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Alto de los Monteros Property Prices 2026: Notarial EUR/m2

Registered notarial prices for Alto de los Monteros in 2026: what homes sold for per square metre in this elevated east Marbella hillside enclave.

In Alto de los Monteros, the registered sale price, what buyers actually paid at the notary, averaged 4,483 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 4,467 EUR/m2 and resale villas at 4,535 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). New-build villa prices are n/a for the zone this month. Those are real closing prices, not asking prices, which is why they sit below the headline figures buyers see in listings.

What did property actually sell for in Alto de los Monteros in 2026?

Registered notarial sales averaged 4,483 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026: 4,467 EUR/m2 for apartments and 4,535 EUR/m2 for resale villas (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). New-build villa data is n/a this month. These are the prices recorded at the notary when a deed is signed, the most reliable public signal of what a home in this elevated hillside stretch of east Marbella actually changed hands for.

Property typeRegistered price (EUR/m2), Alto de los Monteros, June 2026
All property types4,483
Apartments4,467
Resale villas (all categories)4,535
Older resale villas3,929
New-build villasn/a

Source: listyco notarial data, 2026-06 (Consejo General del Notariado). New-build villas are n/a because too few registered new-build villa sales fell in the zone this month to report a reliable figure.

What kind of place is Alto de los Monteros and who buys there?

Alto de los Monteros is the elevated hillside residential area that rises above the coastal Los Monteros beachfront, on the eastern side of Marbella. Where the Rio Real and Los Monteros beachfront sits at sea level with direct sand access, Alto de los Monteros climbs the foothills of the Sierra Blanca along the A-7 road, gaining altitude quickly enough that properties command panoramic views across the Mediterranean to Gibraltar and the North African coast on clear days. The name itself, alto meaning high, distinguishes this uphill enclave from the beachside community below.

The residential character is defined by what the elevation provides: privacy, larger plots and unobstructed views. Properties here are predominantly detached villas on generous parcels, many gated behind walls and landscaped gardens, interspersed with a smaller stock of apartment complexes that cater to buyers wanting the same views without villa maintenance. The streets are quieter than the beachfront, with less through traffic, and the hillside layout means many homes are accessed via winding residential roads that climb from the coastal artery. The trade-off is explicit: you gain the panorama, the space and the seclusion, but you lose the walk-to-the-beach convenience that the lower Los Monteros zone offers.

The buyer profile reflects this calculus. The typical purchaser is a UK, Nordic, German or Gulf second-home buyer or relocator who has already seen the beachfront and decided that a hillside villa with a pool and a view suits their lifestyle better than a frontline beach apartment. A portion of buyers are upsizing from elsewhere on the coast, trading a smaller Marbella town-centre property for a larger hillside home. Spanish families and professionals form a smaller cohort, drawn by the same combination of space and proximity to international schools. The area is roughly ten minutes by car from Marbella town centre and about forty minutes from Malaga airport, which puts it comfortably within the commuting radius for a part-time resident. For the wider context of how this area fits alongside the Los Monteros and East Marbella guide, see the linked area profile.

What drives prices in Alto de los Monteros?

Three factors move the EUR/m2 figure up or down here, and reading them is the key to understanding the registered average.

Altitude and view orientation. The price gradient in Alto de los Monteros runs uphill in a way that has no direct parallel in the beachfront zones. Properties higher on the hillside, with unobstructed south or southwest sea views, command the highest prices per square metre. A villa that sits below the ridgeline or faces north loses the panoramic sea view that defines the area, and its price reflects that loss. The orientation matters as much as the altitude: a south-facing villa at mid-height can outprice a north-facing villa near the top, because the view is what the buyer is paying for.

Plot size and villa category. The notarial data reveals a notable spread within the villa segment: the broader villa category registered 4,535 EUR/m2 while older resale villas registered 3,929 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). This gap between the two villa figures is wider than in several neighbouring zones and reflects the renovation premium that has taken hold here. Buyers who purchase an older hillside villa and modernise it to contemporary standards, open-plan layouts, infinity pools, floor-to-ceiling glass, are effectively creating a different product class. The older resale figure captures unmodernised stock, while the broader villa category includes renovated and extended properties that command the higher band.

New-build scarcity. The n/a for new-build villas this month is itself a market signal. Too few registered new-build villa transactions closed in the zone to report a reliable figure, which indicates that new construction is sparse at the notarial level. The hillside terrain, with its gradients and retaining-wall requirements, makes new villa builds more complex and expensive than on the flat coastal land. Where a new villa does come to market, it may sell off-plan or through a developer channel that does not register as a standard notarial sale in the same reporting period, which suppresses the figure rather than suggesting it is low.

How does Alto de los Monteros compare to its neighbours?

Alto de los Monteros registered 4,483 EUR/m2 across all property types, which places it just above the combined Rio Real and Los Monteros figure on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). The modest difference reflects the trade-off at the heart of this zone: buyers here are paying slightly more for panoramic views and larger plots than they would for a comparable property on the beachfront, where direct sand access is the defining asset.

To the west, the Nueva Andalucia Golf Valley offers a different proposition: golf-front living on the opposite side of Marbella, with a larger apartment stock and a cluster of four courses. A buyer weighing Alto de los Monteros against Nueva Andalucia is choosing between hillside sea views and golf-course frontage, two distinct lifestyle propositions at comparable registered price levels. For rental potential, the Marbella rental yield guide shows that elevated east Marbella, including Alto de los Monteros, attracts premium seasonal rents from view-seeking holiday tenants, though the year-round occupancy can be lower than beachfront zones where the walk-to-the-beach appeal sustains demand outside peak summer.

For the full acquisition-cost breakdown, including the 7% Andalusian ITP on resales and 10% IVA on new-build, see the cost of buying guide.

Why are registered prices lower than asking prices?

Registered notarial prices are lower than asking prices because they record every signed transaction across the full mix of resale apartments, older villas and transfers, rather than the prime, newly listed stock that sets the headlines. As a secondary valuation reference (a valuation model, not registered sales), Tinsa’s index puts the average finished-housing price in Marbella at 3,641 EUR/m2 in Q1 2026, up 20.53% year-on-year (Tinsa, IMIE Mercados Locales, Q1 2026). The national average growth was 14.5% and the Andalusia average 10.3% in the same quarter, placing Marbella well ahead of both the regional and national pace.

The Tinsa Marbella-wide figure of 3,641 EUR/m2 covers the entire municipality, including lower-priced inland areas, which is why it sits below the Alto de los Monteros zone-specific registered average of 4,483 EUR/m2. The zone figure is pulled up by the hillside villa stock and the view premium that defines this enclave, while the municipal average is pulled down by inland and peripheral areas where prices are substantially lower.

The INE Housing Price Index for Q1 2026 reported an annual rate of 12.9% nationally, with new homes up 9.1% and second-hand homes up 13.5%, and a quarterly increase of 3.5% (INE, IPV, Q1 2026). That second-hand figure is particularly relevant to Alto de los Monteros, where the stock is predominantly resale, and it confirms the strong upward pressure on older properties that the zone’s 3,929 EUR/m2 older resale villa figure captures at the notarial level.

How should a buyer read these numbers?

Use the registered notarial figure as your floor of reality: it is what comparable homes actually closed at. Treat asking prices as the seller’s opening position and Tinsa’s valuation index as a municipal benchmark. A buyer who anchors a negotiation to the 4,483 EUR/m2 registered average, then adjusts up for a high-altitude south-facing plot, a renovated villa, or a turnkey finish, is working from what the market did rather than what it hopes to do.

The villa category spread is the most actionable signal here. The gap between the broader villa figure (4,535 EUR/m2) and the older resale figure (3,929 EUR/m2) tells you that renovation matters in this zone more than in most. A buyer considering an unmodernised hillside villa should weigh the purchase price against the renovation cost and the post-renovation value, because the notarial data shows that renovated stock commands a measurable premium. The n/a on new-build villas tells you not that new villas are cheap, but that the new-build market here is too thin to benchmark, so any new-build price you encounter is a one-off asking price rather than a comparable registered sale.

The asking-versus-registered gap is especially important to understand in a view-driven market. Hillside villas with panoramic sea views are the type of stock that lists well above the notarial average, because the headline market is driven by turnkey, newly renovated properties with infinity pools and glass facades. The registered figure captures the full mix, including older resales and transfers that close below those headlines. A buyer who understands this gap negotiates from a position of fact rather than aspiration.

Frequently asked questions

What is the average price per m2 in Alto de los Monteros in 2026?
Registered notarial sales averaged 4,483 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 4,467 EUR/m2 and resale villas at 4,535 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). That is what actually closed at the notary, not an asking price.
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.
How much do new-build villas cost in Alto de los Monteros?
For June 2026 the new-build villa figure is n/a for the zone: there were too few registered new-build villa transactions to publish a reliable price, so no number is shown rather than an estimate.
How does Alto de los Monteros compare to beachfront Los Monteros?
Alto de los Monteros registered 4,483 EUR/m2 across all types, slightly above the combined Rio Real and Los Monteros figure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06). The hillside enclave trades direct beach access for panoramic sea views and larger plots, which keeps prices firm.
What is the difference between the notarial figure and the asking price?
The notarial figure (4,483 EUR/m2) is a registered sale price recorded at the notary. Asking prices on portals run higher because they reflect the seller's opening position and prime, newly listed stock. Both measures are useful but they answer different questions.

Sources and data