Marbella Golden Mile, Marbella
Luxury Townhouse in Nagüeles, Marbella Golden Mile
Discover a newly renovated, elegant three-level townhouse situated in the prestigious area of Nagüeles, on the renowned Marbella Golden Mile in Malaga. This ex…

Browse Costa Sunsets homes for sale across Marbella and the wider Costa del Sol.
We're Bianca and Omèr, and we know homes across Marbella inside out, from Old Town apartments to Sierra Blanca villas. We'll walk you round the back streets of Nueva Andalucía and tell you, honestly, where your money goes furthest and which homes to leave well alone.
“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.”
A town house is where buyers land when an apartment feels tight but a detached villa is a stretch on budget or upkeep. In Marbella they nearly always sit within a gated urbanisation, sharing a pool and gardens with a handful of neighbours, and most run over two or three floors with a private terrace, a patio garden and often a roof solarium. Three and four bedrooms is the usual count, with two-bed duplexes in the newer schemes — your own front door and proper outdoor space, without the pool and garden bills of a standalone house.
Nueva Andalucía is the heartland for the type, with golf-side enclaves such as Aloha Pueblo, Aloha Lake Village, Las Brisas and the streets around Los Naranjos. East of town, Elviria and the wider Marbella East communities add lower-density schemes nearer the beach, while San Pedro and the New Golden Mile suit buyers after walkable town life or newer complexes. A solid resale town house typically runs from around 400,000 to 800,000 EUR, renovated frontline-golf or sea-view homes climb past a million, and new gated developments generally sit between just under 700,000 EUR and around 1.3 million EUR. We'll always tell you which complexes are fairly priced for their floor area and which are riding a postcode — ask us for an honest read on any of them.
Most people picture Puerto Banús when they hear the name, but Marbella is a proper working town as well as a glamorous coast — far bigger and far more varied than its marina. It runs from San Pedro de Alcántara in the west, through Nueva Andalucía and the Golden Mile, around the historic Old Town, and east past Los Monteros to Elviria and Cabopino. Each pocket has its own character, its own price level, and its own kind of buyer. We sell across all of it, and no single street is right for everyone — which is why it pays to talk to someone who lives here before you fall for a photograph.
Marbella has always drawn an international crowd alongside its Spanish residents. You'll find British, Scandinavian, Belgian, Dutch, German, Middle Eastern and American owners, plus a strong base of Spanish families, particularly from Madrid, who keep summer homes here. The Golden Mile and Sierra Blanca attract the wealthiest end — business owners, sportspeople and the genuinely private — while Nueva Andalucía and the eastern beaches of Los Monteros and Elviria pull in families and year-round residents who want schools, golf and a normal community rather than a holiday postcard. The Old Town and San Pedro stay the most Spanish in feel. A good number of our buyers are second-home owners, but plenty live here full time and run their lives remotely.
Villas dominate Marbella, and they set the tone of the whole market — from classic whitewashed Andalusian fincas with arches and terracotta roofs to the crisp, glass-fronted contemporary builds that fill Sierra Blanca, Nueva Andalucía and the hills above the coast. Alongside the villas there's a deep, steady run of apartments: penthouses and duplex penthouses with big sea-facing terraces, ground-floor apartments with private gardens, and everything in between within gated, well-kept urbanisations. Town houses, semi-detached villas and semi-detached houses give families a middle rung between an apartment and a full villa, and you'll also come across the occasional triplex, building plot or rural finca for those who want to design from scratch or buy a slice of land. If you want a garden you'll lean towards a villa, a town house or a ground-floor home; if you want lock-up-and-leave with a view, a penthouse is usually the answer.
Marbella is a broad market, so the bands are wide and depend heavily on the postcode. As a rough guide, two-bedroom apartments away from the very front line typically start somewhere in the mid-to-high six figures, while frontline-beach or prime Golden Mile apartments and penthouses generally run from well over a million into several. Town houses and semi-detached homes in good family urbanisations tend to sit in the high six figures to low millions. Villas are where the spread is greatest: a comfortable family villa in Nueva Andalucía or the eastern suburbs typically begins in the low millions, while Sierra Blanca, the Golden Mile and the gated estates climb from several million into the truly exceptional — eight figures and beyond for the trophy homes. We'll always tell you when a property is over-priced for what it is, and why, rather than letting the asking price do the talking.
This is golf country first and foremost. Nueva Andalucía is known as Golf Valley for good reason, with Los Naranjos, Aloha, Las Brisas and La Quinta all within a few minutes of each other, and Rio Real and Santa María sitting just east of town. The beaches run the full length of the municipality, from the family sands of Elviria and Cabopino to the promenade that links the Old Town to Puerto Banús. The Old Town itself, built around the Plaza de los Naranjos, stays genuinely lovely year-round — orange trees, tapas bars and proper Andalusian streets rather than a museum piece. For families, the international schools matter: Aloha College in Nueva Andalucía, Swans International with campuses in town and Sierra Blanca, and Laude San Pedro just along the coast, all offering British and IB routes. Getting around is easy by Costa standards — the A-7 coast road and the faster AP-7 toll motorway run the length of the town, Málaga airport is about 40 minutes east, and Gibraltar's airport is roughly an hour the other way. There's no train to Marbella itself, so a car is part of life here.
We've spent twenty years on this coast, and we treat buying a home here as a decision you should make slowly and with your eyes open. We don't push you towards the highest commission or the newest off-plan brochure; we ask how you actually want to live — beach mornings or golf mornings, full-time or summers only, walkable town or quiet hillside — and we match that to the right neighbourhood before we ever talk about specific homes. We'll be straight about the downsides too: which urbanisations get road noise, which villas face the wrong way for afternoon sun, which streets feel deserted out of season, and which asking prices simply don't add up. If you'd like a calm, honest conversation about where your budget goes furthest in Marbella, drop us a line.
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As a rough guide, resale town houses in Marbella generally run from around 400,000 to 800,000 EUR. Renovated homes on frontline golf or with sea views can climb past 1 million EUR, and new gated developments in areas such as Elviria and Nueva Andalucía tend to sit between just under 700,000 EUR and around 1.3 million EUR. Price depends far more on the urbanisation, condition and outlook than on the bedroom count alone.
Three and four bedrooms is the most common configuration, typically over two or three floors, with two-bed duplexes in the newer schemes and a roof solarium on the larger homes. The strongest areas are Nueva Andalucía — especially golf-side communities such as Aloha Pueblo, Aloha Lake Village and the streets around Los Naranjos and Las Brisas — plus Elviria and Marbella East for lower-density complexes nearer the beach, and San Pedro for town walkability.
Yes to both. Families value the extra bedrooms, the private patio for children and pets, and the proximity to schools and golf in Nueva Andalucía and Elviria. Holiday-home owners like that a gated town house can be locked up and left, with the communal pool and gardens maintained by the community rather than by you. Compared with an apartment you get your own front door and usually a roof terrace, without the full upkeep cost of a detached villa.
It depends on how you'll live. The Golden Mile and Sierra Blanca are the prime addresses, walkable to the Old Town and Puerto Banús and priced accordingly, suiting buyers who want location above all. Nueva Andalucía, known as Golf Valley, is the family and golf choice, close to Los Naranjos, Aloha and La Quinta and to Aloha College. The eastern suburbs — Los Monteros, Elviria and Cabopino — give you the best beaches and more space for your money, at the cost of a short drive into the centre. San Pedro and the Old Town stay the most Spanish and the most everyday-liveable.
The range is wide. Two-bedroom apartments set back from the beach typically start in the mid-to-high six figures, while frontline-beach and prime Golden Mile apartments and penthouses generally run from well over a million euros upwards. Family villas in Nueva Andalucía or the eastern suburbs usually begin in the low millions, and the gated estates of Sierra Blanca, the Golden Mile and the surrounding hills climb into the many millions and beyond for the very best homes. Town houses and semi-detached homes tend to bridge the gap, sitting from the high six figures into the low millions.
Málaga airport (AGP) is about 40 minutes east of Marbella by car along the AP-7 toll motorway, a little longer on the free A-7 coast road in summer traffic. Gibraltar airport is roughly an hour to the west. There's no train station in Marbella itself, and the town is spread out across many separate urbanisations, so most residents find a car essential for daily life, golf and the school run, even if you can walk to the beach from where you live.
Marbella is well served for international education. Aloha College in Nueva Andalucía offers British and IB programmes and is a major reason families settle in that area. Swans International School has campuses in Marbella town and Sierra Blanca, and Laude San Pedro International College sits just west along the coast, both running English-language and IB pathways for ages roughly 3 to 18. Proximity to a preferred school is a real factor in local pricing, so it's worth deciding on the school before you fix on a neighbourhood.
Very much so. Nueva Andalucía's Golf Valley packs Los Naranjos, Aloha, Las Brisas and La Quinta into a few square kilometres, with Rio Real, Santa María and Marbella Golf just east of town and many more along the wider coast. The beaches run the full length of the municipality, from the broad family sands of Elviria and Cabopino in the east to the marina at Puerto Banús and the promenade linking it to the Old Town. The climate means both are usable for most of the year, which is a large part of why people buy here at all.