La Quinta, Benahavis
Exclusive Luxury Living in La Quinta with Sea Views
Discover this new development set in the prestigious La Quinta Golf area of Benahavis, Malaga. This exclusive enclave offers a selection of Ground Floor Apartm…

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We're Bianca and Omèr, and after 20 years on this coast we know La Quinta street by street: which villas catch the afternoon breeze off the hill, which golf-front blocks back onto the busy fairways, and when a seller is chasing a price the market won't pay. We'll always tell you straight.
“They found us a frontline villa that wasn't even on the open market. Smooth, honest.”
“Three viewings, no pressure, sound advice on schools. Best agency on the coast.”
“Bianca speaks Dutch, knew our notary, and introduced us to other Dutch families nearby.”
Penthouses here sit on the top floor of the low-rise, Andalusian-style apartment complexes that ring La Quinta's golf — Soto de La Quinta, Los Balcones, Buena Vista de La Quinta, Terrazas de la Quinta and La Quinta Suites among them, with a newer crop arriving in Real de La Quinta and the schemes climbing the hill towards The Hills. Most run to two, three or four bedrooms on one level, the appeal being a private rooftop solarium: an open terrace, often with a plunge pool, that catches the south and west light over the fairways towards the Mediterranean, with the Sierra de las Nieves behind. Because the buildings step down the slope, the higher units tend to hold the views and the breeze that the garden apartments below them lose.
Buyers are typically golfers and lock-up-and-leave second-home owners who want the terrace and the outlook without a villa's upkeep — the gardens, pools and security are the community's job. As a guide, a well-placed two- or three-bed penthouse generally runs from the mid-six figures, with the larger duplex-penthouses and frontline-golf units carrying open views climbing well past a million. We'll always tell you which ones are priced for the postcard view rather than the actual aspect — orientation and which complex you sit in matter more here than the headline floor area.
La Quinta has always drawn a particular sort of buyer: people who want the green calm of the hills but still want Puerto Banús, San Pedro Alcántara and the coast road within easy reach. You'll find a steady mix of Northern Europeans here, plenty of British, Scandinavian, Dutch and Belgian owners, alongside Spanish and Middle Eastern families. Some are full-time residents who've made the Costa del Sol home; others keep a holiday base and come down for golf, school holidays and the long shoulder seasons. It's quieter and more family-minded than the seafront strips below, which is exactly why golfers, retirees and families with school-age children gravitate to it. Because so much of La Quinta is laid out as gated communities up the hillside, it tends to attract people who value privacy and a sense of security over being in the thick of things.
Villas set the tone in La Quinta, and they range widely, from the older Andalusian-style houses of the early developments, with their arches, tiled roofs and mature gardens, through to the crisp, contemporary builds of open-plan living, floor-to-ceiling glass and infinity pools that have gone up along the fairways and higher slopes. Around and beneath the villas you'll find a healthy run of apartments and penthouses, including some generous duplex penthouses with wraparound terraces, plus ground-floor apartments that open onto private gardens. Semi-detached villas and townhouses fill in the middle, often the sensible entry point for buyers who want a house with a garden and a community pool without the upkeep of a full standalone villa. The named communities are worth knowing: El Herrojo, Los Arcos, Los Balcones, El Mirador, La Quinta Hills, La Quinta Greens, Lomas de La Quinta, Altos de La Quinta, Soto de La Quinta, Las Terrazas, Eagles Village and Buenavista de La Quinta, with the newer Real de La Quinta extension climbing the hill above, built around its own lake and views. Each has its own character, and we're happy to walk you through which suits how you actually plan to live.
La Quinta is a genuinely broad market, which is part of its appeal. As a rough guide, apartments and ground-floor homes typically start in the mid-hundreds of thousands and run up through the seven-figure mark for the larger, golf-front and view-led ones. Penthouses and duplex penthouses generally sit from around the high-hundreds of thousands into the low millions, depending on terrace size, position and outlook. Townhouses and semi-detached villas usually fall somewhere between, often a comfortable bridge between an apartment and a standalone house. Villas span the widest band of all, from roughly the low millions for older properties needing updating, up to several million and beyond for the newly built contemporary homes with sea and golf views. Frontline-golf position, an open southerly or sea view, and a recent renovation are the three things that move the price most, and we'll always tell you when an asking price is leaning on a view that isn't really there, or a renovation that's only skin deep.
Life in La Quinta revolves around the golf and the green. The La Quinta Golf & Country Club, with its 27 holes designed by Ryder Cup player Manuel Piñero, is the heart of the place, with a clubhouse, a five-star hotel and spa, and easy social golf on the doorstep. Day to day, you're a short drive from the supermarkets, restaurants and marinas of Nueva Andalucía and San Pedro, with Puerto Banús roughly ten minutes down the hill. The nearest beaches, on the Marbella and Estepona side, are about ten minutes away, so you get the hillside calm without giving up the coast. For families, the international schools that matter are close: Aloha College in Nueva Andalucía and Laude San Pedro International College are both around fifteen minutes, with Atalaya and the Guadalmina schools a touch further. Málaga airport is roughly 45 minutes via the AP-7 toll road, a little more on the free coast road in summer traffic. You'll want a car here, the hillside layout means it isn't a walking neighbourhood, but the road links out are quick and well kept.
We've spent 20 years on this coast, and we treat La Quinta the way we'd want someone to treat us if we were buying: honestly. We'll tell you which communities get the cooling afternoon breeze off the hill and which sit in a still pocket, which blocks back onto a busy stretch of fairway, and which villas are priced for what they are rather than for what the seller hopes. We won't push you towards the newest, shiniest build if an older house in a better spot is the smarter buy, and we'll always flag a home that's over-priced and explain exactly why. If you'd like an unhurried, straight-talking view of what's right for you in La Quinta, including the things the glossy listings leave out, drop us a line.
Most La Quinta penthouses have two to four bedrooms on a single level, set on the top floor of low-rise golf complexes such as Soto de La Quinta, Los Balcones and Buena Vista de La Quinta. The defining feature is a private rooftop solarium reached by an internal stair, often with space for a plunge pool and outdoor dining.
A well-positioned two- or three-bedroom penthouse in La Quinta generally starts in the mid-six figures (broadly from the high €500,000s). Larger duplex-penthouses, and units on the front line of the golf with open sea and mountain views, typically run from around a million euros upward. Orientation, the specific complex and the quality of the view drive the price more than floor area alone.
A penthouse offers the rooftop terrace, sea-and-fairway views and single-level living that draw people to La Quinta, without the maintenance of a private villa and garden. The community handles the pools, gardens and gated security, which suits golfers playing La Quinta Golf and lock-up-and-leave second-home owners who want the home ready whenever they arrive.
La Quinta is a hillside area of Benahavís, just northwest of Nueva Andalucía and built around the La Quinta Golf & Country Club. It's roughly a ten-minute drive down to Puerto Banús and San Pedro Alcántara, and about ten minutes to the nearest beaches on the Marbella and Estepona side. Málaga airport is around 45 minutes away via the AP-7 toll road.
Villas dominate, from older Andalusian-style houses to new contemporary builds along the fairways. Alongside them you'll find apartments and penthouses, including spacious duplex penthouses, ground-floor apartments with gardens, and a good supply of townhouses and semi-detached villas that work well as a more manageable entry into the area. Communities to know include El Herrojo, Los Arcos, La Quinta Hills, Lomas de La Quinta and the newer Real de La Quinta.
It's a broad market. As a typical guide, apartments and ground-floor homes generally start in the mid-hundreds of thousands and rise into seven figures for the larger golf-front ones; penthouses run from the high-hundreds of thousands into the low millions; townhouses and semi-detached villas sit in between; and villas span from the low millions for older homes up to several million and beyond for new-build properties with sea and golf views. Position, view and renovation quality drive the price more than anything.
Yes, it's one of the more family-friendly parts of Benahavís, with quiet gated communities and green surroundings. The international schools most families use are close by: Aloha College in Nueva Andalucía and Laude San Pedro International College are both around fifteen minutes' drive, with Atalaya and the Guadalmina schools a little further. You'll want a car, as the hillside layout isn't walkable, but the road links are quick.
La Quinta is built around the La Quinta Golf & Country Club, a 27-hole course designed by Ryder Cup player Manuel Piñero, with a clubhouse and a five-star hotel and spa on site. Many homes sit frontline to the fairways, and golf is very much part of daily life here. If golf is a priority, we can point you to the communities with the best access to the club and the most open course views, and tell you which fairway-side blocks are quieter than others.