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Chullera is where Manilva — and Málaga province with it — comes to an end: the final headland before the coast road crosses into Cádiz at Torreguadiaro. The point itself, Punta de la Chullera, is a low rocky cape topped by a ruined watchtower, and the shoreline either side breaks into coves of sand, pebble and stone rather than the long open beaches further east. The urbanisations sit between the A-7 and the sea or climb the hillside behind, looking across to Gibraltar and, on clear days, the Moroccan coast. Puerto de la Duquesa lies a few kilometres east; Sotogrande's marina, polo and golf begin almost immediately to the west.
Semi-detached houses set the tone in Chullera, with townhouses close behind and a steady run of apartments nearer the water. Bahía de las Rocas climbs the slope above the point with phased rows of contemporary three-bedroom homes — Golden View and Blue Wave among them — designed around large terraces and rooftop solariums angled at the Rock. On and around Punta Chullera itself you find older detached houses on generous plots, some holding front-line positions above the coves, while low-rise schemes such as Playa Paraíso put apartments and the occasional bungalow within a short walk of the sand. Almost nothing here rises above three storeys, and the headland itself is protected, so the rocky character of the place is not going anywhere.
Apartments in Chullera generally start in the low-to-mid €200,000s. Semi-detached houses and townhouses — the heart of this market — typically trade between €300,000 and €600,000, with the newest sea-view phases in Bahía de las Rocas occupying the upper half of that band. Detached homes on or near the headland command more, depending on plot, condition and how directly they face the water. Set against equivalent positions a few minutes west in Sotogrande, the difference is considerable — though some newer phases here lean heavily on the view to justify their asking prices, and those deserve scrutiny before you commit.
Three kinds of buyer keep returning. Cross-border commuters, because Gibraltar's frontier sits around half an hour along the A-7 — closer than almost anywhere else on the Costa del Sol proper. Families, with Sotogrande International School roughly a quarter of an hour away and Spanish state schools in Sabinillas and Manilva closer still. And golfers, who get La Duquesa Golf & Country Club a few minutes east and Valderrama, Real Club de Golf Sotogrande and La Reserva within about fifteen minutes, without paying Sotogrande prices to sleep beside them. What Chullera does not offer is nightlife — evenings here mean Torreguadiaro's bars or the restaurants around Duquesa's marina, and most owners would not have it any other way.
You will want a car. The A-7 runs directly behind the urbanisations, with the AP-7 toll road a short hop inland for quicker runs to Estepona (about twenty minutes), Marbella (around half an hour) and Málaga airport (a little over an hour). Gibraltar's airport is the nearer option at roughly half an hour. Daily errands are a five-minute affair: supermarkets and the seafront paseo in San Luis de Sabinillas one way, Torreguadiaro's shops and beach bars the other, and the coastal bus stops along the main road. The water itself is the local amenity — Playa de la Chullera below the houses, Cala Sardina just over the provincial line.
We know this stretch inside out, and we treat Chullera on its own terms rather than as an outpost of Sotogrande. We will walk you out to the watchtower, show you which semis take the afternoon sun and which terraces genuinely hold the Gibraltar view — and we'll always tell you which homes are over-priced and why. If a quiet, rocky corner of the coast sounds like yours, drop us a line.