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Guadalmina Baja

Guadalmina Baja's old-school beachside calm — numbered streets, mature pines, fairways that finish at the sea.

Where it sits

Guadalmina Baja is the last beachside pocket at the western edge of the Marbella municipality, on the seaward side of the A-7 between the mouth of the Guadalmina river and the garden streets of San Pedro de Alcántara. You enter from the roundabout just past the San Pedro tunnel, and the estate runs down to roughly a kilometre and a half of coastline, where the third-century Roman baths of Las Bóvedas and a sixteenth-century watchtower stand by the sand. San Pedro's boulevard is about five minutes by car, Puerto Banús around fifteen, Marbella's old town twenty-five or so, and Málaga airport generally forty-five minutes on the A-7 or AP-7. Benahavís village, ten minutes inland, handles the long-lunch duties.

The homes

Villas dominate here, and always have. The estate was laid out in the 1960s around the Real Club de Golf Guadalmina, and its numbered streets — Calle 4 winding parallel to the main road, Calle 8 dropping down towards the beachfront hotel — carry plots that typically run from a thousand to three thousand square metres, with some of the larger houses sitting on double or triple plots. The architecture ranges from low-slung Andalusian houses under pines planted half a century ago to full contemporary rebuilds, and the rebuild trend is well established: older villas are often bought for their land and gardens as much as their walls. There are short runs of townhouses near the fairways, Pueblo de Guadalmina among them, and a handful of apartment buildings towards the beach, but they are the exception. Private security patrols the estate's streets.

Golf, beach and the school run

The Real Club de Golf Guadalmina is one of the oldest clubs on the Costa del Sol, its South course threading through the estate to finish beside the sea, with the North course across the A-7 in Guadalmina Alta. The beach is broad and quiet, with a beach club and chiringuito on the sand and a seafront path that takes you into San Pedro on foot. Everyday shopping sits a few minutes away at the Guadalmina shopping centre in Guadalmina Alta — supermarket, banks and a ring of restaurants. For families, Colegio San José, a private bilingual school teaching from infants through to the International Baccalaureate, has its campus within Guadalmina Baja itself, and Laude San Pedro International College is a short drive east.

Buying here, and how we work

Guadalmina Baja suits buyers who want Marbella's coast without its noise — established families, golfers, and owners who value mature gardens and discretion over show. As a guide, established villas generally trade between €1.5 million and €4.5 million depending on plot, position and condition; fully reformed or newly built houses tend to sit between €3 million and €6 million; and frontline-beach properties run well beyond that, into eight figures for the largest. Building plots, when they surface, typically start around €1 million. Our promise is simple: we'll always tell you which homes are over-priced and why, which streets sit furthest from the motorway's hum, and which gardens have the better afternoon light. If Guadalmina Baja sounds like your pace, drop us a line.

Frequently asked questions

Where exactly is Guadalmina Baja?
Guadalmina Baja is a beachside urbanisation at the western edge of the Marbella municipality, on the seaward side of the A-7 between the Guadalmina river and San Pedro de Alcántara. It has roughly a kilometre and a half of coastline, with the Las Bóvedas Roman baths and a sixteenth-century watchtower by the beach. San Pedro's centre is about five minutes by car, Puerto Banús around fifteen, and Málaga airport typically forty-five minutes.
What does a villa in Guadalmina Baja typically cost?
Established villas in Guadalmina Baja generally trade between €1.5 million and €4.5 million depending on plot, position and condition, with fully reformed or newly built houses commonly between €3 million and €6 million. Frontline-beach and double-plot properties run well beyond that, into eight figures. Building plots, when they appear, typically start around €1 million.
Is Guadalmina Baja a good area for families?
Yes — it is one of the most settled family addresses on this stretch of coast. Colegio San José, a private bilingual school running from infants to the International Baccalaureate, has its campus within the urbanisation, and Laude San Pedro International College is a short drive away. The streets are flat and quiet, patrolled by private security, with the beach and the Real Club de Golf Guadalmina inside the estate.
Can you manage daily life on foot, or do you need a car?
Within the estate you can walk to the beach, the golf club and the seafront path into San Pedro, but most daily errands point to the Guadalmina shopping centre across the A-7 in Guadalmina Alta — supermarket, banks, cafés and restaurants — so most residents keep a car. Puerto Banús is around fifteen minutes' drive and Marbella roughly twenty-five.