Coin Centro, Coin
Exclusive semi-detached house renovated in the center of Coín, Malaga
A beautiful semi-detached house is located in the heart of the charming village of Coín, in the province of Malaga. This property, recently renovated and in ex…

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Coin Centro, Coin
A beautiful semi-detached house is located in the heart of the charming village of Coín, in the province of Malaga. This property, recently renovated and in ex…
Coin Centro, Coin
This recently renovated townhouse presents an exceptional opportunity to acquire a stylish residence in the heart of Coin Centro, Malaga. Designed for modern l…
Inland buying rewards caution. After twenty years on the Costa del Sol, we know which Coín urbanisations hold their value, which country homes are fully legalised and which are quietly over-priced. If a finca's deeds, water rights or build records don't stand up, we'll say so before you've wasted a viewing.
“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.”
Town houses here fall into two camps, and it helps to know which one you're looking at. In the historic centre, around the streets behind Plaza Alameda and the church of San Juan, you'll find traditional casas de pueblo: whitewashed, two or three storeys, often narrow at the front but deep, frequently with a small patio or an azotea roof terrace looking over the tiled roofs to the Sierra de Mijas. Many need updating, and we'll always tell you which ones are priced for the work they need. On the outskirts and towards Los Llanos and El Naranjal, the town house means something different again: modern terraced rows in gated communities, typically three bedrooms over two or three floors, with a private garden or solarium and usually a shared pool and gardens.
As a rule of thumb, a habitable village house in the old town generally runs from the low six figures, while a renovation project can sit well below that. A modern townhouse in one of the communal developments typically lands a bit higher, with newer builds and the larger four-bedroom layouts at the top of the band. Buyers tend to be families wanting space and a garden without villa prices, couples after a lock-up-and-leave bolthole with a pool they don't have to maintain, and a steady run of people who take on an old-town casa as a renovation. We're happy to walk you through what a sensible refurbishment budget looks like before you commit.
Coín sits at around 210 metres in the Guadalhorce Valley, between the Sierra de Mijas and the Sierra Alpujata, with Marbella roughly thirty kilometres south over the Monda pass and Málaga airport about thirty-five minutes to the east. It has been called the town of the three hundred orchards since Moorish times, and the name still fits — citrus, avocado and olive terraces run down towards the Río Grande on the western edge of the municipality. This is a Spanish market town of around 25,000 people, not a resort, and that is precisely why people buy here, for villas with land and pools at prices the coast no longer offers.
Coín is first a town that works — farming, building trades, schools, an evening paseo — with roughly one resident in eight born abroad. British, Dutch and Scandinavian households cluster on the urbanisations east and south of town, many of them former coast-dwellers who swapped an apartment for a detached house and kept the same airport run. The British connection goes back further than most realise — the BBC built its Eldorado set at Los Barcos on Coín's outskirts in the early nineties — and alongside the retirees there is a steady flow of younger families and Málaga commuters, since the technology park at Campanillas is about half an hour away down the A-357.
Villas set the tone of the market here. The urbanisations that ring the town — Sierra Gorda to the north-west, Miralmonte about four kilometres east, Los Nebrales and El Rodeo among others — were laid out mostly from the 1980s onward, with detached houses on plots of five hundred to two thousand square metres, private pools and gardens that grow whatever you plant in them. Beyond the urbanisations, on rustic land, sit the country villas and fincas proper, some with a hectare or more of irrigated citrus still fed by the old acequia channels.
In town, the second strand of the market is the Andalusian townhouse — three storeys on the narrow streets around the sixteenth-century church of San Juan Bautista, with internal patios and roof terraces, some reformed to a high standard and plenty still waiting for the right owner. Ground-floor apartments are the most common flat type, mainly in low-rise blocks between the centre and the La Trocha commercial centre, and they suit downsizers who want level access, a terrace and a short walk to everything. Genuinely new construction is the exception rather than the rule; Coín is largely a resale market, which keeps its character intact.
You'd typically expect a town-centre townhouse to run from around €120,000 needing work to €250,000–€300,000 properly reformed. Ground-floor apartments generally sit between €120,000 and €220,000. Detached villas on the urbanisations mostly trade between €350,000 and €700,000, while country fincas with real land start around €400,000 and climb well past €1 million for the larger groves and equestrian properties. The honest comparison is with the coast — a Coín villa budget buys a Fuengirola apartment — and the honest caveat is that inland asking prices are often aspirational. We'll always tell you which Coín homes are over-priced and why, with the comparable sales to show for it.
Daily life centres on the town itself — tapas bars off the main squares, a periodic agri-food market showing off Guadalhorce Valley produce, and the Sunday rastro in La Trocha's car park, which draws bargain-hunters from across the province. The Día de la Naranja each spring celebrates the citrus harvest the town is named for, and the Río Grande valley to the west is where locals swim and picnic in summer. Golfers are better served than you might guess for an inland town — Alhaurín Golf, the Severiano Ballesteros-designed course above Alhaurín el Grande, is about fifteen minutes away, and Lauro Golf's twenty-seven holes roughly twenty.
Families have the town's own state primaries and secondaries, with Novaschool Sunland International — British curriculum, ages three to eighteen, school buses across the valley — about twenty minutes away at Cártama Estación. For getting around, the A-355 runs south through the Monda pass to Marbella in roughly half an hour, the A-404 heads east through Alhaurín el Grande to Fuengirola's beaches in about twenty-five minutes, and the A-357 takes you into Málaga city. The airport is a thirty-to-thirty-five-minute run. Buses connect Coín with Málaga and the coast, but realistically every household here runs a car, and most run two.
Inland buying is a different discipline from the coast, and we treat it as one. Before we recommend a viewing we check that the build matches the deeds, that anything on rustic land is legalised or honestly described, and that the water supply — mains, well or irrigation community — is what the listing claims. We'll walk away from homes we wouldn't buy ourselves, and we'll say plainly when an asking price belongs to a different market. If you're weighing Coín against the coast, or one urbanisation against another, drop us a line.
Most town houses in Coin have three bedrooms, which is the common layout for the modern terraced communities on the edge of town. Traditional casas de pueblo in the old centre vary more, from compact two-bedroom homes to larger four- and five-bedroom houses arranged over three storeys. Four-bedroom town houses exist in both styles but are less common and sit at the upper end of the price band.
A casa de pueblo is a traditional village house in the historic centre, usually whitewashed and built over two or three narrow storeys, often with a patio or a roof terrace rather than a garden, and frequently in need of modernisation. A modern townhouse is a terraced home in a gated community on the outskirts, typically with a private garden or solarium and a shared pool and gardens. Village houses suit buyers who want character and a walkable centre; modern townhouses suit those who want low-maintenance outdoor space and a communal pool.
Town houses in Coin appeal to families wanting more space and a garden than an apartment offers without stretching to villa prices, to couples and retirees after a manageable lock-up-and-leave home with a communal pool, and to renovators who take on an old-town casa as a project. Coin is an established inland town in the Guadalhorce valley rather than a beachfront resort, so buyers here are generally settling in for everyday living rather than buying purely for holiday rental.
Coín sits about 210 metres up in the Guadalhorce Valley, roughly thirty kilometres inland from Marbella. The beaches at Fuengirola are typically a twenty-five-minute drive via Alhaurín el Grande on the A-404, Marbella is around half an hour south on the A-355 through the Monda pass, and Málaga airport takes about thirty to thirty-five minutes via Cártama and the A-357.
Town-centre townhouses generally run from around €120,000 unreformed to €250,000–€300,000 fully renovated. Ground-floor apartments typically sit between €120,000 and €220,000. Detached villas on urbanisations such as Sierra Gorda or Miralmonte mostly trade between €350,000 and €700,000, while country fincas with land range from about €400,000 to well over €1 million. As a rule of thumb, a budget that buys a two-bedroom apartment on the coast buys a villa with a pool in Coín.
Yes. Novaschool Sunland International, a British-curriculum school for ages three to eighteen, is about twenty minutes from Coín at Cártama Estación and runs school bus routes across the Guadalhorce Valley. Coín itself has Spanish state primaries and secondaries, and the international schools of the Mijas and Marbella coast, St. Anthony's College among them, are within a thirty-to-forty-minute drive.
Three things above all: that the buildings are properly registered on the deeds, that any construction on rustic land is legalised or eligible for regularisation through an AFO certificate, and that the water supply — mains, well or irrigation community — is documented. Many Coín fincas are entirely sound; some are not, and the difference rarely shows in the photographs. We check all of this before recommending a viewing.
Yes, though the town remains firmly Spanish. Of around 25,000 residents, roughly one in eight is foreign-born, with British, Dutch and Scandinavian households concentrated on the outlying urbanisations. Daily life runs in Spanish — the shops, the Sunday rastro at La Trocha, the spring orange festival — which is precisely why most international buyers choose Coín over the coast.