La Zagaleta villas — minimum three-thousand-metre plots, two private golf courses, a gate few homes share.
La Zagaleta is, almost entirely, a villa estate — and the villa here is a particular thing. Building plots start at 3,000 square metres and run well past 20,000, so the houses sit apart, screened by cork oak and pine, rather than shoulder to shoulder. Expect generous family homes through to large estates: five to eight bedrooms is the common ground, with the bigger compounds adding a separate guest house or staff residence. The architecture splits two ways. The older streets hold Andalusian and classic-Mediterranean villas; the newer builds run contemporary — glass walls, infinity pools, stone and timber cladding — and over the last decade that modern line has become what most incoming buyers commission or look for.
This is the top of the Benahavis market, so the price band reads accordingly. A villa here generally starts around the mid-single-digit millions and climbs through the teens, with the largest new-build estates reaching considerably higher. What you are paying for, beyond the house, is the gate: 24-hour security, private roads, controlled access, two 18-hole golf courses, an equestrian centre and a helipad, all reserved for owners. Buyers tend to be international ultra-high-net-worth families who want space and discretion above a sea view. We'll always tell you which of these villas is priced for the address rather than the build, and why.
La Zagaleta's 900 hectares behind one gate — two private golf courses, a helipad, and the most guarded address on the coast.
La Zagaleta sits in the hills of Benahavis, northwest of Marbella, on roughly 900 hectares of protected woodland at the foot of La Concha. It is a single fully gated estate, not a cluster of urbanisations, with two manned entrances and private roads running through the sectors. There are around 420 building plots in total, each with a generous minimum size, so the estate feels more like open country than a neighbourhood. From the south gate you are about twenty to twenty-five minutes from central Marbella, and San Pedro de Alcantara and Puerto Banus are both inside a fifteen-minute drive once you clear the gate.
Who lives in La Zagaleta
This is an address bought for privacy above all else. Owners tend to be international: a strong British contingent, alongside German, Swiss, Scandinavian and Spanish buyers, plus families from the Gulf and further afield. Many are business owners, company founders and people who value being unfindable for a few months of the year. Discretion is the rule here, which is why a large share of homes never appear on a public portal and change hands quietly. We'll always tell you when a home is being marketed louder than its owner intended, and what that usually signals about price.
Architecture & property types
Villas dominate completely. These are large detached houses on substantial plots, most with a pool, several with private spas, wine cellars, cinema rooms and full home automation. Styles run the full range, from the heavy classical Andalusian villas of the estate's earlier years to the glass-and-stone contemporary builds that buyers increasingly commission today. You will also find a small number of ground-floor apartments and more modest homes, which give a rare entry point into the estate, but the defining product is the standalone villa on its own grounds, frequently with a panoramic view down the valley toward the sea.
Price expectations & what drives value
La Zagaleta is the top of the coast's market, and the pricing reflects that. A villa here generally starts in the mid-single-digit millions of euros and runs comfortably into the low tens of millions, with the largest signature homes on the best plots reaching considerably higher. The rare smaller homes and ground-floor apartments sit below that, offering the most accessible way in. Two homes a few hundred metres apart can be priced very differently, and the reasons are concrete: south and west-facing plots that hold the sea view and the late sun command a premium, sectors higher up tend to be quieter and more private, and a lower plot can lose its outlook to a neighbour's build. We walk every plot at the time of day that matters and tell you plainly which homes are over-priced for what they actually offer.
Lifestyle, golf & the estate amenities
Life inside La Zagaleta is built around its two private golf courses, reserved for owners and their guests, giving thirty-six holes of parkland golf without a public tee time in sight. There is also an equestrian centre, a clubhouse, tennis and padel, and the estate's own helipad with a private heli service for transfers. The appeal is that all of this sits behind the same gate, so day-to-day life rarely requires leaving the grounds, and when it does, the coast is a short drive down the hill.
Schools, beaches & getting around
Families here are well served by the international schools clustered around San Pedro and Estepona. Atalaya International School and Laude San Pedro are both roughly a ten to fifteen-minute drive, and Aloha College near Nueva Andalucia is a similar reach. The nearest beaches are at San Pedro and Guadalmina, around fifteen minutes away, with the wider sweep of Estepona under half an hour. Malaga airport is a little over an hour by car, and the helipad shortens that considerably for owners who use it. Day to day, you will want a car: this is a hillside estate, not a walkable village.
How we work in La Zagaleta
Because so much of this market is off-portal, buying well here depends on relationships and on being shown homes that are never publicly listed. We treat that quietly and seriously. We will tell you which homes are over-priced and why, which sectors suit your brief, and which plots photograph better than they live. If you are weighing a villa, a plot to rebuild on, or one of the rarer apartments, drop us a line.