Torreguadiaro Property Prices 2026: Notarial EUR/m2 on the Sotogrande Coast
What property in Torreguadiaro and San Diego sold for in June 2026: registered notarial EUR/m2 for apartments and villas, with village and price analysis.
In Torreguadiaro and San Diego, the fishing village that sits on the coast just outside Sotogrande’s gated perimeter, registered sale prices averaged 2,990 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with resale villas at 3,276 EUR/m2 and apartments at 2,411 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 recorded at the notary, not asking prices, which is why they sit below the headline figures buyers see on portals.
What did property actually sell for in Torreguadiaro in 2026?
Registered notarial sales averaged 2,990 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026: 2,411 EUR/m2 for apartments and 3,276 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 coastal village actually changed hands for.
| Property type | Registered price (EUR/m2), Torreguadiaro and San Diego, June 2026 |
|---|---|
| All property types | 2,990 |
| Apartments | 2,411 |
| Resale villas | 3,276 |
| Resale villas (older stock) | 3,246 |
| New-build villas | n/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.
What kind of place is Torreguadiaro, and who buys here?
Torreguadiaro is not part of the Sotogrande estate. It is a pre-existing fishing village on the Mediterranean coast in the municipality of San Roque, Cadiz province, sitting immediately to the west of Sotogrande’s marina and gated residential areas. The village shares its postal code, 11312, with the adjacent hamlet of San Diego and the nearby settlement of San Enrique de Guadiaro. San Roque municipality itself was founded on 21 May 1706 by Spanish residents expelled from Gibraltar during the War of the Spanish Succession, and its motto, “the city where Gibraltar resides”, preserves that origin. Torreguadiaro predates the Sotogrande development, which Joseph McMicking established in the early 1960s on the farmland and pine forest to the east.
The distinction matters for property buyers. Sotogrande is a master-planned, gated, golf-anchored estate with private security, large minimum plot sizes and a club-based social circuit. Torreguadiaro is an open village with a seafront promenade, a working fishing harbour, tapas bars and beachside chiringuitos that operate through the summer. The streets are narrow and walkable. The beach, the bakery and the bars sit within a few minutes on foot. There is no gate, no guardhouse and no membership required. That openness is the defining difference, and it shapes who buys here.
The buyer profile falls into three groups. First, permanent residents: northern European retirees and remote-working professionals who want a year-round village with a genuine community rather than the seasonal, club-oriented rhythm of gated Sotogrande. Second, lifestyle second-home buyers who prioritise walkability and sea views over golf-frontline positioning. Third, value-conscious buyers who recognise that the registered price per square metre in Torreguadiaro sits below the gated Sotogrande core, but that the hillside villas above the village offer comparable Mediterranean views at a lower entry point than equivalent properties inside the estate.
What drives Torreguadiaro’s EUR/m2 up or down?
The single biggest price driver is the split between hillside and waterfront. The hillside above Torreguadiaro rises steeply from the beach, and the villas on its upper slopes capture unobstructed sea views across the Mediterranean toward Gibraltar and the North African coast on clear days. Those view-led villas pull the resale villa average up to 3,276 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado), well above the zone’s apartment figure. The waterfront, by contrast, holds older apartment blocks built close together along the seafront road, and their registered prices reflect the age, density and lack of private outdoor space that characterise that stock.
The second driver is the village’s open, ungated character. Properties in Torreguadiaro trade without the Sotogrande estate premium, the uplift that gated security, golf access and estate-managed landscaping add to properties inside the perimeter. That is why the all-property average of 2,990 EUR/m2 sits below the Sotogrande-wide figure (covered in the Sotogrande prices guide). Buyers who want the Sotogrande address without paying the Sotogrande premium are the segment that lifts demand here, but the village’s older housing stock keeps the overall average in check.
The third driver is the resale villa market’s tightness. The gap between the overall resale villa figure (3,276 EUR/m2) and the older-stock resale villa figure (3,246 EUR/m2) is narrow, at 30 EUR/m2. That narrow spread signals a consistent resale villa market where older and more recent stock price similarly, because the value sits in the plot, the view and the location rather than in the age of the build. When a hillside villa with sea views comes to market, it commands a premium regardless of when it was constructed, because the supply of such plots is finite and the demand is steady.
For regional context, Tinsa’s IMIE index puts the Cadiz city average at 2,838 EUR/m2 in Q1 2026, up 10.99 percent year on year, below the national growth rate of 14.5 percent and the Andalusian average of 10.3 percent. Torreguadiaro’s notarial figures sit above the Cadiz provincial capital, consistent with the broader Sotogrande area’s premium over the provincial average, but the province-wide moderation signals less demand pressure than Malaga, where Marbella posted 20.53 percent year-on-year valuation growth in the same quarter. The Cadiz province’s slower appreciation is partly a function of its distance from Malaga Airport and its more limited foreign-buyer inflow, though the Sotogrande area within Cadiz consistently outperforms the provincial capital.
How does Torreguadiaro compare to its neighbouring zones?
The notarial cache covers several Sotogrande sub-zones, each with a distinct price profile, and Torreguadiaro and San Diego occupy a specific position within that hierarchy. The golf-valley core around Valderrama and Real Club de Golf Sotogrande commands the highest registered resale villa figures in the Sotogrande family, reflecting its frontline position around the championship courses, as covered in the Sotogrande Costa prices guide. Puerto de Sotogrande, the marina area, follows closely, with its waterfront position carrying its own premium. Sotogrande Alto, the elevated inland section, prices below the golf-valley core but holds its own on hillside views, as the Sotogrande Alto prices guide details.
Torreguadiaro sits apart from all of these because it is outside the estate, not merely a sub-section of it. Its all-property average runs below the Sotogrande-wide figure, which blends the golf-valley premium with the hillside and marina zones. But the zone’s resale villas at 3,276 EUR/m2 approach the Sotogrande-wide resale villa average, because the hillside sea-view villas here compete with the golf-valley villas on view quality, if not on golf access. A buyer comparing a Torreguadiaro hillside villa to a Sotogrande Alto hillside villa is weighing sea-view proximity to a walkable village against proximity to golf courses and estate amenities.
The clearest signal is the villa-versus-apartment gap. The spread between resale villas and apartments in Torreguadiaro and San Diego is the widest among the Sotogrande coastal zones in the notarial cache (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). That spread reflects the fundamental character of the zone: two distinct property types, hillside villas and waterfront apartments, sitting side by side in a compact village, each appealing to a different buyer. In the golf-valley core, the spread is narrower because the stock is more homogeneous, oriented around golf proximity rather than the sea-view-versus-waterfront split.
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 on portals as the seller’s opening position and Tinsa’s regional valuation as a guide to the standing stock. A buyer who starts from the 3,276 EUR/m2 registered resale villa average, then adjusts up for an upper-slope sea-view position or down for a lower hillside plot with partial sightlines, is working from what the market did rather than what it hopes to do. An apartment buyer should anchor to the 2,411 EUR/m2 figure and adjust for waterfront proximity, building age and terrace size.
For the broader comparison, the Sotogrande vs Marbella guide breaks down the decision across golf, schools, marina and accessibility. The cost of buying guide covers the total acquisition costs, roughly 12 to 15 percent on top of the price across ITP, notary, registry and legal fees, which apply identically in Cadiz as in Malaga under Andalusian tax rules. Torreguadiaro falls under the same 7 percent ITP resale transfer tax and 10 percent IVA plus 1.2 percent AJD new-build tax regime as the rest of Andalusia.
Torreguadiaro rewards buyers who understand that the value here is in the village character, the sea views and the walkability, not in golf-frontline positioning or gated security. The registered notarial data is the cleanest way to see how that value proposition shows up in actual sale prices, and the wide villa-versus-apartment spread is the clearest structural signal of what this zone actually is.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the average price per m2 in Torreguadiaro in 2026?
- Registered notarial sales averaged 2,990 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 2,411 EUR/m2 and resale villas at 3,276 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). Those are closing prices signed at the notary, not asking prices.
- Why is the villa-apartment gap so wide in Torreguadiaro?
- Torreguadiaro is a fishing village, not a planned golf estate. The hillside above the village holds individual villas with sweeping sea views, while the waterfront has older apartment blocks. Those are two very different property types in one small zone, which is why the resale villa figure runs far above the apartment figure.
- How much do new-build villas cost in Torreguadiaro?
- 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.
- Is Torreguadiaro cheaper than Sotogrande?
- On registered notarial prices, Torreguadiaro's all-property average of 2,990 EUR/m2 sits below the Sotogrande-wide figure, reflecting the village's older, non-gated character. But the zone's resale villas at 3,276 EUR/m2 approach the Sotogrande-wide villa average, because the hillside sea-view villas carry genuine premium value.
- What kind of buyer chooses Torreguadiaro over gated Sotogrande?
- Buyers who want a walkable village with sea views, tapas bars and a year-round community rather than the privacy and golf-club circuit of gated Sotogrande. Torreguadiaro attracts permanent residents and lifestyle second-home buyers who prefer the local village feel over the estate-managed alternative.