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Campo de Mijas Property Prices 2026: Notarial EUR/m2 in the Inland Mijas Valley

Registered notarial prices for Campo de Mijas in 2026: what homes sold for per square metre in Mijas's inland rural valley, the value entry point.

Campo de Mijas is the inland rural valley of the Mijas municipality, and its registered prices read as the value pocket of the whole municipality: sales averaged 2,458 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 2,301 EUR/m2 and villas at 2,581 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). These are closing prices recorded at the notary, and they make Campo de Mijas the lowest priced entry point in Mijas by a clear margin.

What did property actually sell for in Campo de Mijas in 2026?

Registered notarial sales averaged 2,458 EUR/m2 across all types in June 2026: 2,301 EUR/m2 for apartments and 2,581 EUR/m2 for villas (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). New-build villa data is not available for this zone, rendered as n/a, so the villa figure reflects resale stock exclusively.

Property typeRegistered price (EUR/m2), Campo de Mijas, June 2026
All property types2,458
Apartments2,301
Villas (all)2,581
New-build villasn/a
Resale villas2,581

Source: listyco notarial data, 2026-06 (Consejo General del Notariado).

What is Campo de Mijas and who buys there?

Campo de Mijas is the inland farming valley that sits behind the coastal strip of the Mijas municipality, north of La Cala de Mijas and the apartment belts of Calahonda and Riviera del Sol. It is the rural counterpart to the resort coast: olive groves, scatterings of fincas, country lanes and working agricultural land rather than beachfront promenades and golf resorts. The Mijas municipality as a whole covers 148.8 km2 and had a registered population of 95,104 as of 1 January 2025 (Instituto Nacional de Estadistica), spread across three main nuclei: Mijas Pueblo on the hillside, La Cala de Mijas on the coast, and Las Lagunas on the Fuengirola border. Campo de Mijas is the countryside between and beyond these centres.

The buyer profile here is distinct from the coastal zones. Relocators who want a finca lifestyle with land, a garden and privacy rather than an apartment near the beach are the core audience. Retirees who prize space and quiet over sea views and marina proximity also feature. A third group is investors hunting for the lowest cost per square metre in the municipality, buyers who calculate that inland land plus a renovation budget buys more house than a coastal apartment at three times the price per metre. What unites them is a willingness to trade the five minute walk to the beach for a five minute drive to it, and to accept rural character, septic tanks and country roads as part of the package.

What drives prices in Campo de Mijas?

Three factors set the price level here, and all three push it below the coast. The first is location: Campo de Mijas is genuinely inland, without sea views, beachfront access or the resort infrastructure that carries the premium in La Cala de Mijas and Calahonda. The second is stock mix: the housing is older, more rural and more varied than the purpose-built apartment complexes and modern villa estates of the coast. Fincas, country houses and older townhouses dominate, and their registered sale prices reflect land value and renovation potential rather than resort positioning. The third is supply and demand dynamics: fewer international holiday-home buyers compete here than on the coast, which keeps the price floor lower and the negotiation room wider.

The premium that does exist within Campo de Mijas attaches to land size and condition. A renovated finca with several hectares of olive grove and a pool commands more per square metre than an unmodernised country house on a small plot, because the buyer pool for turnkey rural property is deeper than for renovation projects. Proximity to Mijas Pueblo, the whitewashed hill village that anchors the municipality, also lifts values at the Campo de Mijas edges that border the pueblo, since village amenities are then walkable.

How does Campo de Mijas compare to its neighbours?

Against the other priced zones of the Mijas municipality, Campo de Mijas sits clearly at the bottom of the registered price range. The coastal zones, La Cala de Mijas and Sitio de Calahonda, register substantially higher as genuine beach towns with year-round expat demand and apartment-heavy liquidity. Riviera del Sol on the Mijas coast follows the same pattern. Mijas Pueblo, the whitewashed hill village, prices higher still thanks to its tourist draw, sea views from elevation and the limited supply of property inside the historic centre.

Campo de Mijas undercuts all of them because it offers none of the three things that carry the Mijas premium: a beach, a view or a resort. What it offers instead is land, space and the lowest registered price per square metre in the municipality. For a buyer whose priority is a large plot, a rural setting and a renovation project at value pricing, the gap between Campo de Mijas and the coast is the trade, not a defect. The Mijas and Fuengirola value guide covers the broader value thesis across the municipality.

How does Campo de Mijas sit within the wider Costa del Sol value belt?

Looking beyond Mijas, Campo de Mijas at 2,458 EUR/m2 registered sits among the lowest priced zones on the entire western Costa del Sol. The inland position removes the coastal premium that runs through the Marbella and Estepona markets to the west and the Benalmadena and Torremolinos apartment belts to the east. Fuengirola Centro, the nearest town centre to the south, registers higher as a compact urban market with a working port, shops and transport links. Campo de Mijas trades all of that urban density for land and quiet.

The market context across the Costa del Sol is one of sustained price growth. Tinsa’s market intelligence series tracks year-on-year appreciation across the Spanish costas, and the Mijas municipality has benefited from the same demand that has lifted the whole region. But the growth is uneven: the prime west of Marbella and the Golden Mile have moved further and faster than the inland value pockets, which widens the price gap rather than narrowing it. Campo de Mijas remains a value play, not a growth leader, and that is the honest framing a buyer should bring to any listing here.

What should a buyer take from these numbers?

The 2,458 EUR/m2 registered average is the benchmark to carry into any Campo de Mijas negotiation. It tells you what homes here have actually sold for at the notary, not what sellers are asking, and it sits at the bottom of the Mijas price range for a structural reason: inland location, rural stock and a buyer pool that self-selects for land and value over beach and resort. The apartment figure of 2,301 EUR/m2 and the villa figure of 2,581 EUR/m2 give you the type-specific anchors, and the absence of new-build villa data confirms that this is a resale market, not a developer-led one.

For a buyer weighing Campo de Mijas against the coast, the decision is straightforward in principle. If the priority is a beachfront apartment, a golf resort address or a turnkey holiday let, the coastal zones are the right target and their registered prices reflect that. If the priority is land, a finca, a renovation project or simply the most square metres for the budget in the Mijas municipality, Campo de Mijas is the entry route, and its registered prices confirm it is priced accordingly.

Frequently asked questions

What is the average price per m2 in Campo de Mijas in 2026?
Registered notarial sales averaged 2,458 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026: 2,301 EUR/m2 for apartments and 2,581 EUR/m2 for villas (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). These are prices recorded at the notary, not asking prices. New-build villa data is not available for this zone.
Why is Campo de Mijas cheaper than coastal Mijas?
Campo de Mijas sits inland, away from the beach and the resort infrastructure of La Cala de Mijas, Calahonda and Riviera del Sol. Without sea views, beachfront access or golf-resort amenities, registered prices settle lower. It is the rural value pocket of the municipality, trading coast proximity for land size and authenticity.
Is Campo de Mijas a good investment?
At 2,458 EUR/m2 it is the lowest registered price point in the Mijas municipality. Buyers get more square metres and land for their budget than anywhere else locally, with the coast a short drive south. It suits those who want rural living with Costa del Sol access, not buyers seeking a beachfront rental yield.
Who buys in Campo de Mijas?
Buyers seeking space, land and rural Andalusian character at value pricing: relocators who want a finca lifestyle, retirees prioritising garden and privacy over beach, and investors looking for the lowest cost per square metre in the Mijas municipality with room for renovation or land use.

Sources and data