Mijas Golf's garden-level living — a private terrace, a patch of lawn, and the fairways a short walk away.
On a valley laid out around the two Robert Trent Jones courses, Los Lagos and Los Olivos, the ground floor apartment is the type people come here specifically to find. What sets it apart from the flats above is simple and tangible: you step straight out onto a wide terrace and, in most cases, your own slice of garden, with the communal pool and its planting a few paces beyond. No lift, no stairs, no carrying shopping up to the third floor. In the gated urbanisations that ring the course — Riviera Golf, the Matchroom Country Club and similar low-rise developments — these garden units are usually the first to go, which is why they rarely sit unsold for long.
Most ground floor apartments here run to two bedrooms and two bathrooms, with the occasional one-bed and a smaller number of three-bed corner units that border the fairway directly. Built areas typically sit somewhere from the mid-70s to over 100 square metres, and the real draw — the terrace and garden — can add a generous outdoor room on top of that. As a type they tend to attract two kinds of buyer: retirees and semi-retired couples who want single-level living with no steps and easy outdoor access, and families or dog owners who value a private garden over a balcony. Price bands shift with size, condition and how close you sit to the course, but you'd generally expect a two-bed garden apartment to run from the high €200,000s into the mid-€300,000s; front-line and recently renovated units sit at the upper end. We'll always tell you which ones are priced ahead of the market and why.
Mijas Golf — the valley between the courses, fairway views and ten minutes to the beach.
Mijas Golf sits in a green valley just inland of Fuengirola, in the municipality of Mijas Costa. It is built around two eighteen-hole courses laid out by Robert Trent Jones Senior — Los Lagos, the older and more open of the pair, with its wide fairways and lakes, and Los Olivos, shorter and tighter, threaded through olive trees on hillier ground. The homes here look onto those fairways and back up toward the sierra, which is the whole point of the place: you get golf and quiet without giving up the coast, because the sand at Fuengirola, La Cala and El Faro is only ten to fifteen minutes down the hill.
It is a calmer proposition than the built-up beachfront strip. Tree-lined avenues, gated communities, low blocks set among the greens. People who buy here tend to want space and air rather than a front-row seat on the promenade, and they are happy to drive a few minutes for the beach in exchange for a garden, a fairway outlook and somewhere to park.
Who buys in Mijas Golf
The valley draws a steady mix. Golfers, naturally — many buyers are here for the two courses on the doorstep and the handful more within a short drive. Alongside them are families who want a settled base near the international and bilingual schools around Fuengirola and Mijas, and a long-established northern-European community, with Scandinavian, British and German owners well represented. Some live here year-round; others split the year and let the property when they are away, which the golf outlook and the proximity to the airport make straightforward. What unites them is a preference for the quieter, greener side of the coast — where you play eighteen holes in the morning and are on the beach by lunch.
Architecture and property types
Apartments are the backbone of Mijas Golf, and ground-floor units are among the most sought after — typically with a garden, direct access to a communal pool and a couple of generous terraces, which suits both year-round living and easy holiday use. Above them, penthouses are the other defining type: top-floor homes with larger wrap-around terraces and the longer views back over the fairways toward the sea or the sierra. Between the two you will find mid-floor apartments and a run of townhouses, and at the upper end a scatter of detached villas with their own pools.
The look is classic Costa del Sol — low-rise, whitewashed, terracotta roofs, set in mature landscaped grounds rather than packed tightly together. Many of the urbanisations date from the development of the courses and the decades after, so build quality and layout vary; some have been thoroughly renovated, others are honest originals waiting for a refresh. We will always tell you which is which, and what a reform is realistically likely to cost.
Price expectations
As a guide rather than a promise pinned to any one month: ground-floor and mid-floor apartments here generally open in the low-to-mid hundreds of thousands of euros, with the figure moving up for size, condition and a clean fairway or sea view. Penthouses typically sit toward the upper end of the apartment range and beyond, the premium going on the terrace space and the outlook. Townhouses fall broadly in between. Detached villas with private pools run higher again, and the largest, most worked-on houses reach well into seven figures. Within any of these bands the view, the floor and how recently the home was renovated do most of the work on price — which is exactly where we will tell you, plainly, when an asking figure is ahead of the market and why.
Lifestyle, schools and getting around
Golf sets the rhythm. Los Lagos and Los Olivos are on the doorstep, with Lauro Golf and several other courses a short drive off, so a serious player is rarely more than a few minutes from a tee. Day to day, the valley is quiet and green; the busier amenities — supermarkets, restaurants, the marina and the long beach — are down in Fuengirola, roughly ten minutes away, with La Cala de Mijas and El Faro a similar hop along the coast. For families, the draw is the cluster of international and bilingual schools serving the area, covering British, Scandinavian and other curricula, all within a comfortable drive. Getting around is easy: Málaga airport is about twenty minutes by the AP-7 and A-7, Marbella a similar distance the other way, and the coastal train at Fuengirola links you up the line toward Málaga and the airport without a car.
How we work in Mijas Golf
We treat Mijas Golf as somewhere to live, not a brochure. That means matching you to the right urbanisation as much as the right home — orientation, which terraces hold the sun, how the community is run and what the fees actually cover, whether a ground floor floods with light or sits in shade, how a penthouse terrace handles the afternoon. We will point you toward the homes that are sensibly priced and steer you off the ones that are not, and we will be honest about what a place needs spending on. If that is the kind of help you want on the Costa del Sol, drop us a line.