Cortijo Blanco villas — flat beachside plots, walk to the sand, San Pedro on your doorstep.
This is one of the few corners of San Pedro de Alcantara where you can own a proper villa on level ground a few hundred metres from the beach. Cortijo Blanco sits between Nueva Alcantara and Puerto Banus, and the streets are quiet, leafy and walkable rather than hillside. That matters for a villa here: no steep driveways, easy plots to landscape, and the sand and beach restaurants reachable on foot. Plots typically run from around 900 to 1,300 square metres, which gives generous gardens and room for a pool without the climb.
The stock splits into two camps. The older Andalusian and colonial-style villas — whitewashed, terracotta roofs, mature gardens — are steadily being bought, reworked or replaced by contemporary new-builds with open-plan living, basements and roof terraces. Most are four or five bedrooms with built areas commonly between 500 and 850 square metres. As a guide, a renovated or new villa here generally sits in the mid-single-digit-million euro band, with land value doing much of the work; we'll always tell you when a plot is being priced as if it were finished.
Cortijo Blanco's old artists' colony — whitewashed lanes, villas behind mature walls, and Puerto Banús just across the Guadaiza.
Where Cortijo Blanco sits
Cortijo Blanco is the easternmost pocket of San Pedro de Alcántara's beachside, the flat strip between the A-7 and the sand. Calle Pablo Picasso marks its western boundary with Las Petunias, and the Río Guadaiza its eastern edge, with Puerto Banús directly across the river. The lanes run gently down to Playa del Cortijo Blanco, roughly half a kilometre of beach forming a slight headland at the river mouth. San Pedro's boulevard is a few minutes one way, the Banús marina a few minutes the other; living between the two, with neither on top of you, is precisely the appeal.
An artists' colony before it was an urbanisation
The Hotel Cortijo Blanco opened in 1961, the project of a Sevillian doctor who imagined a colony for painters and writers rather than a resort. Antonio Mingote and José Caballero spent time here, Jean Cocteau wrote admiringly of the idea, and the street names — Calle Antonio Mingote among the first to be built along — still carry the artists' roll-call. The earliest whitewashed chalets went up in the first half of the sixties, and the Andalusian-courtyard hotel still trades at the heart of the urbanisation. It gives Cortijo Blanco something much of the coast lacks: a story older than its sales brochures.
The homes, and what they typically cost
Villas dominate. The originals are single-storey chalets behind whitewashed walls on plots of roughly 800 to 1,000 square metres, many with gardens half a century in the making. Plot by plot, these are giving way to contemporary villas, and a handful of small gated communities of new builds has appeared, some with round-the-clock security. An older chalet sold essentially for its land typically starts around €1.5 million; finished contemporary villas generally run €2.5 to €6 million depending on plot and distance to the sand. The modest run of apartments and townhouses near the beach tends to sit between €500,000 and €900,000.
The beach at the end of the lane
Playa del Cortijo Blanco rarely crowds, partly because parking inside the urbanisation is scarce — an inconvenience for day-trippers that works quietly in residents' favour. Kala Kalua, the wooden chiringuito at the eastern end, handles long lunches, and the Alabardero beach club with its pool is a stroll west along the shore. The two Globales hotels, Pueblo Andaluz and Cortijo Blanco, keep a cluster of bars and small shops trading near the entrance, and San Pedro's market and supermarkets are a short cycle along the seafront.
Schools, golf and getting around
Laude San Pedro International College — bilingual, ages three to eighteen — sits in neighbouring Nueva Alcántara, a few minutes from any front door here, and Aloha College in Nueva Andalucía is roughly ten minutes by car. Golfers have Real Club de Golf Guadalmina, founded in 1959, immediately west of San Pedro, with Los Naranjos and Real Club de Golf Las Brisas in Nueva Andalucía's Golf Valley about ten minutes away. The A-7 runs along the top of the urbanisation: Marbella's old town is around twelve minutes, Estepona twenty, Málaga airport about fifty via the AP-7. On foot, the seafront boardwalk reaches Puerto Banús in around twenty minutes.
Buying in Cortijo Blanco with us
We have sold homes in Cortijo Blanco for long enough to know which lanes hold their hush and which plots near the A-7 pick up the hum of traffic — and we will say so before you view, not after. The same goes for pricing: where an asking price is really a land price wearing villa clothing, we will tell you which homes are over-priced and why. If you are weighing an established chalet against the new builds, or simply want to walk the beach and the lanes with someone who knows both, drop us a line