Estepona West, Estepona
Luxurious Newly Built Villa in Estepona Golf, Costa Del Sol
Nestled in the prestigious Estepona Golf area of Estepona West, Malaga, this newly built villa epitomises luxury and modern living on the Costa Del Sol. Part o…

Browse Costa Sunsets homes for sale across Marbella and the wider Costa del Sol.
Estepona West, Estepona
Nestled in the prestigious Estepona Golf area of Estepona West, Malaga, this newly built villa epitomises luxury and modern living on the Costa Del Sol. Part o…
Estepona West, Estepona
Introducing a stylish contemporary villa, ideally set in the esteemed Valle Romano area of Estepona West, Malaga. Boasting a prime location, this exquisite pro…
Estepona West, Estepona
This exceptional modern villa, currently under construction and scheduled for completion in Q1 2026, is nestled in the exclusive Valle Romano, Estepona West, M…
Estepona West, Estepona
Presenting a luxurious, contemporary villa situated in the prestigious Azata Golf area of Estepona West, Malaga. This exceptional property is one of 15 modern…
Estepona West, Estepona
Introducing an exceptional new off plan villa, situated in the highly desirable enclave of Azata Golf in Estepona West, Málaga set to be finished by end of 202…
We're Bianca and Omèr, and we know the homes between Estepona town and the Manilva border inside out. We walk these urbanisations, we know the service charges, and we'll always tell you which homes are over-priced and why. No spin, just what we'd tell a friend.
“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.”
The detached villa is where Estepona West shows its hand. The stretch running west from the New Golden Mile through El Paraiso, Atalaya, Benamara, Cancelada and El Velerin out to El Velerin and the beachside Costalita gives you genuine space — many plots here run around 1,000 to 1,900 square metres, the kind of flat or gently terraced ground you rarely find closer to Marbella centre. El Paraiso in particular, set quietly off the road between the El Paraiso and Atalaya golf courses, is the heart of the villa market: Gary Player's 1973 championship layout, established gardens, and upper terraces that catch both the sea and the fairways.
You'll find two broad camps. There are the older, character villas on big mature plots — solid family homes, often priced well below the headline new-builds, and worth a proper look if you don't mind updating. And there are the new south-facing contemporary villas, all glass and clean lines, clustered around El Campanario and Atalaya Golf. As a rough guide, established villas can start in the mid-to-high six figures, while newer detached homes with sea or golf views typically run from around one and a half million euros upward, climbing well past three for frontline-golf or frontline-beach positions. We'll always tell you which ones are priced for the view rather than the build.
This side of town has a settled, year-round feel. You'll find a real mix: Northern European retirees and semi-retirees who came for the winters and stayed, younger families drawn by the international schools and the space, and remote workers who wanted Costa del Sol sun without Marbella prices. There's a strong British, Belgian, Dutch and Scandinavian presence, alongside Spanish families from Estepona itself, who never really left this stretch. It's less of a high-season-only postcode than parts of the coast — plenty of urbanisations here keep their lights on through January. Holiday-home owners and long-let landlords are well represented too, particularly in the older established communities like Bahía Dorada and Costa Natura, which have decades of rental history behind them. The result is a neighbourly, low-key atmosphere where people actually use the communal pools and walk to the chiringuito rather than driving everywhere.
Apartments dominate here, and dominate comfortably — bright two- and three-bed flats and a particularly good run of ground-floor apartments with private gardens, the kind that sell quickly because buyers love stepping straight out onto a terrace and lawn. Behind the apartments sit detached villas, more of them as you climb the hillside towards the A-7 and the golf, and a scattering of penthouses and duplex penthouses for buyers chasing the bigger sea-view terraces. Semi-detached villas round out the mix for families who want a garden and a bit of privacy without a full villa's upkeep. Styles span the decades: the 1970s and 80s Mediterranean-village look of Bahía Dorada, designed by architect Aubrey David with its whitewashed walls and arches; solid 1990s and 2000s urbanisations like Arroyo Vaquero and Buenas Noches; and a steady run of contemporary new-build — flat roofs, floor-to-ceiling glass, communal spa and gym — around Valle Romano, Azata Golf and the hillside above the coast road. If you want clean modern lines with a golf or sea outlook, this is fertile ground; if you want character and mature gardens, the older beachside communities deliver that.
Estepona West generally gives you more home for your money than the beachfront strips closer to Marbella. As a rough guide, apartments here typically run from the high €200,000s for an older two-bed inland, into the €400,000s and €500,000s for a well-positioned three-bed or a newer build with sea views — call it broadly €3,000 to €3,900 per square metre, with frontline and brand-new stock pushing the top of that. Ground-floor apartments with gardens carry a premium for the lifestyle they offer. Penthouses and duplex penthouses with proper terraces typically start in the mid-to-upper €400,000s and climb from there. Villas are the wide band: a modest semi-detached or older detached villa might sit around €700,000 to €900,000, while a contemporary detached villa with a pool and sea views on the hillside or beside the golf will comfortably run into seven figures, often €4,500 to €4,800 per square metre and beyond for the best of them. These are typical ranges, not promises — condition, exact position and sea-view aspect move the number a lot, and we'll always be straight with you about whether an asking price stacks up.
The beaches are the daily draw: Costa Natura (home to Spain's first official naturist resort, dating to the mid-1980s), Arroyo Vaquero, El Cristo and El Padrón are all along this stretch, backed by Estepona's long seafront promenade. Golf is close at hand — Valle Romano, Azata Golf and Estepona Golf are all within the area, La Resina's short course sits just inland, and the championship course at Finca Cortesín is about a ten-minute drive west. For families, the international schools are a real pull: Mayfair Academy and Colegio San José are in Estepona, with Laude San Pedro International College and Sotogrande International School both within an easy drive. Day to day you've got the commercial centres at Arroyo Vaquero and the supermarkets, plus everything in Estepona town's flower-filled old quarter a few minutes east. Getting around is straightforward: the A-7 coast road runs through the whole area for free, the AP-7 toll motorway shortcuts the longer hops, Estepona town is five to ten minutes away, Marbella around 20 to 25, Gibraltar airport roughly 40 to 45 minutes, and Málaga airport under an hour. There's no train, so a car is essential, but the roads here are good and the drives are short.
We know these urbanisations inside out, so we don't deal in glossy generalities — we'll tell you that one block at Bahía Dorada gets the breeze and the sea view while another looks at a car park, that Costa Natura is a naturist community and isn't for everyone, that a hillside villa's sea view depends entirely on what gets built below it, and which communities have sensible service charges versus the ones with ageing lifts and a reserve fund problem. We'll point out an over-priced listing before you fall for the terrace, and we'll flag the quietly good value before it's gone. If you're weighing up Estepona West — whether it's a lock-up-and-leave apartment, a garden flat for the grandchildren, or a villa to retire into — we're happy to walk you round, share the honest local view and help you buy well. Come and see the coast with people who actually live on it; drop us a line.
Villas in Estepona West tend to come with real land. In El Paraiso, average plots run close to 1,900 square metres, with many individual homes on roughly 1,000 to 1,300 square metres of flat or gently sloping ground. The golf-side urbanisations — El Paraiso, Atalaya, Benamara — generally offer more generous gardens than you'd find nearer central Marbella, which is a large part of why families choose this stretch.
El Paraiso is the established villa heartland, set between the El Paraiso and Atalaya golf courses on the New Golden Mile, with mature gardens and sea-and-golf views from the higher plots. Atalaya and Benamara hold most of the newer contemporary villas, several clustered around El Campanario and Atalaya Golf & Country Club. For beachside living, Costalita and El Velerin sit closer to the sand, though detached villas there are scarcer than townhouses and apartments.
Buyers are a mix of British, Scandinavian, Dutch and Spanish families, with golfers strongly represented given the cluster of courses on the doorstep. Some buy for full-time living, drawn by the international schools, the space and the calm residential streets; others use the villa as a holiday and long-let base. The common thread is wanting a detached house with a garden and pool rather than a lock-up-and-leave apartment.
Estepona West refers to the coastal and hillside strip running west of Estepona town centre towards Sabinillas, Casares Costa and the Manilva border. It takes in established urbanisations such as Bahía Dorada, Arroyo Vaquero, Costa Natura and Buenas Noches along the beach, plus hillside and golf communities like Valle Romano and Azata Golf inland of the A-7 coast road. Estepona town itself is just five to ten minutes east.
As a general guide, apartments usually run from the high €200,000s for an older inland two-bed up into the €400,000s and €500,000s for newer or sea-view three-beds, roughly €3,000 to €3,900 per square metre. Penthouses with large terraces tend to start in the mid-to-upper €400,000s. Villas span widely, from around €700,000 for a modest semi-detached or older detached home to well over €1 million for a contemporary villa with a pool and sea views, often €4,500 per square metre and up. Position, condition and aspect move these figures considerably.
Apartments are by far the most common, including a strong supply of ground-floor apartments with private gardens. Beyond those you'll find detached villas (more of them on the hillside near the golf), penthouses and duplex penthouses with bigger terraces for sea views, and semi-detached villas for families wanting a garden without full villa upkeep. Styles range from 1970s and 80s Mediterranean-village urbanisations to modern new-build with communal spa and gym.
For golf you have Valle Romano, Azata Golf and Estepona Golf right in the area, La Resina just inland, and the championship Finca Cortesín about ten minutes west. Beaches include Costa Natura (Spain's first naturist resort), Arroyo Vaquero, El Cristo and El Padrón, linked by the Estepona promenade. International schools within easy reach include Mayfair Academy and Colegio San José in Estepona, Laude San Pedro International College, and Sotogrande International School a short drive away.
A car is essential as there's no train line, but the roads are good. The free A-7 coast road runs the length of the area and the AP-7 toll motorway speeds up longer trips. Estepona town is five to ten minutes away, Marbella about 20 to 25 minutes, Gibraltar airport roughly 40 to 45 minutes, and Málaga airport under an hour by car. Local commercial centres and supermarkets at Arroyo Vaquero cover day-to-day needs.