Monte Halcones, Benahavis
Renovated townhouse in Monte Halcones with Panoramic Views
This exceptional Scandinavian-style townhouse is situated in the prestigious Monte Halcones area of Benahavis, Malaga, on the renowned Costa Del Sol. Featuring…

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We've walked these blocks for years, so we can tell you before you visit which apartments keep the Mediterranean view as the trees grow, which terraces catch the afternoon sun, and which sit quietly back from the access road. With a hillside urbanisation, orientation is everything, and we'll always be straight with you about it.
“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.”
Town houses are the quiet workhorse of Monte Halcones. Most of them sit in Nido de los Halcones, the run of semi-detached and terraced homes on the lower, gentler slopes near the urbanisation's own commercial centre, so the supermarket, pharmacy and a handful of restaurants are a short walk rather than a drive. They tend to come as three- and four-bedroom homes, often around the 200 sqm mark, frequently with en-suite bathrooms throughout and a private terrace or small garden, plus shared landscaped gardens and a communal pool you don't have to maintain yourself. It's a different proposition to the standalone villas higher up the hill, and for many buyers a more sensible one.
What you're really buying here is position. Monte Halcones sits between La Quinta Golf and Los Arqueros, above San Pedro and Nueva Andalucia, with Puerto Banus roughly ten to fifteen minutes down the hill. For that reason town houses here suit golfers, families who want space without a villa's upkeep, and lock-up-and-leave second-home owners who like that the community handles the gardens and the water. We'll always be straight with you about which of these homes are sensibly priced and which are leaning on the view to justify the asking figure.
Monte Halcones sits high on the Benahavis hills, just off the Ronda road as it climbs away from San Pedro de Alcantara. It is one of the newer addresses in this corner of the municipality, built largely from the early 2000s onward on a steep south-facing slope between La Quinta and La Zagaleta. The reward for that elevation is the view: an open sweep across the Golf Valley and down to the Mediterranean, with Gibraltar and the African coast on the clearest days. It is a calm, gated residential pocket rather than a village, and that is precisely what draws people to it.
The community is a mix of year-round residents and people who use their home for long seasons. We see a good number of international families who want space, security and a school run that works, alongside golfers who like being a few minutes from several courses, and downsizers moving out of larger villas who still want the view without the upkeep. Northern European and British buyers are well represented, but it is genuinely cosmopolitan. The common thread is a preference for quiet over scene; people who want the Benahavis lifestyle and the Marbella postcode within reach, without paying La Zagaleta money.
Apartments set the tone here. The urbanisation is anchored by a run of low-rise, ochre-toned blocks set in mature subtropical gardens, gathered into named pockets such as El Real de los Halcones, Nido de Halcones and Torre Halcones. Ground-floor apartments are the most common thing to come up, typically with their own garden terrace, followed by mid-floor and penthouse units in the same blocks. The interiors lean classic-Mediterranean, with generous terraces designed around the view, and many have been updated to a more contemporary finish over the years. Among the apartments sit a scattering of detached villas, and a smaller number of town houses, on the more accessible plots. Plots are modest by Benahavis standards because of the terrain, so if you want a villa with a big flat garden you may do better elsewhere, and we'll say so.
As a rough guide, two- and three-bedroom apartments generally start in the mid-to-high six figures and run upward through the low millions for the best penthouses with the strongest views. Ground-floor units with private garden terraces tend to sit at the more accessible end of that band. Villas are a wider field and depend heavily on plot, age and outlook, typically running from around one million into the several-millions for larger modern homes. These are typical ranges rather than a fixed tariff; condition, floor, orientation and exactly what the terrace looks out on move the number more than the headline bedroom count, and we'll talk you through where a given asking price actually sits.
This is golf country, and Monte Halcones is unusually well placed for it. La Quinta Golf and Country Club is right alongside, Los Arqueros is a short drive up the same road, and the championship courses of the Golf Valley in Nueva Andalucia, along with the courses around La Zagaleta, are all within easy reach. For anyone organising their week around tee times, few hillside addresses make it this simple.
There is a small commercial centre at the entrance to the urbanisation with the everyday essentials, a supermarket, pharmacy, a couple of restaurants and bars, banks and a few shops, so you are not in the car for a carton of milk. For everything else, San Pedro de Alcantara and its beaches are roughly ten to fifteen minutes down the hill, and Puerto Banus a touch beyond that. Marbella town and Estepona are both comfortable drives. Malaga airport is generally around forty minutes via the AP-7 and toll road. Families have a strong choice of international schools within a short drive, including Laude San Pedro International College in San Pedro and Atalaya International School towards the Estepona side, with newer options opening around Benahavis itself. The whole estate is gated with security, and access is straightforward despite the elevation.
We have spent twenty years on this stretch of coast, and we treat a hillside urbanisation like this with the attention it needs. Two apartments in the same block can be a world apart depending on floor and orientation, so we walk you through which units actually hold the sea view, where the morning and afternoon sun fall, and which terraces are sheltered from the breeze that comes up the valley. We will tell you plainly when a home is priced ahead of the market and why, and when something quiet and sensibly priced is worth moving on quickly. If Monte Halcones is on your list, or you are weighing it against La Quinta or Nueva Andalucia, drop us a line.
Town houses in Monte Halcones are usually three- or four-bedroom homes, with many built around the 200 sqm mark across two or three levels. A good number have en-suite bathrooms to most or all bedrooms, a private terrace or small garden, and access to shared gardens and a communal pool. They sit mainly in the Nido de los Halcones part of the urbanisation, on the lower slopes near the commercial centre.
As a typical guide, town houses in Monte Halcones generally run from around the high-six-figure euro range for an unrenovated three-bedroom up to roughly 1.2 million euros or more for a larger, fully renovated four-bedroom with strong golf and mountain views. The renovation standard and the outlook drive most of the difference, so two homes of similar size can sit some way apart on price.
They suit buyers who want the location and golf access of Monte Halcones without the cost and maintenance of a detached villa. That's typically golfers drawn to La Quinta and Los Arqueros on either side, families wanting room to spread out with a pool they don't have to look after, and second-home owners who value a lock-up-and-leave home where the community manages the gardens and shared areas.
Monte Halcones is a gated hillside urbanisation in the municipality of Benahavis, on the Costa del Sol. It sits on a south-facing slope just off the Ronda road above San Pedro de Alcantara, between La Quinta and La Zagaleta and a short drive from Nueva Andalucia's Golf Valley. Its elevation gives open views over the Golf Valley and down to the Mediterranean.
It is predominantly an apartment community, built around low-rise ochre-coloured blocks set in subtropical gardens, in pockets such as El Real de los Halcones, Nido de Halcones and Torre Halcones. Ground-floor apartments with garden terraces are the most common, along with mid-floor units and penthouses. A number of detached villas and a few town houses sit among the blocks on the more accessible plots.
As a general guide, two- and three-bedroom apartments usually start in the mid-to-high six figures and rise into the low millions for the best penthouses with the strongest views, with ground-floor garden units tending toward the more accessible end. Villas vary widely with plot, age and outlook, typically from around one million into the several-millions. Floor, orientation and the exact view affect price more than bedroom count.
Yes to both. La Quinta Golf and Country Club is right alongside, Los Arqueros is a short drive away, and the Golf Valley and La Zagaleta courses are within easy reach. Families have a good choice of international schools nearby, including Laude San Pedro International College and Atalaya International School, and there is a small commercial centre at the entrance with a supermarket, pharmacy, restaurants and shops.
San Pedro de Alcantara and its beaches are roughly ten to fifteen minutes down the hill, with Puerto Banus a little further on. Marbella town and Estepona are both comfortable drives, and Malaga airport is generally around forty minutes via the AP-7 and toll motorway.