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Calahonda is where the Costa del Sol first learnt to build a community rather than a resort. Juan Orbaneja laid out Sitio de Calahonda in 1963 on roughly three hundred hectares of hillside acquired with the Van Dulken family, and six decades of steady growth have produced something closer to a small town than an urbanisation: around fifteen thousand people live here through the winter, not just the summer. The community is firmly international — British and Irish above all, with Dutch, Scandinavian and Spanish households alongside — and the mix runs from retired couples in the upper avenues to younger families and remote workers who want Fuengirola's services without Fuengirola's density. Lower Calahonda, between the A-7 and the sea, is genuinely walkable, with supermarkets, pharmacies, medical clinics and a long run of restaurants; the upper hill is quieter, greener and built around its umbrella pines. People who buy here tend to stay, which tells you most of what you need to know.
Villas set the tone in Calahonda, with town houses a close second; apartments fill in along the lower slopes and the seafront. The villa stock is largely Andalusian in character — white walls, clay-tiled roofs, mature gardens on pine-shaded plots — built from the seventies through the nineties and increasingly renovated to open-plan, glass-fronted standards. Town house communities such as Jardines de Calahonda, laid out in the mid-eighties around generous green space, and Calypso, between Riviera del Sol and the El Zoco centre, offer two and three bedrooms with communal pools and far less upkeep than a private plot. Doña Lola and the beachside communities below the A-7 add low-rise apartments within a few minutes' walk of the coves. The street names tell the story of the place — the spine is Avenida de España, and Calle Don José de Orbaneja remembers the founder. What you will not find is high-rise: the planning here has kept the skyline to the treetops.
Calahonda has always traded at a sensible discount to its Marbella neighbours, and that remains its quiet advantage. Apartments generally sit between about €180,000 and €350,000 depending on position and condition. Town houses typically run from around €300,000 to €550,000, with the best-kept communities and sea views pushing higher. Villas start at roughly €600,000 for honest, dated houses on good plots — the renovation opportunities — and run to between €1m and €2m once a home has been modernised or newly built; only exceptional plots and frontline positions go beyond that. For comparison, an equivalent villa a few kilometres west across the municipal boundary, in Marbella's Cabopino or Elviria, would usually carry a meaningful premium. Our standing promise applies here as everywhere: we will always tell you which homes are over-priced and why — and in Calahonda the commonest reason is a 'renovated' villa where the works stopped at the paint.
Families are well served without leaving the hill. Calahonda International College teaches children from three to eighteen on Calle Don José de Orbaneja, inside the urbanisation itself, and St Anthony's College — among the oldest international schools on the coast — is a short drive along the A-7, with Spanish state schools in La Cala de Mijas and Las Lagunas for those going the local route. Day to day, El Zoco and the Doña Lola centre cover shopping, banking and restaurants, and a small tourist train links the hill with the beach in season. Getting around is straightforward: the A-7 passes through the lower urbanisation, the AP-7 toll road has its own Calahonda exit, and buses run between Fuengirola and Marbella roughly every half hour along the coast road. Málaga airport is about thirty-five kilometres away — half an hour in normal traffic — and the Cercanías train at Fuengirola, fifteen minutes east, connects to the airport and Málaga centre.
The coast below Calahonda is a string of sandy coves broken by low rock, quieter than the long town beaches either side, with the Senda Litoral boardwalk running along the shore towards La Cala de Mijas in one direction and Cabopino in the other. Cabopino itself — a small marina beside the protected Artola dunes — is five minutes west and does harbourside-dinner duty. Golfers are spoilt for choice without long drives: La Siesta, a nine-hole par-three course, sits inside the urbanisation; Miraflores Golf is laid out across the next hillside; Cabopino Golf is just west of the boundary; and Calanova Golf Club is ten minutes up behind La Cala. Add tennis and padel clubs, year-round beach bars and the gyms and clinics of the lower town, and the lifestyle case makes itself — this is a place built for living in, not just visiting.
Sitio de Calahonda is maintained by its own conservation entity — the EUC — which looks after roads, gardens, lighting and security across the urbanisation, and we always set out the EUC charge alongside any community fees before you commit to a purchase. We will also walk you through the honest trade-offs: homes close to the A-7 hear it, the upper hill really needs a car, and older communities vary widely in how well they have been kept — differences that rarely show in photographs but always show in resale values. That candour is how we work along this stretch of coast, and Calahonda rewards it; the gap between a well-bought villa here and a badly bought one is wide, and entirely avoidable. If you would like a shortlist matched to your budget, or simply a second opinion on a home you have already seen, drop us a line.