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Guadalmina Alta Property Prices 2026: Notarial EUR/m2 in the Riverside Golf Belt

What property actually sold for in Guadalmina Alta in 2026: registered notarial prices per square metre for apartments and resale villas, not asking prices.

In Guadalmina Alta, the registered sale price, what buyers actually paid at the notary, averaged 3,039 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 2,845 EUR/m2 and resale villas at 3,431 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 Guadalmina Alta in 2026?

Registered notarial sales averaged 3,039 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026: 2,845 EUR/m2 for apartments and 3,431 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 inland, golf-side corner of west Marbella actually changed hands for.

Property typeRegistered price (EUR/m2), Guadalmina Alta, June 2026
All property types3,039
Apartments2,845
Resale villas3,431
New-build villasn/a

Source: listyco notarial data, 2026-06 (Consejo General del Notariado). New-build villas are n/a this month: no reliable figure is available for the zone.

Who buys in Guadalmina Alta and what is the zone like?

Guadalmina Alta is the inland half of the Guadalmina urbanisation, sitting north of the A-7 coastal road in west Marbella, between San Pedro de Alcantara and the Guadalmina river. Its beachfront twin, Guadalmina Baja, lies on the seaward side of the road. The split is literal: Alta means high, inland, away from the coast. The development traces its origins to 1933, when Norberto Goizueta spotted the tall sugar cane plantation of Guadalmina from a boat and bought 350 acres of land to farm, land that shifted from agriculture to golf and residential use over the following decades (Real Club de Golf Guadalmina).

The golf club is the zone’s anchor. The Real Club de Golf Guadalmina inaugurated its South Course in 1959, designed by Javier Arana, described by the club as one of the best Spanish golf course designers of all time. The North Course followed in 1973, supervised by Folco Nardi, an Italian cavalry colonel who worked as a foreman and greenkeeper with Goizueta. A par-3 nine-hole course completed the offering in 1989. The club now carries over 2,000 members across more than 20 nationalities, with Spanish members forming the largest single group, and it transitioned to a members-owned club in 2021 after decades as a limited liability company (Real Club de Golf Guadalmina). The North Course is shorter and hillier than the South, with more water obstacles and the Arroyo del Chopo stream running through holes 8, 12, 16, 17 and 18, giving the inland layout its character.

The residential stock in Guadalmina Alta is a mix of frontline-golf apartments, gated communities with mature gardens, and detached villas on larger plots than the beachfront side allows. The setting is greener and quieter than Baja: no direct beach, but the river, the golf fairways and the established tree cover give it a more residential, year-round feel. The buyer profile is specific. This is not a holiday-let zone. The typical buyer is a UK, Nordic or northern European second-home owner or full-time relocator drawn to the golf-and-riverside combination, the walk-to-club layout, and the proximity to San Pedro de Alcantara’s town centre, which sits minutes to the east. Marbella municipality had 160,478 residents as of 2025, with 49,813 foreign residents forming roughly 31 per cent of the population (Instituto de Estadistica y Cartografia de Andalucia), and Guadalmina Alta’s buyer base sits squarely within that northern European cohort. For the wider west Marbella context, including how Guadalmina Alta fits alongside San Pedro and the Golden Mile, see the cost of buying guide.

What moves prices in Guadalmina Alta?

Three factors shape the EUR/m2 figure here, and understanding them is the key to reading the registered average.

Golf frontage versus inland position. The price gradient in Guadalmina Alta runs from the frontline-golf properties, with fairway views and direct course access, to the streets set further back toward the A-7 road. Properties closest to the golf course carry the highest prices per square metre within the zone. The North Course’s tighter, hillier layout, with the Arroyo del Chopo stream threading through five holes, means that frontline-golf stock is genuinely limited, which supports the resale villa figure of 3,431 EUR/m2.

Apartment volume versus villa scarcity. The apartment stock, including gated communities around the golf periphery, adds transaction volume and keeps the registered average from rising purely on villa scarcity. The 2,845 EUR/m2 apartment figure reflects this broader mix of stock, from golf-side apartments to more standard residential blocks. Resale villas, at 3,431 EUR/m2, command a premium over apartments, reflecting the larger plots and the established gardens that the inland side of the development allows.

New-build scarcity. The n/a for new-build villas this month is itself a price signal. No reliable figure is available for the zone, which tells you that new-build supply is effectively absent at the notarial level. Guadalmina Alta is a mature, established development with little room for new construction without buying and demolishing an existing property, which keeps resale villa prices firm. Where a new villa does come to market, it typically sells off-plan or through a developer channel that may not register as a standard notarial sale in the same month, which is why the figure is suppressed rather than low.

How does Guadalmina Alta compare to its neighbours?

Guadalmina Alta’s registered all-type average of 3,039 EUR/m2 places it below its beachfront twin Guadalmina Baja on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). The gap reflects the difference between an inland, golf-side address and a beachfront and golf-side enclave with direct sea access. A buyer weighing the two is choosing between Alta’s quieter, greener, riverside setting and Baja’s beach-and-golf combination. See the Guadalmina Baja price guide for the full breakdown of the beachfront side.

To the east, Guadalmina Alta sits just above San Pedro de Alcantara on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06). The two are close in registered price, but the character is different: San Pedro is a working town with a commercial centre, a broader apartment stock and a wider price range, while Guadalmina Alta is a residential enclave organised around a single golf club. A buyer who wants town life, walkable shops and a lower entry point may prefer San Pedro; one who wants a gated, golf-side address with mature gardens may prefer Guadalmina Alta. See the San Pedro de Alcantara price guide for the town-centre figures.

To the east along the coast, the Marbella Golden Mile sits well above Guadalmina Alta on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). The Golden Mile carries Marbella’s prime address premium, with beachfront and hotel-front positions that Guadalmina Alta’s inland setting does not match. A buyer who wants the prime west Marbella address at a lower registered price may find Guadalmina Alta the more accessible entry point into the same western Marbella corridor.

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

Registered notarial prices are lower than both asking prices and valuation estimates 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. A model estimate from listyco market-stats puts current Guadalmina Alta valuations around 5,795 EUR/m2 (model estimate, not a sale price), reflecting the golf-side and riverside addresses that define the zone. Asking prices on portals run higher still (asking, not closing). The 3,039 EUR/m2 registered average is the figure that reflects completed sales.

The two numbers measure different things. The notarial figure is a closing price; the model estimate is a current-value estimate across the standing stock. Quote them side by side and you get an honest range: what is being asked, what the stock is estimated to be worth, and what actually sold. For context on what Marbella as a whole is doing, a Tinsa report puts the average finished-housing price in Marbella at 3,641 EUR/m2, up 20.53 per cent year-on-year (Tinsa, IMIE Mercados Locales, Q1 2026). That Marbella-wide figure covers the entire municipality, including lower-priced inland areas, which is why it sits close to Guadalmina Alta’s zone-specific registered average.

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 model estimates as a valuation guide for the standing stock. A buyer who starts from the 3,039 EUR/m2 registered average, then adjusts up for a frontline-golf position, a garden view, or a turnkey renovation, is working from what the market did rather than what it hopes to do. 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 see is a one-off asking price rather than a comparable registered sale.

For the rental yield picture, Guadalmina Alta’s golf-side positions command steady rents from golf visitors and year-round residents, which matters for buyers weighing the property as a part-let investment. And for the full acquisition-cost breakdown, including the 7 per cent Andalusian ITP on resales and 10 per cent IVA on new-build, see the cost of buying guide. Guadalmina Alta rewards buyers who understand the difference between the inland golf-side address and the beachfront premium next door, and the registered notarial data is the cleanest way to see it.

Frequently asked questions

What is the average price per m2 in Guadalmina Alta in 2026?
Registered notarial sales averaged 3,039 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 2,845 EUR/m2 and resale villas at 3,431 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 Guadalmina Alta?
For June 2026 the new-build villa figure is n/a for the zone: no reliable figure is available, so no number is shown rather than an estimate.
How does Guadalmina Alta compare to Guadalmina Baja?
Guadalmina Alta's registered all-type average of 3,039 EUR/m2 sits well below Guadalmina Baja on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06). The gap reflects Baja's direct beachfront position versus Alta's inland, golf-side setting. A buyer weighing the two is choosing between beach access and a quieter, greener riverside address.
What is the difference between the notarial figure and the model estimate?
The notarial figure (3,039 EUR/m2) is a registered sale price. The market-stats figure (around 5,795 EUR/m2) is a model estimate of current valuation across the standing stock, a different measure, which is why the two differ. Both are labelled so you can compare like with like.

Sources and data