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Pinos de Alhaurín

Pinos de Alhaurín — a pine-clad hillside of villas, large plots and a fifteen-minute run to the airport.

Pinos de Alhaurín sits in the lower hills above the town of Alhaurín de la Torre, inland from Málaga and back from the coast. It is a residential urbanisation in the proper sense: detached homes on generous plots, threaded with pines, with the working town and its services laid out below. You get the countryside feel the area is known for, while the airport, Málaga city and the beaches all stay within easy reach.

Where exactly it sits

The pocket lies on the Málaga side of Alhaurín de la Torre, climbing the slopes that look back across the valley towards the Sierra. Málaga–Costa del Sol airport is roughly fifteen minutes away, and Málaga city around twenty to twenty-five by car. The nearest sand — Guadalmar, Los Álamos and on towards La Carihuela in Torremolinos — is a fifteen-to-twenty-minute drive down the hill. The town itself, with supermarkets, pharmacies, schools and a bus service, sits just below the urbanisation.

What the homes are like

Villas dominate here, and the plots are the point. Minimum plot sizes run to around 1,000 m², with many homes sitting on 1,300 m² or more, and builds frequently in the region of 350 m² — room for a pool, a garden and proper separation from the neighbours. The stock mixes established Andalusian-style villas from earlier decades with newer gated schemes; the run of detached villas is occasionally broken by a semi-detached home or a building plot, as some land in the lower part of the pocket is still being developed.

Who it suits

This is a place for buyers who want space and green over a sea-front address — families wanting a garden and a short school run, remote workers within striking distance of the airport, and golfers, with Lauro Golf's twenty-seven holes a few minutes further inland. It draws a settled mix of Spanish and international owners who treat it as a year-round home rather than a lock-up-and-leave, drawn by the quiet, the pines and the value that comes with being inland.

Typical prices

Because you are inland, your money buys land. Smaller houses and the more modest plots generally start in the mid-200,000s, while the larger detached villas typically run from the mid-six figures upward, with the newest or most generously plotted homes reaching past a million. Building plots trade separately and are worth weighing if you'd rather design your own. As ever, plot size, position on the slope and the state of the build move the number more than the postcode does.

Getting around

A car is the natural way to live here — the A-7 and the airport are a short drop down to the coast road, and Málaga city is a straightforward run. A local bus links the urbanisation to the town below, and the town connects on towards Málaga and the train network, so the school and shopping trips don't depend entirely on driving.

How we work

We've spent twenty years on the Costa del Sol and we know this hillside lane by lane — where the higher plots earn their view and their breeze, where a build looks tidy but hides its age, and where an asking price has drifted ahead of what the street will bear. We'll show you the honest ones, tell you plainly when a home is over-priced and why, and never push you up the hill faster than suits you. If Pinos de Alhaurín sounds like your kind of quiet, drop us a line.

Frequently asked questions

Where is Pinos de Alhaurín?
Pinos de Alhaurín is a residential urbanisation in the lower hills of Alhaurín de la Torre, an inland town on the Málaga side of the Costa del Sol. It sits back from the coast among pine-covered slopes, with Málaga–Costa del Sol airport about fifteen minutes away, Málaga city around twenty to twenty-five minutes by car, and the nearest beaches roughly a fifteen-to-twenty-minute drive down to the coast.
What kind of property can you buy in Pinos de Alhaurín?
Villas dominate, set on generous plots — minimum plot sizes are around 1,000 m², with many homes on 1,300 m² or more and builds often near 350 m². The mix runs from established Andalusian-style villas to newer gated developments, with the occasional semi-detached home and building plots still available in the lower, developing part of the pocket.
How much do homes in Pinos de Alhaurín typically cost?
Being inland, the area offers more land for the money than the coast. Smaller houses and modest plots generally start in the mid-200,000s, while larger detached villas typically run from the mid-six figures upward, with the newest or most generously plotted homes reaching beyond a million. Plot size, position on the slope and the condition of the build affect the price more than the location alone.
Is Pinos de Alhaurín a good place to live year-round?
Yes. It draws a settled mix of Spanish and international owners who live here full-time rather than seasonally, valuing the quiet, the pines and the space. The town of Alhaurín de la Torre below provides schools, supermarkets, pharmacies and a bus service, Lauro Golf's twenty-seven holes lie a few minutes inland, and the airport, city and beaches are all within an easy drive.