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Marbesa Property Prices 2026: Notarial EUR/m2 on the Marbella East Beachfront

Registered notarial prices for Marbesa in Marbella East, June 2026: what beachfront villas and apartments actually sold for per square metre in this zone.

In Marbesa, the registered sale price, what buyers actually paid at the notary, averaged 4,967 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with resale villas at 5,970 EUR/m2 and apartments at 3,992 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, and they reflect a low-density, villa-led beachfront urbanisation on Marbella’s eastern coast where large plots and direct beach access set the tone.

What did property actually sell for in Marbesa in 2026?

Registered notarial sales averaged 4,967 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026: 5,970 EUR/m2 for resale villas and 3,992 EUR/m2 for apartments (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 part of east Marbella actually changed hands for.

Property typeRegistered price (EUR/m2), Marbesa, June 2026
All property types4,967
Apartments3,992
Resale villas (all categories)5,970
Older resale villas5,970
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 sales fell in the zone this month to report a reliable figure.

What kind of place is Marbesa and who buys there?

Marbesa is a beachfront residential urbanisation on Marbella’s eastern side, sitting roughly 8 kilometres from the town centre along the Mediterranean coast. It sits between Elviria to the west and Cabopino to the east, with the A-7 coastal road running along its northern edge. Unlike the elevated areas further inland or the hotel-strip zones closer to town, Marbesa is defined by flat terrain and a direct relationship to the sea. Its beach, Playa de las Cañas, takes its name from the Torreón del Lance de las Cañas, an 18th-century watchtower that stands on the shoreline and remains the urbanisation’s most recognisable landmark.

The urbanisation began in the 1960s as part of Marbella’s early eastward expansion. Unlike later master-planned areas, the plots were released individually rather than through a single coordinated project, which produced an organic layout of detached villas on generous plots. Plot sizes typically range from 600 to 1,200 m2, a footprint that has become increasingly rare for beachfront Marbella and is the defining feature of the zone’s low-density character. The streets are wide, the housing stock is predominantly villas rather than high-rise apartments, and the protected dune areas along the shoreline preserve a natural coastline setting that newer, denser developments have lost.

The buyer profile here is primarily families and second-home owners who want a quiet beachfront villa address with privacy, space and direct beach access, rather than a resort lifestyle or a marina address. The original residents were largely older foreign owners and Spanish families who held holiday homes for decades. Over the past several years, a younger generation of international buyers has entered the zone, targeting the older 1970s and 1980s villas for renovation or demolition and replacement with contemporary builds. This redevelopment trend is the most active dynamic in the Marbesa market today. Everyday amenities, including supermarkets, cafes and international schools such as the English International College and Colegio Alboran, are accessed in neighbouring Elviria, a short drive west. The urbanisation recently added a 24-hour security service. For the wider context of how this area fits within the east Marbella corridor, see the Los Monteros and East Marbella buyer guide.

What drives prices in Marbesa?

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

The villa-led stock profile. The most telling signal in the data is the gap between villas and apartments: 5,970 EUR/m2 for resale villas versus 3,992 EUR/m2 for apartments. This is a wide spread, and it reflects a market where detached villas on large plots are the dominant product. Apartments are limited to a handful of low-rise complexes and are not a defining feature of the area. A buyer comparing the two figures should understand that they measure fundamentally different products: a beachfront villa on a 900 m2 plot with a private pool and mature gardens, and a two-bedroom apartment in a low-rise block, deliver entirely different value propositions. The villa figure, not the apartment figure, is the headline number for this zone.

Plot scarcity and redevelopment potential. The n/a for new-build villas this month tells you that the zone is largely built out, but the redevelopment story is different from simple scarcity. Marbesa’s original 1960s and 1970s villas are increasingly being replaced by modern contemporary homes with open-plan layouts, larger glazing and integrated outdoor living. Buyers are paying for the plot and the beachfront location, then investing in construction. This dynamic lifts the registered villa average because renovated and newly built homes on the old plots transact at higher prices than the original stock they replace. The structural scarcity of 600 to 1,200 m2 beachfront plots in Marbella is the argument for price stability in a zone where the building envelope is effectively fixed but the housing stock is actively upgrading.

Beachfront position and dune protection. Marbesa sits directly on the coastline, with direct pedestrian access from the entire urbanisation to Playa de las Cañas. The protected dune areas that line the shoreline prevent dense construction along the beachfront, which preserves the low-density character and the natural setting. A handful of established beach restaurants, including Simbad Beach Restaurant and Nosso Summer Club, sit within the urbanisation and contribute to a relaxed, daytime-oriented social scene. This direct beach access combined with dune protection is a finite resource along Marbella’s coast, and it is what separates Marbesa from the more commercialised beachfront zones.

How does Marbesa compare to its neighbours?

Marbesa occupies a specific position within the east Marbella price hierarchy. The zone registered 4,967 EUR/m2 across all property types, which places it below neighbouring Las Chapas on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). Las Chapas carries a higher premium from the Hacienda Las Chapas gated estate, which anchors a villa tier that Marbesa does not match. The Costabella market to the west registers lower overall because its apartment-heavy beachfront mix dilutes the per-metre figure, even though its frontline seafront stock commands its own premium.

To the east, Cabopino carries a lower overall average because its marina-led, apartment-dominant stock pulls the figure down. Marbesa, by contrast, is led by beachfront villas rather than apartments or a marina, which is why the villa figure here is the headline number. For buyers weighing the amenities side, Elviria to the west offers a more commercially developed setting with supermarkets, restaurants and schools on the doorstep, at a lower registered price point because its apartment-heavy stock dilutes the average. Marbesa sits at the villa-premium end of the east Marbella beachfront market, offering large beachfront plots that Elviria and Cabopino cannot match.

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 resales and transfers, rather than the prime, newly listed stock that sets the headlines. A model estimate from listyco market-stats puts current Marbesa valuations around 7,363 EUR/m2 (model estimate, not a sale price). Asking prices on portals run higher still (asking, not closing). The 4,967 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. The gap between them is particularly wide here because renovated and contemporary-rebuilt villas on large beachfront plots carry a high valuation premium that the transaction mix, which includes older resales and non-prime transfers, does not fully capture. A buyer who anchors to the registered average and adjusts up for a turnkey villa, a recent renovation or a larger plot is working from what the market did, not what it hopes to do.

For broader Marbella context, Tinsa’s Q1 2026 data puts the average finished-housing price in Marbella municipality at 3,641 EUR/m2, up 20.53% year-on-year, against a national year-on-year rate of 14.5% and an Andalusia rate of 10.3% (Tinsa, IMIE Mercados Locales, Q1 2026). That Marbella-wide figure covers the entire municipality, including lower-priced inland areas, which is why the Marbesa zone-specific registered average of 4,967 EUR/m2 sits well above it. The INE Housing Price Index for Q1 2026 reported an annual rate of 12.9% nationally, with second-hand homes up 13.5% and new homes up 9.1% (INE, IPV, Q1 2026), figures directly relevant to Marbesa where the stock is almost entirely resale and the new-build villa figure is suppressed.

How should a buyer read Marbesa’s 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 the model estimate as a valuation guide for the standing stock. A buyer who anchors a negotiation to the 4,967 EUR/m2 registered average, then adjusts up for a beachfront villa, a turnkey renovation or a larger plot, is working from what the market did rather than what it hopes to do.

The villa and apartment spread is the most actionable signal in this data. The 5,970 EUR/m2 villa figure reflects detached beachfront stock on generous plots, while the 3,992 EUR/m2 apartment figure captures the limited low-rise apartment complexes. A buyer comparing the two should compare total prices, not just EUR/m2, because a villa on a 900 m2 plot and a 100 m2 apartment deliver fundamentally different value propositions. For rental potential, the Marbella rental yield guide shows that east Marbella commands strong seasonal rents, which matters for buyers weighing the property as a part-let investment. For the full acquisition-cost breakdown, including the 7% Andalusian ITP on resales and the 10% IVA on new-build, see the cost of buying guide.

Frequently asked questions

What is the average price per m2 in Marbesa in 2026?
Registered notarial sales averaged 4,967 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with resale villas at 5,970 EUR/m2 and apartments at 3,992 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). These are real closing prices at the notary, not asking prices or valuation estimates.
Why do villas cost more per m2 than apartments in Marbesa?
The villa figure of 5,970 EUR/m2 sits well above the apartment figure of 3,992 EUR/m2 because Marbesa is a villa-led urbanisation developed in the 1960s with large beachfront plots of 600 to 1,200 m2. Apartments are limited to a handful of low-rise complexes, so the few that transact carry a lower per-metre figure than the detached villa stock that defines the zone.
How does Marbesa compare to neighbouring Las Chapas and Elviria?
Marbesa registered 4,967 EUR/m2 across all types, below neighbouring Las Chapas on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). Las Chapas carries a higher premium from the Hacienda Las Chapas gated estate. To the west, Elviria registers lower overall because its apartment-dominant stock dilutes the per-metre figure, while Marbesa's villa-led mix lifts the average.
Are there new-build villas for sale in Marbesa?
For June 2026 the new-build villa figure is n/a for the zone: too few registered new-build villa transactions to publish a reliable figure. Marbesa is a mature 1960s urbanisation with limited room for new detached construction, so villa transactions are dominated by resales of established stock and, increasingly, by redevelopment of older properties into contemporary homes.
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 sits below asking-price headlines because it includes older stock and non-prime transactions that never appear on portal front pages. A model estimate from listyco market-stats puts the current valuation of standing stock higher still.

Sources and data