zone’s local figures sit.

How should a buyer read the Seghers and Playa del Cristo data?

The registered figures confirm this zone’s position as a premium beachfront pocket within Estepona town, above the inland and New Golden Mile western zones on the same notarial measure, driven by the combination of direct beachfront access, marina adjacency, and walkable proximity to the Old Town. The apartment figure of 5,645 EUR/m2 is the most relevant benchmark for a buyer shopping for a flat, because apartment transactions carry the majority weight in this zone. The all-type average of 5,197 EUR/m2 blends in the smaller pool of villa closings and should not be read as an apartment price.

The n/a for new-build villas tells a buyer that this is a resale market. The zone was built out decades ago, and new construction is limited to individual renovation and modernisation within the existing footprint. The marina redevelopment, when it proceeds, will reshape the harbour-side amenity offering and may influence the perceived value of the closest properties, though the residential stock itself will remain fixed. For active new-build supply in the municipality, the Estepona Centre price post covers the more development-adjacent zones.

The apartment-villa inversion in this zone is the key analytical signal. In a built-out beachfront pocket where frontline flats are scarce and tightly held, the per-square-metre rate of an established apartment can exceed that of a detached villa on a full plot. This is the opposite of the pattern seen in low-density beachfront villa enclaves such as Guadalmansa, where land scarcity drives the villa figure above the apartment figure. A buyer comparing the two zone types should understand that the same headline EUR/m2 figure can reflect fundamentally different market structures, and that the apartment premium here is a signal of beachfront flat scarcity in a mature, walkable setting, not of villa underperformance.

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 Seghers and Playa del Cristo in 2026?
Registered notarial sales averaged 5,197 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 5,645 EUR/m2 and villas at 4,022 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 apartment price higher than the villa price in this zone?
Seghers and Playa del Cristo is a built-out beachfront pocket between Estepona marina and the Old Town, where established frontline-beach apartments are scarce and command a premium per square metre. The villa figure reflects a smaller pool of detached properties on individual plots, which trade at a lower per-metre rate than the tightly held beachfront flats.
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 properties actively for sale, while the notarial average includes every completed transaction regardless of how it was marketed.
How does Seghers and Playa del Cristo compare to Estepona Centre?
Seghers and Playa del Cristo sits above Estepona Centre on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06). The difference reflects the direct beachfront position and marina adjacency of Seghers, compared with the more urban, mixed-use character of Estepona Centre. A buyer choosing between them is trading beachfront proximity against town-centre walkability and amenities.
What is the difference between the notarial figure and the model estimate?
The notarial figure (5,197 EUR/m2) is a registered sale price for the zone. The market-stats median (14,002 EUR/m2) 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