El Bajondillo Property Prices 2026: Torremolinos Beachfront Zone Guide
Registered notarial prices for El Bajondillo, Torremolinos, June 2026: what homes sold for per m2 on the cliff-backed central beachfront district.
In El Bajondillo, the registered sale price, what buyers actually paid at the notary, averaged 3,766 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 3,781 EUR/m2 and villas at 3,706 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). New-build villas registered n/a this month: no reliable figure is available for the zone. These are real closing prices, not asking prices, and they reflect the highest-priced beachfront zone in Torremolinos, where the cliff setting lifts both the apartment and the villa segments to comparable premium levels.
What did property actually sell for in El Bajondillo in 2026?
Registered notarial sales averaged 3,766 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026: 3,781 EUR/m2 for apartments and 3,706 EUR/m2 for villas (listyco notarial data, Consejo General del Notariado). New-build villas registered n/a. The apartment figure exceeds the villa figure by only 75 EUR/m2, a narrow gap that distinguishes El Bajondillo from the typical beachfront pattern where apartments command a large premium over detached stock.
| Property type | Registered price (EUR/m2), El Bajondillo, June 2026 |
|---|---|
| All property types | 3,766 |
| Apartments | 3,781 |
| All villas | 3,706 |
| Resale villas | 3,701 |
| New-build villas | n/a |
Source: listyco notarial data, 2026-06 (Consejo General del Notariado). The resale villa figure of 3,701 EUR/m2 sits within 5 EUR/m2 of the all-villa figure of 3,706 EUR/m2, confirming that the villa market is entirely resale-driven this month. No new-build villa transactions registered, which is consistent with the fully developed cliffside and beachfront where land for new detached construction is effectively unavailable.
What kind of place is El Bajondillo?
El Bajondillo is the central beachfront district of Torremolinos, sitting between the town centre to the east and La Carihuela to the west. The beach itself runs for roughly a kilometre with an average width of 40 metres (Turismo Costa del Sol), making it one of the wider urban beaches in the municipality. A broad beachfront promenade lines the sand, connecting eastward to the Torremolinos centre promenade and westward to the La Carihuela fishing-quarter front, so the district functions as the hinge between the town’s two principal beachfront zones.
The defining physical feature is the cliff. The name Torremolinos itself derives from the tower and the mills that once sat on the elevated ground above the coast, and the Bajondillo area is where this cliff topography is most pronounced. The district rises sharply from the beachfront promenade to the upper streets, where apartment blocks and detached houses sit on elevated ground with panoramic sea views. This cliffside setting is what separates El Bajondillo from the flatter beachfront zones to the west: the elevation gives both the apartment stock and the villa stock a viewpoint premium that flatter districts cannot replicate.
The residential fabric is a mix of mid-century apartment blocks near the promenade and more recent developments on the upper streets. The apartment stock ranges from 1960s and 1970s blocks that opened Torremolinos to mass tourism, to renovated units with contemporary interiors and sea-view terraces. The villa stock, unlike the older detached cottages found on the narrow streets behind La Carihuela’s promenade, tends to be larger and higher-specification, sitting on the cliffside streets where the elevation and the views justify a premium price.
Torremolinos covers 19.9 square kilometres with 71,270 residents in 2025, of whom 15,610 are foreign-origin (Instituto de Estadistica y Cartografia de Andalucia, SIMA, 2025). The municipality registered 1,566 property transactions in 2024, split between 148 new-build sales and 1,418 resales (SIMA, 2024). The tourism economy is substantial: 52 hotels with 20,808 beds and 1,002 hospitality establishments (SIMA, 2024), making the town one of the Costa del Sol’s densest accommodation hubs. For El Bajondillo specifically, the buyer profile splits between two segments. The first is the holiday-home buyer, typically UK or Nordic, drawn by the central beachfront position, the cliff-view properties and the short-let income the location supports. The second is the year-round resident, who values the walkable distance to both the town centre and the beach, plus the concentration of promenade restaurants and amenities.
What drives property prices in El Bajondillo?
Three factors shape the zone’s price structure. First, the cliffside elevation is the distinguishing value driver. Properties on the upper streets carry sea views that flatter beachfront districts cannot offer, and this viewpoint premium lifts both the apartment and the villa segments. The registered villa figure of 3,706 EUR/m2, which sits within 75 EUR/m2 of the apartment figure, reflects detached houses on elevated ground with panoramic viewpoints. In a beachfront market where sea views typically belong only to high-floor apartments, the cliff setting gives El Bajondillo’s villa stock a viewpoint advantage that La Carihuela’s inland cottages lack.
Second, the central position between the town centre and La Carihuela gives the district walkable access to both. A resident in El Bajondillo can reach the shops, restaurants and transport links of Torremolinos centre on foot in one direction, and the seafood-restaurant scene of La Carihuela in the other, without crossing the N-340 coast road. This dual-access position is rarer than it sounds: many Torremolinos beachfront zones sit on one side of a commercial axis, but El Bajondillo sits at the junction. The convenience premium is built into the registered price level.
Third, the tourism economy drives rental demand and supports the price level. With 52 hotels and over 20,000 hotel beds in the municipality (SIMA, 2024), Torremolinos is a year-round destination, and El Bajondillo’s central beach and promenade position make it a strong short-let location. A buyer evaluating the zone should weigh the rental income potential against the community-approval requirements for short lets under Andalusia’s VFT rules. For the full rental regulatory framework, see the renting-out guide for non-resident owners.
How does El Bajondillo compare to neighbouring areas?
El Bajondillo’s all-type registered average is the highest among the Torremolinos zones with notarial data, sitting above both La Carihuela and Montemar (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). The gap over La Carihuela is driven primarily by the villa segment: El Bajondillo’s villas sit well above La Carihuela’s villa figure, reflecting the different character of the detached stock. La Carihuela’s villa figure captures older, smaller cottages on the narrow inland streets, while El Bajondillo’s captures larger detached houses on the cliffside with sea views. The apartment figures are closer, because both zones have beachfront apartment stock. For the La Carihuela comparison in detail, see the La Carihuela and Los Nidos property prices guide.
To the east, Torremolinos Centro registered a lower all-type average, reflecting its broader stock mix that includes inland residential properties without beach proximity (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). A buyer choosing between the centre and El Bajondillo trades the town-centre commercial density for the beachfront and cliff-view premium. For the Centro comparison in detail, see the Torremolinos Centro property prices guide.
To the west, Montemar registered a lower all-type average than El Bajondillo (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). Montemar shares the narrow apt-villa spread pattern, but at a lower price level, because it stretches inland up the hillside without the same beachfront immediacy. A buyer choosing between them trades El Bajondillo’s direct beach access and cliff-view villas for Montemar’s Cercanias rail connection and residential calm. For the Montemar comparison, see the Montemar property prices guide. For the broader Benalmadena coast context across the municipal boundary, see the Benalmadena Centro property prices guide.
Why are registered notarial prices lower than asking prices?
Registered notarial prices are lower than asking prices 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. Asking prices on property portals for El Bajondillo sit above the registered average (asking, not closing), a gap typical of Costa del Sol beachfront zones where the listing stock skews toward renovated sea-view apartments and cliffside properties, while the transaction mix captures the full range of older residential stock that needs updating.
For broader market context, the Tinsa IMIE Local Markets report for Q2 2026 recorded 15.2 per cent annual growth in Spanish completed housing values, the highest year-on-year rate since the third quarter of 2006, with a quarterly advance of 3.7 per cent (Tinsa, IMIE, Q2 2026). The INE Housing Price Index reported a 12.9 per cent annual rate nationally for Q1 2026, with new homes up 9.1 per cent and second-hand homes up 13.5 per cent (INE, HPI, Q1 2026). The two indices measure different things: the notarial figure is a closing price for this specific zone, while the Tinsa and INE figures track broader market trends at the national level. El Bajondillo’s registered average sits at the top of the Torremolinos beachfront price pattern. For the broader regional transaction and price trend, see the Costa del Sol quarterly market tracker.
How should a buyer read El Bajondillo’s numbers?
Start from 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 adjust for the specific property’s distance to the beach, view, floor level, condition and refurbishment state. A buyer evaluating a renovated apartment with a sea view on the upper cliffside streets should expect to pay above the 3,781 EUR/m2 registered apartment average, which captures the full stock mix including older units near the promenade. A buyer looking at a detached house on the elevated streets should weigh the resale villa figure of 3,701 EUR/m2 as a benchmark, while recognising that cliffside properties with panoramic sea views will command a premium over that average.
The n/a for new-build villas is itself a signal. In a district where the cliffside and beachfront are fully developed, new-build villa transactions are too rare to report. That tells a buyer that El Bajondillo is a resale market, not a development pipeline, which has implications for specification levels: most stock is existing and may require refurbishment to reach current standards. For the full acquisition-cost breakdown, see the cost of buying guide. For rental yield context across the Costa del Sol, the Marbella rental yields guide covers the buy-to-let landscape.
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
- What is the average price per m2 in El Bajondillo in 2026?
- Registered notarial sales averaged 3,766 EUR/m2 across all property types in June 2026, with apartments at 3,781 EUR/m2 and villas at 3,706 EUR/m2 (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). These are real closing prices recorded at the notary, not asking prices.
- Why are apartment and villa prices so close in El Bajondillo?
- El Bajondillo's cliffside topography means both seafront apartments and detached houses on the elevated streets carry sea views, pulling both segments to a similar per-square-metre level. Unlike La Carihuela, where the villa figure reflects older inland cottages, the villa stock here commands a premium because the cliff setting gives detached properties elevated viewpoints that buyers prize.
- How does El Bajondillo compare to La Carihuela?
- El Bajondillo's all-type registered average sits above La Carihuela's (listyco notarial data, 2026-06, Consejo General del Notariado). The gap is driven mainly by the villa segment: El Bajondillo's villas sit well above La Carihuela's, reflecting the different character of the detached stock on the cliffside versus the old fishing-quarter inland streets.
- Why are registered prices lower than the asking prices I see online?
- Asking prices on portals sit above registered notarial prices because they reflect the seller's opening position, not what buyers actually paid. The registered average includes every signed transaction across the full mix of resales and transfers, capturing older stock and non-prime transactions that asking-price headlines skip.
- Is El Bajondillo a good area for short-let rental income?
- El Bajondillo's central beachfront position, the kilometre-long beach and the promenade connection to both the town centre and La Carihuela give it strong short-let appeal. A buyer should weigh rental yield against the community-approval requirements for short lets under Andalusia's VFT rules and the fact that most stock is existing and may require refurbishment.
Sources and data
- Centro de Informacion Estadistica del Notariado (notarial transaction statistics) — Consejo General del Notariado
- IMIE Mercados Locales 2º trimestre 2026: +15,2% — Tinsa
- Housing Price Index (HPI). Base 2025. First Quarter 2026 — INE
- SIMA - Torremolinos (Malaga) municipal statistical summary — Instituto de Estadistica y Cartografia de Andalucia