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Aloha Property Prices 2026: Notarial EUR/m2

Registered notarial sale prices for Aloha in Marbella's Golf Valley in 2026: what homes actually sold for at the notary, not asking-price headlines.

In Aloha, the registered sale price, what buyers actually paid at the notary, averaged 4,814 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 4,619 EUR/m2 and resale villas at 4,985 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. Aloha is the central pocket of Nueva Andalucia’s Golf Valley, wrapped around the 1975 Aloha Golf Club, and its registered figures land between its golf-neighbour zones on the same notarial measure.

What did property actually sell for in Aloha in 2026?

Registered notarial sales averaged 4,814 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026: 4,619 EUR/m2 for apartments and 4,985 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 Golf Valley pocket actually changed hands for.

Property typeRegistered price (EUR/m2), Aloha, June 2026
All property types4,814
Apartments4,619
Resale villas4,985
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 Aloha and who buys there?

Aloha is the middle pocket of the Nueva Andalucia Golf Valley, the band of real estate that stretches north from Puerto Banus toward the AP-7 motorway, framed by three private golf courses. The urbanisation grew around the Aloha Golf Club, an 18-hole, par-72 course designed by Javier Arana and opened in 1975, which remains the zone’s organising feature. The course runs through mature pine, palm and olive tree planting that gives the streets a dense, established green canopy unusual even by Golf Valley standards. Frontline-golf properties line the fairways, and the secondary streets step back through a mix of detached villas, townhouses and low-rise apartment complexes, all within a five-minute drive of Puerto Banus.

The buyer profile is specific. Aloha draws golf-led second-home owners and relocators who want course views without the premium that Los Naranjos now commands, and without the gated formality of La Zagaleta or Sierra Blanca. UK and Scandinavian buyers form the dominant international cohort, with a steady Belgian and Dutch contingent, alongside Spanish families who value the established gardens and the short commute into Marbella. The buyer here is paying for a mature, tree-lined setting within walking distance of a private club, not for frontline beach or for maximum plot size. Apartments in the secondary streets pull the registered average toward the 4,619 EUR/m2 figure, while the frontline-golf villas on the fairway edge sit above it. For the wider Nueva Andalucia context, including how Aloha fits among the Golf Valley pockets, see the Nueva Andalucia price guide.

What drives prices in Aloha?

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

Frontline-golf position. The strongest price driver in Aloha is direct fairway frontage. Properties on the edge of the Aloha Golf Club course, with unobstructed views across the fairways and the tree canopy, command a clear premium over the secondary streets behind. The resale villa figure of 4,985 EUR/m2 reflects this stock, which carries the established gardens and pool settings that define the Golf Valley lifestyle. The apartment figure of 4,619 EUR/m2 captures the complexes set back from the course, which trade course views for lower entry prices and still sit within walking distance of the clubhouse.

Mature landscaping and built-out supply. Aloha’s tree cover is denser than its Golf Valley neighbours because the urbanisation is nearly 50 years old and the planting has had decades to establish. This creates a scarcity effect: the zone is largely built out, so new supply means demolishing and rebuilding rather than developing fresh land, and the planning constraints around the golf course limit what can be built on the periphery. The n/a on new-build villas reflects this: too few new-build villa transactions registered this month to report a reliable figure, because new construction is rare and the stock that trades is overwhelmingly resale.

Central Golf Valley access. Aloha sits between Los Naranjos to the west and Las Brisas to the east, and its position gives buyers access to three private clubs within a few minutes’ drive. This centrality sustains demand: a buyer who wants golf-course living with a choice of clubs, restaurants and pro shops nearby, without committing to a single development, tends to land in Aloha. The trade-off is that the zone lacks the beachfront access of the Marbella Golden Mile or the elevation and sea views of Nagüeles, so its price ceiling stays below those prime zones.

How does Aloha compare to its neighbours?

Aloha sits geographically in the middle of the Golf Valley and economically in the middle of its price range, and the registered data makes the relationship clear.

To the west, Los Naranjos registers above Aloha on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). Los Naranjos carries the highest registered villa figure in the Golf Valley, and its new-build villa transactions reflect recent turnkey redevelopment that has pushed the pocket’s ceiling upward. A buyer choosing between the two weighs Los Naranjos’s newer, higher-priced stock against Aloha’s established green setting and tighter price range. The two share the same golf-led buyer pool but answer different questions: one is newer and more expensive, the other is mature and more contained.

To the east, Las Brisas registers below Aloha on the all-type notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06). Las Brisas has a higher apartment figure than Aloha, reflecting the apartment complexes near the Real Club de Golf Las Brisas entrance, but its villa figure sits below because the villa stock is older and less redeveloped than Aloha’s. A buyer who prioritises apartment living near a prestigious club may find Las Brisas competitive; a buyer focused on villas tends to find more value in Aloha’s frontline-golf stock.

For buyers looking beyond the Golf Valley, La Quinta to the north in Benahavis offers a gated, hillside alternative at a comparable all-type registered figure, and El Madronal provides a more private, gated villa enclave at a higher price point. The choice between these depends on whether the buyer prioritises golf-course frontage (Aloha), gated security (El Madronal) or elevated valley views (La Quinta).

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

Registered notarial prices sit below both asking prices and valuation estimates because they capture every signed deed across the full transaction mix, including older resales and transfers, rather than the prime, newly listed stock that drives the headlines. A model estimate from listyco market-stats places current Aloha valuations around 9,052 EUR/m2 (model estimate, not a sale price), with high confidence across 366 property valuations. Asking prices on portals run higher still (asking, not closing). The 4,814 EUR/m2 registered average is the figure that reflects completed sales.

The two numbers answer different questions. The notarial figure tells you what closed; the model estimate gauges current value across the standing housing stock. Read together they form an honest range: what sellers ask, what the stock is estimated to be worth, and what actually sold. For Marbella-wide context, Tinsa’s Q1 2026 data puts the average finished-housing price in Marbella at 3,641 EUR/m2, up 20.53 per cent year-on-year, against a national average of 14.5 per cent and an Andalusia average of 10.3 per cent (Tinsa, IMIE Mercados Locales, Q1 2026). That Marbella-wide figure spans the whole municipality, including lower-priced inland districts, which is why it falls below Aloha’s zone-specific registered average.

How should a buyer read these numbers?

Anchor your negotiation to the 4,814 EUR/m2 registered average: it is what comparable homes actually closed at. Treat asking prices as the seller’s opening bid and model estimates as a valuation guide for the standing stock. A buyer who starts from the registered figure, then adjusts upward for a frontline-golf position, a renovated interior or a larger garden, works from what the market did rather than what it hopes to do. The n/a on new-build villas does not mean new villas are cheap; it means 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.

For the rental yield picture, Aloha’s golf-front villas and apartments command strong seasonal rents during the spring and autumn golf seasons, which matters for buyers weighing a part-let strategy. 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. Aloha rewards buyers who understand the frontline-golf premium and the gap between asking and closing, and the registered notarial data is the cleanest way to see it.

Frequently asked questions

What is the average price per m2 in Aloha in 2026?
Registered notarial sales averaged 4,814 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 4,619 EUR/m2 and resale villas at 4,985 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). That is what actually closed at the notary, not an asking price.
How does Aloha compare to Los Naranjos and Las Brisas?
On the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06), Aloha's all-type figure of 4,814 EUR/m2 sits above Las Brisas at 4,556 EUR/m2 but below Los Naranjos at 5,648 EUR/m2. Los Naranjos carries the highest registered villa figure in the Golf Valley, while Aloha's tighter tree-lined course setting keeps its premium measured.
How much do new-build villas cost in Aloha?
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.
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.
What is the difference between the notarial figure and the model estimate?
The notarial figure (4,814 EUR/m2) is a registered sale price. The market-stats figure (around 9,052 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