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Sierra Blanca, Marbella: the gated hillside villa enclave and how to buy there

Sierra Blanca is Marbella's 24-hour gated villa community above the Golden Mile: what the zone is, who buys there, what villas cost and how the purchase works.

Sierra Blanca is the 24-hour gated villa community carved into the pine-covered slopes of the mountain that gives it its name, directly above the western end of Marbella’s Golden Mile. Registered notarial sales averaged 6,089 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with resale villas at 6,223 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). Apartments and new-build villas are n/a for the zone this month because the community is almost entirely villa-led. Those are real closing prices at the notary, not asking prices, and they sit above neighbouring Nagüeles on the same measure. Sierra Blanca is one of the most consolidated luxury enclaves on the Costa del Sol, and this guide covers its character, its buyer profile, what drives prices, how it compares to its neighbours and how the purchase actually works.

What kind of place is Sierra Blanca?

Sierra Blanca is a gated residential community covering approximately 25 hectares on the hillside above the Golden Mile, containing roughly 300 villas accessed through three controlled entrance points, all barriered and staffed around the clock. The community was developed from the late 1980s onward as Marbella’s prime market pushed uphill from the coast into the mountain foothills. The stock is a mix of original Andalusian-style villas and increasingly bold contemporary architecture, with some of the largest plot sizes and highest individual sale prices in the municipality.

The character is defined by what it is not. There are no hotels, no commercial strips, no through-traffic and no apartment blocks. The streets inside the gates are quiet, residential and uniformly low-density. The gradient rises from roughly 150 metres at the lower entrance to over 300 metres at the highest streets, where villas look south across the Mediterranean and west toward Gibraltar and the African coast. The mountain itself, La Concha, forms a dramatic backdrop that gives the community its name and its sense of enclosure.

The gated perimeter is the defining feature. Three staffed entrances, perimeter security and community regulations create a price floor that open neighbourhoods cannot replicate. Buyers pay a premium for the certainty that the streets are private, the access is controlled and the community is uniformly residential. This security premium is structural: it persists across market cycles because the gated infrastructure is permanent. For buyers coming from abroad, the relocation playbook for Marbella explains how the residency and logistics layer sits underneath the property search.

Who buys villas in Sierra Blanca?

The buyer profile is narrow and specific. Sierra Blanca draws high-net-worth primary and second-home owners who prioritise security, privacy and plot size above walk-to-beach convenience. Middle Eastern, Nordic and British buyers form the core international cohort, alongside Spanish families who have held property in the community for decades. A buyer here is paying for the gated perimeter, the large individual plots, the sea views from elevation and the discretion that a staffed-entrance community provides.

The typical purchase is a villa bought for long-term hold, often renovated or rebuilt to contemporary standards rather than traded quickly. Many owners hold for personal use rather than let, which constrains the rental supply. For the rental yield picture across Marbella, Sierra Blanca’s gated villas command premium seasonal rents when they do enter the market, but the pool of available lets is small.

The buyer journey at this price level requires the same legal diligence as any Spanish property purchase, and often more. The complete foreign-buyer process and the acquisition-cost breakdown apply to Sierra Blanca just as they do to any Marbella purchase, including the 7 per cent Andalusian ITP on resales or 10 per cent IVA plus approximately 1.2 per cent AJD on new build, notary and Land Registry fees, and independent legal representation.

What drives prices in Sierra Blanca?

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

Plot sizes and scarcity. Sierra Blanca is largely built out. The original master plan allocated generous plots, many between 1,000 and 4,000 square metres, and the community is now close to fully developed. New construction means demolishing an existing villa and rebuilding, not developing fresh land. This scarcity of buildable plots keeps villa prices firm because supply is effectively fixed. When a plot comes to market, it commands a premium that reflects the impossibility of replicating it within the gates. The registered villa figure of 6,223 EUR/m2 captures this constrained supply.

Elevation and sea views. The price gradient runs uphill. Villas on the highest streets, with unobstructed views across the Mediterranean from elevated plots, command the highest per-square-metre figures. Mid-level properties carry partial views and garden settings at a lower tier. The lower section, closest to the Golden Mile access road, trades some view for convenience but still benefits from the gated perimeter. Resale villas dominate the registered transactions in the zone, which is why the all-types figure tracks closely to the villa figure.

The gated premium. The comparison to ungated neighbours below, where similar villas on similar gradients close for less, shows the gated premium in the data. Nagüeles, the open residential neighbourhood directly below Sierra Blanca on the hillside, registers lower on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). The step from Nagüeles to Sierra Blanca, visible in the registered figures on both zones’ price pages, is the cost of the gate.

How does Sierra Blanca compare to its neighbours?

Sierra Blanca sits above two registered zones and below one, and the notarial data makes each relationship clear. The table summarises the zone hierarchy; for the exact registered EUR/m2 figures for each neighbour, follow the links to their dedicated price pages.

ZonePositionCharacter
Cascada de CamojanAbove Sierra BlancaUltra-prime, fewer than 30 villas, highest on the hillside notarial measure
Marbella Golden MileBelow Sierra Blanca (south)Beachfront apartments and hotels, higher all-types notarial figure, lower villa figure
Sierra BlancaThe gated hillsideVilla-only gated community, 6,089 EUR/m2 all types, 6,223 EUR/m2 villas
NagüelesBelow Sierra BlancaOpen residential, villas and apartments, lower than Sierra Blanca on both measures
Nueva AndaluciaWest (across the Ronda road)Golf Valley, wider price range, more apartment density

Source: listyco notarial data, 2026-06 (Consejo General del Notariado). Sierra Blanca figures shown; neighbouring zones carry their own registered figures on their dedicated price pages.

Directly below, Nagüeles is an open residential neighbourhood of villas and apartments on the hillside between the Golden Mile and Sierra Blanca. A buyer moving up from Nagüeles to Sierra Blanca pays for the gated perimeter, the larger plots and the controlled access that Nagüeles’s open street layout does not provide.

To the south, the Marbella Golden Mile registers higher on all property types because of its beachfront apartment stock next to the Puente Romano and Marbella Club hotels. But the Golden Mile’s villa figure sits below Sierra Blanca’s, because the Golden Mile’s prime stock is apartment-led while Sierra Blanca’s is villa-led. A buyer choosing between them weighs the Golden Mile’s coastal, hotel-adjacent lifestyle against Sierra Blanca’s gated, elevated privacy.

Above Sierra Blanca, the ultra-prime enclave of Cascada de Camojan registers higher still on the same notarial measure (listyco notarial data, 2026-06). Cascada de Camojan is a smaller, even more exclusive community on the slopes above Sierra Blanca, with larger plots and fewer than 30 villas. A buyer stepping up from Sierra Blanca to Cascada de Camojan is paying for greater exclusivity and larger estate plots at the very top of the Marbella hillside market.

To the west, Nueva Andalucia’s Golf Valley offers a different proposition: golf-front living on the other side of the Ronda road, with a larger area, more apartment density and a wider price range. Buyers who prioritise golf course access and marina proximity over gated hillside privacy may prefer Nueva Andalucia; those who want the enclosed, villa-only security stay in Sierra Blanca. For a course-by-course breakdown of golf-front property, the frontline-golf guide covers the specific courses and their price bands.

How does Sierra Blanca fit the wider 2026 Marbella market?

Tinsa’s IMIE Mercados Locales for Q2 2026 records a 15.2 per cent year-on-year increase nationally, the largest since the third quarter of 2006, with a 3.7 per cent quarterly advance and 11.8 points above general inflation (Tinsa, IMIE Mercados Locales, Q2 2026). Marbella itself runs well ahead of the national trend: the Tinsa city average for finished housing reached 3,694 EUR/m2, up 18.31 per cent year-on-year (Tinsa, precio vivienda Marbella, Q2 2026). The INE’s Index of Housing Prices for Q1 2026 confirms a 12.9 per cent annual rate nationally, with second-hand housing at 13.5 per cent and new build at 9.1 per cent (INE, IPV, Q1 2026).

These macro figures span the whole country and the whole municipality, including lower-priced inland districts, which is why they contextualise rather than match Sierra Blanca’s zone-specific registered average. The INE’s April 2026 property-transfer statistics recorded 53,241 dwelling sales registered nationally, down 1.8 per cent year-on-year and 13.1 per cent month-on-month (INE, Statistics on transfer of property rights, April 2026), pointing to a supply-constrained market where registered prices hold firm even as transaction volumes ease. Sierra Blanca, with its fixed supply of plots and gated premium, is a textbook case of that constraint.

What should a villa buyer check before buying in Sierra Blanca?

A Sierra Blanca purchase demands the same checks as any Spanish villa acquisition, plus a few specific to a gated community.

The community accounts. As a villa owner inside the gates, you share the cost of the 24-hour security staffing, perimeter maintenance and common-area upkeep. The community of owners operates under the Ley de Propiedad Horizontal and charges community fees proportional to your cuota, your ownership share. Ask for the last three years of community accounts and the current budget before committing. The community fees guide explains how these are calculated.

The property valuation. A villa in Sierra Blanca is a high-value asset, and the gap between asking prices and registered notarial sales can be wide. A professional valuation anchors your negotiation to what comparable homes actually closed at, not what sellers hope for. The 6,089 EUR/m2 registered average is the starting point; adjust upward for an elevated plot with full sea views, a renovated or rebuilt interior, or a larger garden within the gates.

The cost of living. The cost of living in Marbella covers the day-to-day expenses of owning and running a property in the municipality, from utilities to insurance to council tax. Sierra Blanca’s larger villas carry higher running costs than the Marbella average, both in absolute terms and in community fees for the gated infrastructure.

The registered price as a negotiation anchor. Start from the registered figure, then adjust upward for the specific property’s advantages. A buyer who works from what the market did rather than what it hopes to do is positioned to negotiate honestly. The n/a on apartments and new-build villas does not mean those categories are cheap or absent; it means the registered transaction volume was too thin to benchmark, so any price you encounter in those categories is a one-off asking price rather than a comparable registered sale.

This guide is general information, not legal or tax advice. Rules change and individual circumstances differ. Verify current requirements with an independent lawyer (abogado) or tax advisor (gestor/asesor fiscal) before acting.

Frequently asked questions

Is Sierra Blanca a gated community?
Yes. Sierra Blanca is a 24-hour gated residential community on the Marbella hillside above the Golden Mile, accessed through three controlled entrance points that are barriered and staffed around the clock. There are no hotels, commercial strips or apartment blocks inside the gates, and the streets are uniformly low-density and residential.
What is the average price per m2 in Sierra Blanca?
Registered notarial sales averaged 6,089 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with resale villas at 6,223 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). Apartment and new-build villa figures are n/a because the community is almost entirely villa-led and too few transactions in those categories fell this month.
How does Sierra Blanca compare to the Golden Mile?
The Golden Mile to the south registers higher on the all-types notarial figure because of its beachfront apartment stock, but Sierra Blanca's villa figure sits above the Golden Mile's villa figure. The Golden Mile offers a coastal, hotel-adjacent lifestyle; Sierra Blanca offers gated, elevated privacy. The two zones serve the same prime buyer pool but answer different questions.
Who buys property in Sierra Blanca?
The buyer profile is narrow and specific: high-net-worth primary and second-home owners who prioritise security, privacy and large plots. Middle Eastern, Nordic and British buyers form the core international cohort, alongside Spanish families who have held property in the community for decades. The typical purchase is a villa for long-term hold.
Are there apartments in Sierra Blanca?
No. Sierra Blanca is almost entirely villa-led. The apartment notarial figure is n/a for June 2026 because too few registered apartment transactions fell in the zone this month to report a reliable per-square-metre figure. The community is defined by detached villas on individual plots, not apartment buildings.
What is above Sierra Blanca on the Marbella hillside?
Cascada de Camojan sits above Sierra Blanca on the slopes of the same mountain. It is a smaller, even more exclusive enclave with fewer than 30 villas, registering higher on the same notarial measure. A buyer stepping up from Sierra Blanca to Cascada de Camojan pays for greater exclusivity and larger estate plots.

Sources and data