
Marbella · Apartment market
Apartments for sale in Marbella
€300K – €8M+
The Marbella apartment market is broader and more liquid than the villa market. Old Town pied-à-terres, beachfront in Marbella Centro, golf-front in Nueva Andalucía and resort-style developments along the Golden Mile all draw different buyer profiles.
How the market is segmented
Below €500K you are mostly looking at one and two-bed apartments in Nueva Andalucía, San Pedro and inland Marbella. From €1M up, beachfront and frontline-golf becomes realistic. Penthouses on the Golden Mile sit in the €3–8M range and rarely linger.
Realistic 2026 pricing
Pricing in Marbella moves with sea proximity, view, plot size and the resale-vs-new-build split. Most public portals are 5–10% above what well-priced stock actually trades at, and the best inventory often never reaches them — it moves agent-to-agent. Treat asking prices as a ceiling, not a benchmark.
Picking the right agent
An agent who closes one or two transactions a year in Marbella is not the agent you want. Ask for the last five comparable closings, ask which side of the AP-7 they actually work, and ask whether they have access to the off-market book. Discretion and inventory access matter more than slick presentation.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the realistic price entry point in Marbella?
- Entry-level turnkey stock in Marbella typically starts in the range shown above. Below that band you are looking at renovation projects, smaller plots, or older inventory awaiting refurbishment.
- Are foreigners free to buy property in Marbella?
- Yes. Spain has no nationality restriction on property purchase. You will need a Spanish NIE number, a Spanish bank account, and an independent lawyer — none of which take long to arrange.
- How long does a typical purchase take from offer to keys?
- Six to ten weeks for a clean resale, longer if a mortgage or off-plan completion is involved. The 10% reservation/exchange deposit is binding and forfeited if you walk.
- Do I need to be a resident to buy?
- No. Non-residents can buy freely. Tax treatment differs (non-residents pay an annual non-resident tax, Modelo 210), but the purchase itself is identical.


