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Las Gaviotas Property Prices 2026: Notarial EUR/m2 on the Carvajal Beachfront

Registered notarial prices for Las Gaviotas in Fuengirola, 2026: what homes sold for per m2 at this beachfront zone between Carvajal and Benalmadena.

In Las Gaviotas, the registered sale price, what buyers actually paid at the notary, averaged 5,474 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 5,260 EUR/m2 and villas at 8,496 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). Those are real closing prices, not asking prices, and they make Las Gaviotas the most expensive notarial zone in Fuengirola, ahead of both the town centre and the El Higueron resort on the same registered measure.

What did property actually sell for in Las Gaviotas in 2026?

Registered notarial sales averaged 5,474 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026: 5,260 EUR/m2 for apartments and 8,496 EUR/m2 for 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 part of Fuengirola actually changed hands for.

Property typeRegistered price (EUR/m2), Las Gaviotas, June 2026
All property types5,474
Apartments5,260
Villas8,496
New-build villasn/a
Resale villasn/a

Source: listyco notarial data, 2026-06 (Consejo General del Notariado). Both the new-build and resale villa breakdowns are n/a this month, meaning the all-villa figure of 8,496 EUR/m2 reflects a thin set of transactions rather than a broad market sample. When villa volume is low, a few premium sales can lift the average substantially.

What kind of place is Las Gaviotas?

Las Gaviotas is a beachfront residential pocket at the eastern edge of Fuengirola, where the Carvajal district meets the Benalmadena boundary. The zone takes its name from the Spanish for seagulls, and it sits on one of the widest and quietest sandy stretches in the municipality, the Playa de Carvajal, which runs east from the Carvajal seafront promenade toward Torrequebrada. Unlike the dense high-rise blocks that line Fuengirola Centro, Las Gaviotas is a lower-density beachfront strip of apartment buildings and a handful of detached villas, many dating from the 1980s and 1990s, now intermixed with newer developments.

The defining feature is the beach itself. The Paseo Maritimo de Carvajal, a wide seafront promenade, runs the full length of the district and connects westward into Fuengirola’s main seafront and eastward toward Benalmadena’s coastline. The beach here is wide and sandy, less crowded than the central Fuengirola strips, and backed by chiringuitos (beach bars) and low-rise apartment blocks rather than the tower blocks of the town centre. A buyer standing on the Carvajal promenade at sunset sees open Mediterranean to the south and the Sierra de Mijas rising behind the town to the north.

Carvajal train station, on the Renfe C1 Cercanias line, sits within walking distance and connects directly to Malaga airport in roughly 20 minutes and to Malaga city centre in around 35 minutes. This station is one of the reasons the zone attracts international buyers who want car-free airport access, a rarity on the Costa del Sol outside Torremolinos and Montemar. The A-7 motorway runs just inland, giving road access to Benalmadena and Marbella within 30 minutes. For the wider Fuengirola context, including how the town centre compares, see the Mijas and Fuengirola buyer guide.

Who buys in Las Gaviotas and what drives the price level?

The buyer profile is international and beachfront-led. Fuengirola’s registered population stood at 84,857 in 2025 (SIMA, Instituto de Estadistica y Cartografia de Andalucia), with 31,808 foreign residents, whose principal origin is Finland at 14.2 per cent of the foreign total. The town has a deep Scandinavian community, and Las Gaviotas attracts the same Nordic, British and northern European buyers who have settled along this stretch of coast for decades, drawn by the beachfront location, the airport proximity and the calmer character of the Carvajal pocket relative to the town centre.

Three factors set the price level here. First, beachfront scarcity is the primary driver. The zone is a narrow strip between the sea and the A-7, with no room for lateral expansion, so supply is fixed. When a beachfront apartment or villa comes to market, it commands a premium that inland Fuengirola zones cannot match. Second, the villa market is structurally thin. Both the new-build and resale villa breakdowns are n/a for June 2026, meaning very few detached homes transacted. A small number of premium villa sales at high prices can pull the villa average well above the apartment figure, which is exactly what the data shows. Third, the Carvajal station connectivity premium applies to this zone more than any other in Fuengirola, because the station is closer here than in the town centre.

The municipality recorded 2,391 property transactions in 2024 (596 new-build and 1,795 resale, SIMA), across 6,280 built parcels (Catastro via SIMA), figures that contextualise how thin the villa segment is at the zone level. Las Gaviotas is a small beachfront strip within a town that is overwhelmingly apartment-dominated, so villa transactions here are rare enough to move the average sharply. For how Fuengirola’s rental market works alongside these prices, see the El Higueron zone guide.

Why is the villa figure so far above the apartment figure?

The villa figure of 8,496 EUR/m2 sitting 62 per cent above the apartment figure of 5,260 EUR/m2 is the defining pricing signal of Las Gaviotas, and it is the opposite of what most apartment-dominant Costa del Sol zones show. In zones like Miraflores or Sitio de Calahonda on the Mijas coast, the apartment and villa figures sit within a few hundred EUR/m2 of each other because the housing stock is homogeneous. Here, the gap is structural rather than market-wide.

The explanation is volume. Both the new-build villa and resale villa breakdowns are n/a for June 2026 (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado), which means the all-villa figure of 8,496 EUR/m2 is drawn from a very small number of transactions. In a beachfront zone where detached villas are rare, a single large sea-front villa sale at a high price can set the average. The apartment figure of 5,260 EUR/m2, by contrast, is drawn from a broader set of transactions across the apartment buildings that line the Carvajal promenade, making it the more reliable signal of day-to-day market levels.

A buyer reading these numbers should treat the villa figure with caution. It tells you that the few villas that did sell commanded very high prices, consistent with beachfront land scarcity, but it does not tell you what a broad villa market would look like because the volume is too thin. The apartment figure is the more useful benchmark for the typical buyer, who is most likely looking at a beachfront flat rather than a detached villa. For a deeper explanation of why registered, asking and valuation figures diverge, see the property valuation guide.

How does Las Gaviotas compare to neighbouring Fuengirola zones?

Las Gaviotas occupies the top of the Fuengirola price hierarchy. Fuengirola Centro, the town-centre zone of high-rise apartments and commercial streets, registered notably lower across all types on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). The gap reflects the difference between a beachfront residential strip with fixed supply and a dense town centre with abundant apartment stock. El Higueron, the resort-led new-build zone on the Benalmadena border, also registered lower across all types, reflecting its apartment-led pricing structure where new-build villas on modest plots pull the villa average down rather than up.

A buyer comparing the three is choosing between Fuengirola Centro’s town living at the lowest price entry, El Higueron’s resort-style apartments with wellness amenities, and Las Gaviotas’s beachfront position with the widest villa premium in the municipality. Las Gaviotas is the choice for a buyer who prioritises direct beach access and a quieter seafront character over resort facilities or town-centre convenience. For the full acquisition-cost breakdown when buying any of these, see the cost of buying guide.

Why are registered prices lower than asking prices and estimates?

Registered notarial prices are lower than both asking prices and valuation estimates because they record every signed transaction across the full mix of resales and transfers, rather than the prime, newly listed stock that sets the headlines. A model estimate for the Las Gaviotas pocket places current valuations at a median of 11,631 EUR/m2 (listyco market-stats, model estimate, not a sale price). Asking prices on portals run higher still (asking, not closing). The 5,474 EUR/m2 registered average is the figure that reflects completed sales.

The gap between the registered average and the model estimate is wider here than in most Fuengirola zones. That tells you the standing stock is valued above what the transaction mix has been clearing at, which can happen when few sales occur but the properties that do transact include older resales at lower specifications. A buyer who anchors to the 5,474 EUR/m2 registered average and adjusts up for a renovated beachfront apartment with sea views is working from what the market did, not what it hopes to do.

For the broader regional context, Tinsa’s IMIE Mercados Locales reported a 15.2 per cent year-on-year rise in finished-housing values nationally in the second quarter of 2026 (Tinsa, IMIE Mercados Locales, Q2 2026), the highest annual rate since the third quarter of 2006. The INE Housing Price Index for Q1 2026 reported an annual rate of 12.9 per cent nationally, with new homes up 9.1 per cent and second-hand homes up 13.5 per cent (INE, IPV, Q1 2026). These macro figures frame a market where supply is constrained and demand is firm, which is the environment that supports the beachfront premium visible in Las Gaviotas’s registered data.

How should a buyer read the Las Gaviotas numbers?

Use the registered notarial figure as your floor of reality: it is what comparable homes actually closed at. Treat the apartment figure of 5,260 EUR/m2 as the more reliable benchmark for the typical transaction, because it is drawn from a broader set of sales. Treat the villa figure of 8,496 EUR/m2 as evidence of beachfront land value, not as a benchmark for a broad villa market, because the n/a breakdowns tell you the volume behind it is thin. A buyer who anchors a negotiation to the registered apartment average, then adjusts up for a direct beachfront position, a higher floor or a renovated specification, is working from what the market did rather than what it hopes to do.

The new development pipeline is worth watching. Recent projects in the Las Gaviotas and Carvajal area, including the Oleo development of 42 homes, show that the zone still attracts developer interest despite its fixed footprint, because older 1980s and 1990s apartment blocks are being replaced with higher-specification buildings. That pipeline is modest compared to the large resort phases at El Higueron, but it signals that the beachfront strip is gradually upgrading its stock, which supports the registered price level over time.

Frequently asked questions

What is the average price per m2 in Las Gaviotas in 2026?
Registered notarial sales averaged 5,474 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 5,260 EUR/m2 and villas at 8,496 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). These are real closing prices recorded at the notary, not asking prices.
Why are villa prices so much higher than apartments in Las Gaviotas?
Villas registered 8,496 EUR/m2 against apartments at 5,260 EUR/m2, a 62 per cent premium (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). This gap reflects beachfront land scarcity for detached homes and thin villa transaction volume, where a small number of premium sales can lift the average substantially.
How does Las Gaviotas compare to other Fuengirola zones?
Las Gaviotas registered 5,474 EUR/m2 across all types, well above Fuengirola Centro at 2,721 EUR/m2 and El Higueron at 4,550 EUR/m2 on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). It is the most expensive notarial zone in Fuengirola municipality.
Why are registered prices lower than the asking prices I see online?
Asking prices are what sellers list. Registered notarial prices are what buyers and sellers actually signed for at the notary, across the full mix of resales and transfers. The registered average is the more reliable signal of what changed hands, and it sits below asking-price headlines because it includes older stock and non-prime transactions.
Is Las Gaviotas a good investment for holiday rentals?
Las Gaviotas sits on a beachfront promenade near Carvajal station, giving it strong seasonal rental appeal. However, Andalusia requires tourist-let (VFT) registration and 60 per cent community-of-owners approval under the February 2025 Decreto-ley. A buyer should verify the community's VFT policy before relying on rental income.

Sources and data