Costa Sunsets
Our PropertiesNew DevelopmentsAboutNews & Articles
+34 656 38 68 36
EN
  • ENEnglish
  • NLNederlands
  • ESEspañol
  • DEDeutsch
Costa Sunsets
Language
ENNLESDE
  • Our Properties
  • New Developments
  • About
  • News & Articles
  • Saved
Explore the coast

Popular searches by area

Browse Costa Sunsets homes for sale across Marbella and the wider Costa del Sol.

  • Marbella
  • Benahavis
  • Estepona
  • Nueva Andalucia
  • Marbella Golden Mile
  • Estepona East
  • Mijas Costa
  • Marbella Este
  • San Pedro de Alcantara
  • Casares
  • Mijas
  • Benalmadena
  • Fuengirola
  • Malaga
  • All areas
Costa Sunsets
IPA Winners 25/26AIPP MemberFamily-run
Sales & Listings
+34 656 38 68 36
WhatsApp
+34 656 38 68 36
Email
info@costasunsets.com

Family-run luxury real estate agency on the Costa del Sol, covering Marbella, Puerto Banús, Golden Mile, Nueva Andalucía, La Zagaleta, Benahavís, Estepona & Sotogrande.

Sign up to our newsletter

New listings, market notes and the occasional sunset photo - straight to your inbox.

Privacy policyCookie policy

© 2026 Costa Sunsets Development SL · CIF B06913016 · All rights reserved.

Powered by Propelos

Malaga - Centro

Malaga's old-town heart — marble lanes, restored flats, the sea a short walk south.

Centro is Malaga's historic core: the grid of pedestrian streets between the Alameda Principal, the Cathedral, the Alcazaba and the Plaza de la Merced. This is the city you picture when you think of Malaga itself, all marble paving, plane-tree squares and balconies, rather than a coastal urbanisation. Calle Marques de Larios runs through the middle of it, with the Plaza de la Constitucion at one end and the port and Muelle Uno at the other.

Where it sits

The quarter folds in several distinct pockets. La Merced, to the north-east around Picasso's birthplace, is the liveliest of them. Soho, between the Alameda and the river, is the arts district, full of murals and small galleries. The lanes immediately around the Cathedral and Calle Granada are the quietest and most sought-after. La Malagueta beach and the Paseo del Parque sit just to the south, a fifteen to twenty minute walk from most of the centre.

What the homes are like

Apartments are almost the whole story here. The typical home is a flat in a period building, often four or five storeys, many with high ceilings, tall windows and the original mouldings kept through a renovation. You'll find everything from compact one-bedroom flats on a pedestrian lane to generous restored apartments with a terrace, and a steady run of penthouses with rooftop views over the tiled domes. New-build is rare inside the old grid; most of what changes hands is a sympathetic restoration of something old.

Who it suits

Centro suits people who want to live without a car and have the museums, the market at Atarazanas, the restaurants and the airport all within easy reach. That covers lock-up-and-leave second-home owners, remote workers drawn to Soho, and a good number of buyers letting short-term, since demand for holiday flats here is constant. It is less suited to families wanting a garden and a quiet street, who tend to look to the suburbs or the coast instead.

Typical prices

Centro is among the more expensive parts of the city by the metre, and the smaller, well-placed flats carry the highest premium of all. As a rough guide, a renovated one-bedroom apartment generally runs in the mid-to-high six figures of thousands rather than the low ones, larger restored family-sized flats move well into seven figures of euros, and a rooftop penthouse on a prime lane sits at the top of the range. Something needing full renovation can come in lower, but the works in a protected building are rarely cheap, and we'll always tell you which homes are priced ahead of what they are.

Getting around

This is the best-connected corner of the province for life without a car. The Metro stops at Atarazanas and Alameda Principal, in the heart of the old town. The Cercanias C1 line runs from Centro-Alameda station to Malaga airport in around twelve minutes and on to Fuengirola down the coast. The bus network and the long-distance Maria Zambrano station are both close. There is no golf inside the centre itself, but the Parador course near the airport is a short drive west.

How we work

We're a family agency, Bianca and Omer, and we've spent twenty years on this coast. In the centre that means knowing the difference between a quiet lane and one that fills with terraces until two in the morning, which buildings have a lift and which never will, and where a community of neighbours still lives among the holiday flats. We'll walk it with you, give you the honest version, and never push a sale that isn't right. If you're weighing up the old town, drop us a line.

Frequently asked questions

Where exactly is Malaga - Centro?
It is Malaga's historic centre, the old town built around Calle Marques de Larios, the Plaza de la Constitucion, the Cathedral, the Alcazaba and the Plaza de la Merced, between the Alameda Principal and the port. It includes the La Merced and Soho quarters and sits just inland of La Malagueta beach and the Paseo del Parque.
What kind of property can I buy in the centre?
Almost entirely apartments. The typical home is a flat in a period building, frequently renovated behind a historic facade, ranging from compact one-bedroom flats on pedestrian lanes to large restored apartments with terraces and rooftop penthouses with city and Cathedral views. New-build is uncommon inside the old grid.
How much do apartments in Malaga - Centro typically cost?
Centro is one of the pricier districts of the city per square metre, and small, well-located flats command the highest premium. As a general guide, renovated one-bedroom apartments typically run in the mid-to-upper hundreds of thousands of euros, larger restored family-sized flats move into seven figures, and prime penthouses sit at the top of the range. Properties needing full renovation can start lower.
How well connected is the historic centre?
Very well. The Metro serves Atarazanas and Alameda Principal in the old town, and the Cercanias C1 train runs from Centro-Alameda station to Malaga airport in about twelve minutes and on to Fuengirola along the coast. La Malagueta beach is a fifteen to twenty minute walk, and the area is genuinely walkable without a car.