Montemar, Torremolinos
Luxury New Ground Floor Apartment in Montemar, Torremolinos
This newly constructed ground floor apartment, poised for completion by Q2 2026, offers the opportunity to embrace sophisticated coastal living in Montemar, To…

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Montemar, Torremolinos
This newly constructed ground floor apartment, poised for completion by Q2 2026, offers the opportunity to embrace sophisticated coastal living in Montemar, To…
Torremolinos Centro, Torremolinos
Presenting an exceptional ground floor apartment situated in the sought-after area of Torremolinos Centro, Malaga, this newly built residence blends the finest…
Long before Marbella became our base, our drives east finished the same way — fried fish in La Carihuela and the lift back up from El Bajondillo. Twenty years on, we still know which Playamar floors catch the wind and which Montemar streets stay quiet in August, and we'll always tell you which homes are over-priced, and why.
“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 ground floor apartment is the one home in Torremolinos you walk straight into, no lift and no stairs between you and the front door. In practice that single quality decides who comes looking. We see older buyers who want to stay independent without depending on a community lift, owners with a dog who value a terrace the animal can reach on its own, and people who simply want an outdoor room to live in rather than a balcony to look at. The trade-off, which we'll always be straight about, is light and privacy: a planta baja set behind tall neighbouring blocks can feel dim, so the ones worth having face south or open onto a garden that catches the sun.
Most ground floor flats here are part of established communities with a pool, gardens and parking, the urbanisations that ring Playamar, Montemar and El Pinillo. They run from compact one-bedroom units to roomy three-bedroom layouts, and the better ones hand you a private garden or a wide terrace in place of the height you give up. We'll point out which terraces are genuinely usable and which are a strip of tile against a wall.
Torremolinos sits where the Costa del Sol begins: roughly seven kilometres west of Málaga airport, with Málaga city beyond it and Benalmádena next door to the west. The town is built on a low cliff above the beach — the pedestrianised shopping streets around Calle San Miguel run along the top, and lifts and stepped lanes drop down to the sand at El Bajondillo. West along the shore, La Carihuela keeps the low whitewashed lines of the fishing village it once was, its promenade running without a break into Benalmádena and Puerto Marina. East of the centre stand the Playamar towers, and beyond them the broad, flat beach at Los Álamos. Uphill from all of this sit the residential quarters most visitors never see — Montemar, La Colina, El Pinillo — pine-shaded streets of garden apartments and family houses where the town actually lives. Seven kilometres of continuous sand, a railway through the middle and an airport ten minutes away: the geography explains the appeal better than any brochure.
This is a genuine year-round town of close to seventy thousand people, not a resort that empties in November. Málaga families settle here for the train line and the schools; a long-established community of British, Dutch and Scandinavian owners has held homes in Montemar and La Carihuela for decades; and the streets around La Nogalera are home to one of Spain's most settled LGBT communities, which gives the centre an open, easy-going character all year. Madrid and Seville second-home owners take the garden apartments near the beach, and a steady run of remote workers has worked out that twenty minutes on the Cercanías beats anything Málaga city charges in rent. Torremolinos is not Marbella and has no wish to be — it is busier, more Spanish and considerably better value, and the buyers it suits best are those who want a working town with a beach rather than a gated postcode.
Ground-floor apartments are the backbone of the market here — garden flats in the low-rise urbanisations that climbed the hillsides from the 1960s onwards, in Montemar, La Colina, Eurosol and El Pinillo, typically with a private terrace and shared pools and lawns. Semi-detached houses run them close: two- and three-bedroom homes on quiet residential streets in El Pinillo, upper Montemar and La Colina, often with a small garden and a garage — the kind of stock that barely exists in the showier towns further west. Above the beach at Playamar stand the white towers Antonio Lamela designed in the 1960s, the same architect behind Madrid's Torres de Colón, and their upper floors hold some of the best sea-view apartments on this stretch of coast. Montemar Alto and Cerro del Toril keep a scatter of detached villas, while new-build apartment schemes have gathered along Los Álamos near the sand. Plenty of the older stock wants modernising, which is exactly where the value hides.
Across most of the town you would typically expect somewhere between €3,000 and €4,500 per square metre, climbing past €5,000 for the best front-line positions along Los Álamos, Playamar and La Carihuela. In practical terms, a one-bedroom apartment generally runs €180,000–260,000; a two-bedroom ground-floor apartment with a terrace and a community pool typically sits between €250,000 and €420,000, with sea views adding a clear premium; and semi-detached houses in El Pinillo, La Colina and Montemar generally trade between €350,000 and €600,000. Detached villas in Montemar start around €700,000 and the largest plots can pass €2 million, while new-build two-bedroom apartments near the beach are commonly asked at €450,000–700,000. A standing promise from us: sea-view stock here attracts ambitious pricing, and we will always tell you when an asking price is built on the view rather than the home — and what the same money buys two streets back.
The beaches are the town's whole seaward edge: Los Álamos, wide and flat with its run of beach clubs; Playamar and El Bajondillo below the centre; La Carihuela and El Saltillo towards Benalmádena, where the espeto smoke from the fish restaurants drifts over the promenade most lunchtimes. For families, Sunny View School in Cerro del Toril teaches the British curriculum from age three to eighteen inside the town itself, and The British College at Torremuelle and the IB Colegio Internacional Torrequebrada are both a short drive into Benalmádena. Golfers have the Parador de Málaga Golf — a Tom Simpson course from the 1920s beside the airport — plus Torrequebrada next door and Lauro Golf inland, all within about twenty-five minutes. The Cercanías C1 stops five times in the municipality, at Los Álamos, La Colina, Torremolinos, Montemar Alto and El Pinillo, runs roughly every twenty minutes, and puts the airport about ten minutes away and Málaga's María Zambrano station around twenty. Marbella is some forty-five minutes west by car.
We sell here the way we sell everywhere on this coast: by telling you what the brochure will not. Which Bajondillo blocks hear the beach bars at two in the morning and which sleep soundly. Which Playamar floors take the full force of the levante and which terraces stay usable in February. Where community fees in the older towers are heading, which garden apartments genuinely get winter sun, and which streets in El Pinillo clog with school-run traffic at nine o'clock. We will always tell you which homes are over-priced and why, and we would rather lose a sale than watch you pay for a view you can have for less two doors down. If you are weighing Torremolinos against Benalmádena or Fuengirola, or simply want a straight answer on a home you have seen, drop us a line.
Ground floor apartments cluster in the gated communities of Playamar, Montemar and La Carihuela near the seafront, and in the more residential El Pinillo and El Calvario areas inland. These developments are typically built around a shared pool, mature gardens and resident parking, which is where the ground floor units with private gardens or large terraces usually sit.
They range from one-bedroom flats of around 80 square metres to three-bedroom homes of 140 to 170 square metres, often with a terrace of 30 to 50 square metres or a private garden. As a guide, two-bedroom ground floor apartments generally run from the low-to-mid 300,000s euro range, with larger garden units and prime seafront positions reaching higher. Condition, orientation and the quality of the outdoor space move the price more than floor area alone.
They suit anyone who values level, lift-free access: older buyers staying independent, families and pet owners who want a garden the children or dog can step straight into, and people who prefer an outdoor terrace to a high balcony. The main thing to check before buying is light and privacy, since a ground floor set behind taller blocks can feel dim. South-facing units and those opening onto an open garden are the ones to prioritise.
About seven kilometres. The drive typically takes ten minutes, and the Cercanías C1 train connects the airport to Torremolinos station in around ten minutes, with departures roughly every twenty minutes. Málaga city centre and María Zambrano station are about twenty minutes by train in the other direction, which makes Torremolinos one of the best-connected towns on the Costa del Sol.
As a general guide, one-bedroom apartments run €180,000–260,000, two-bedroom ground-floor apartments with terraces typically sit between €250,000 and €420,000, and semi-detached houses generally trade between €350,000 and €600,000. Detached villas in Montemar start around €700,000, and front-line or sea-view homes in Playamar, El Bajondillo and La Carihuela command a clear premium over equivalent homes two streets back.
La Carihuela suits buyers who want the old fishing quarter and a walk-everywhere beach life; El Bajondillo and Playamar offer sea-view apartments close to the centre; Los Álamos has the widest beach and most of the newer developments; and Montemar, La Colina and El Pinillo are the quieter residential quarters where most family houses and garden apartments are found, usually at better value per square metre.
Yes. Sunny View School, in the Cerro del Toril area of Torremolinos, teaches the British curriculum from ages three to eighteen. In neighbouring Benalmádena, a ten-to-fifteen-minute drive away, The British College at Torremuelle follows the British system and Colegio Internacional Torrequebrada offers the full International Baccalaureate programme. Spanish state schools serve every neighbourhood of the town.
More easily than almost anywhere on the Costa del Sol. The Cercanías C1 line stops five times in the municipality — Los Álamos, La Colina, Torremolinos, Montemar Alto and El Pinillo — with trains roughly every twenty minutes to the airport, Málaga and Fuengirola. The town centre is pedestrianised around Calle San Miguel, and the seafront promenade runs unbroken from Los Álamos to Benalmádena's Puerto Marina. A car only really earns its keep for inland golf or trips west towards Marbella.