Guadalmina Alta, San Pedro de Alcantara
Stunning New-Build Penthouse in Guadalmina Alta
Nestled in the prestigious area of Guadalmina Alta, San Pedro de Alcántara, Málaga, this newly built penthouse epitomises luxury living on the Costa del Sol. B…

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Guadalmina Alta, San Pedro de Alcantara
Nestled in the prestigious area of Guadalmina Alta, San Pedro de Alcántara, Málaga, this newly built penthouse epitomises luxury living on the Costa del Sol. B…
San Pedro de Alcantara
This stunning penthouse, located in the picturesque town of San Pedro de Alcantara, Malaga, offers an exceptional living experience characterised by quality an…
San Pedro de Alcantara
This new-build penthouse, poised for October 2026 delivery, represents the finest in Costa del Sol real estate. Set within a secure, gated community in the hea…
Bahia Alcantara, San Pedro de Alcantara
This remarkable penthouse apartment is situated in the exclusive, beachfront enclave of Bahia Alcantara in San Pedro de Alcantara, Malaga, renowned for its ref…
San Pedro de Alcantara
Located in the charming town of San Pedro de Alcantara in Malaga, this stunning new-built penthouse offers an unparalleled lifestyle on the Costa Del Sol. This…
We're Bianca and Omèr, and after twenty years on this stretch of coast we know San Pedro properly: which Guadalmina culs-de-sac stay quiet, which beachside blocks catch the afternoon levante, and which asking prices simply don't add up. We'll always tell you the truth, even when it costs us a sale.
“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.”
Penthouses here are mostly the top floors of low-rise beachside blocks rather than tower living, and that suits San Pedro. Two and three bedrooms are the heart of the market, often laid out as a duplex with the living space below and a private solarium above. The terraces do the heavy lifting: large wrap-around roof spaces with covered lounge areas, an outdoor shower, and room for a plunge pool, which is what people are really paying the premium for. You'll find the closest-to-the-sand options around La Gavia, Bahía Alcántara and Castiglione, a short stroll from the promenade, while quieter, often better-value penthouses sit inland of the boulevard nearer the old town.
As a guide, a two-bed penthouse a few streets back typically runs in the high-six-figure band, while a front-line or near-beach duplex with sea views generally moves into seven figures, climbing well past two million for the newest builds on the seafront. Buyers tend to be couples and families who want lock-up-and-leave living with proper outdoor space and the boulevard, beach and shops on foot — and we'll always tell you which of these are priced ahead of what the view and the terrace truly justify.
San Pedro draws a broader, more rooted crowd than the showier corners of Marbella. You'll find Spanish families who have been here for generations alongside Northern European residents who came for a holiday home and quietly stayed for good. It works because the town actually functions year-round: there's a primary-school run, a Saturday market, a doctor's surgery and a butcher who knows your name, not just a season of restaurants that shutter in November. Families are the backbone, drawn by the international schools and the safe, walkable centre. Retirees value the flat streets, the long promenade and the unhurried café culture around La Colonia. And because Puerto Banús and Nueva Andalucía are a short hop east, plenty of people who work in Marbella's smarter quarters choose to live here instead — better value, calmer evenings, and a community that doesn't empty out off-season. Holiday-home owners do well too, tucked into the golf urbanisations of Guadalmina and Nueva Alcántara, but San Pedro never feels like a resort. It feels like a town that happens to sit on a very good beach.
Villas set the tone here, and they come in real variety — from the mature, generously plotted homes of Guadalmina Baja and Guadalmina Alta, many wrapped around the two golf courses, to more contemporary new-builds on the better streets of Nueva Alcántara and Cortijo Blanco. Alongside the villas runs a deep supply of apartments and penthouses: the beachside blocks of Nueva Alcántara and San Pedro Playa, the gated communities near the Boulevard, and the resale stock that turns over steadily in the town itself. You'll also find a good run of duplexes, ground-floor apartments with private gardens (a favourite with families and dog-owners), the occasional duplex penthouse with a proper roof terrace, and semi-detached villas that bridge the gap between a townhouse budget and a freestanding home. The architectural mood is comfortably mixed — classic whitewashed Andalusian and Mediterranean villas sitting beside cleaner, glass-and-render modern builds. Guadalmina Baja, between the old N-340 and the sea, holds the grandest detached villas; Guadalmina Alta, on the inland side, is leafier, family-oriented and gentler on the wallet.
San Pedro is one of the better-value spots on Marbella's western flank — you're paying for substance rather than a Puerto Banús postcode. As a rough guide, apartments typically open from around the low-to-mid €200,000s for a modest flat in a residential block, run through the €400,000s to €700,000s for something well-located near the beach or the Boulevard, and climb past €1 million for the largest sea-view penthouses. Townhouses and semi-detached villas generally sit in the €400,000s to €800,000s depending on condition and position. Villas span the widest band of all: a smaller home on the inland side might start in the high €600,000s to €900,000s, while the established detached villas of Guadalmina Baja and the best new-builds frequently run from €1.5 million well into multiple millions. Those are typical ranges, not promises — position, plot, sea views and how recently a property was renovated shift the figure considerably. What we will always do is tell you which homes are sensibly priced and which are carrying an optimistic asking figure, and exactly why.
Daily life centres on La Colonia, the leafy old square with its church and the handsome buildings left from the town's 19th-century sugar-mill colony — the restored distillery is now an arts centre, a quiet reminder that San Pedro earned its keep long before tourism arrived. Down at the coast, the tiled promenade runs for two kilometres, wide and planted, past family-friendly sandy beaches and a string of chiringuitos. The Boulevard, laid over the buried A-7, knitted the town back together with playgrounds, an amphitheatre and open-air dining — a genuinely clever piece of planning. For families, Laude San Pedro International College sits right in town with a British curriculum, while Atalaya International School and Calpe School are a short drive west. Golf is close at hand: Guadalmina's two 18-hole courses, Atalaya and Los Arqueros are all on the doorstep. Getting around is easy — Puerto Banús is about five minutes east, Marbella and Estepona each around fifteen, Nueva Andalucía roughly ten, Benahavís village fifteen up the valley, and Málaga airport about 55 minutes along the AP-7.
We keep a tight, honest list rather than papering the window with everything going. Because we live on this part of the coast, we can tell you the things that don't show up in a listing photo: which Guadalmina streets stay quiet, which beachfront blocks catch the afternoon levante wind, where the morning sun lands on a terrace, and which communities have healthy reserves versus a community fee about to jump. We'll walk you through the real numbers — IBI, community charges, the 7% transfer tax on a resale or the 10% VAT and stamp duty on a new-build, plus notary and legal costs — so there are no surprises at the notary's office. And if a home is over-priced or simply wrong for you, we'll say so plainly; we would rather lose a commission than sell you a mistake. Whether you're after a Guadalmina villa, a beachside apartment or a family townhouse near the schools, we're happy to share what we genuinely think — so drop us a line.
Most penthouses in San Pedro de Alcántara have two or three bedrooms. They are commonly arranged as duplexes, with the main living space on one floor and a private rooftop solarium above, so a two-bedroom penthouse can still feel generous thanks to its terrace.
The beachside urbanisations closest to the promenade — among them La Gavia, Bahía Alcántara and Castiglione — hold the most sought-after penthouses, many within a short walk of the sand. Penthouses set inland of the San Pedro Boulevard, nearer the old town, are usually quieter and tend to offer better value for the space.
A two-bedroom penthouse a few streets back from the sea typically runs in the high-six-figure range. Near-beach or front-line duplex penthouses with sea views generally start in seven figures and rise well beyond two million euros for new-build seafront homes, depending on terrace size, orientation and outlook.
San Pedro de Alcántara sits on the western Costa del Sol, in Marbella municipality, between Estepona and Puerto Banús. Puerto Banús is about a 5-minute drive east, Marbella town and Estepona each around 15 minutes, and Nueva Andalucía roughly 10 minutes. Málaga–Costa del Sol airport is about 60km away, around 55 minutes via the AP-7 toll road; Gibraltar airport is a little under an hour to the west.
Villas are the dominant type, from established detached homes in Guadalmina Baja and Alta to modern new-builds in Nueva Alcántara. Alongside them is a deep supply of apartments and penthouses near the beach and the Boulevard, plus duplexes, ground-floor apartments with private gardens, the occasional duplex penthouse, and semi-detached villas. You'll find both classic Andalusian-style and contemporary architecture across the town and its golf urbanisations.
As a rough guide, apartments usually start from the low-to-mid €200,000s, with well-located or sea-view homes running from the €400,000s to over €1 million for larger penthouses. Townhouses and semi-detached villas generally sit in the €400,000s to €800,000s. Villas span the widest band: from the high €600,000s for a smaller inland home up into several millions for established Guadalmina Baja villas. These are typical ranges — plot, position, views and condition all move the price significantly.
The best-known is Guadalmina, split into Guadalmina Baja (grand detached villas between the old road and the sea) and the leafier, more family-oriented Guadalmina Alta inland. Other key areas include Nueva Alcántara and San Pedro Playa near the beach, Cortijo Blanco, Linda Vista, Alta Vista and newer beachside developments such as Arqueros Beach. The historic town centre around La Colonia square offers more traditional apartments and townhouses with a genuinely Spanish feel.
Yes — San Pedro works for full-time family life, not just holidays. Laude San Pedro International College, with a British curriculum, is right in town, and Atalaya International School and Calpe School are a short drive west. The 2km tiled beach promenade, the Boulevard's playgrounds and amphitheatre, flat walkable streets and a real year-round community make it genuinely practical for raising children. Ground-floor apartments with gardens and semi-detached villas are popular family choices here.