Cheapest areas in Costa del Sol

Cost of living

Cheapest areas in Costa del Sol

Living costs

The cheapest pockets of the Costa del Sol are not Marbella — they cluster east of Málaga and west of Estepona. Manilva, Sabinillas, Vélez-Málaga, Torre del Mar and the inland white villages all offer apartments well below the headline coastal prices.

What it actually costs

Within the central Costa del Sol, Fuengirola, parts of Mijas Costa and Torremolinos remain the most realistic entry points. Sub-€200K still buys a two-bed apartment in walking distance of the beach.

Where the money goes

Rent and restaurants are the two variables that dominate spend — both are highly postcode-sensitive. Healthcare, transport and utilities sit close to the national average and are not a meaningful driver of cost-of-living differences within the Costa del Sol.

How to reduce the bill

Live one or two streets back from the seafront, shop at Mercadona and Lidl rather than the English supermarkets, use the private healthcare plans (Sanitas, Adeslas, DKV) rather than pay-per-visit, and rent rather than buy until you know which town actually fits.

Frequently asked questions

Are the published figures realistic?
Yes for a normal lifestyle. They exclude luxury restaurants, beach clubs, private schools and frequent travel — all of which can easily double the monthly figure.
Is it cheaper than my home country?
Almost certainly, if you're coming from the UK, Northern Europe, the US or the Gulf. Spanish wages are lower but most cost-of-living categories are too.
What's the single biggest cost surprise?
Air-conditioning electricity in July–August, and the annual community fees on prime apartments — both can be 30–50% higher than expected.
How much should I budget for healthcare?
Private health insurance for a healthy 40-year-old runs €60–90/month; for a couple in their 60s, €200–350/month. The public system is excellent but most expats keep a private policy in parallel.

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