Apartments at Casares del Sol — terracotta and tropical gardens, gated, eight hundred metres from the sand.
This is an apartment estate first and foremost. Casares del Sol was laid out in the traditional Andalusian terracotta style across four phases, with only around a third of the plot built on, so the blocks sit low among lawns and palms rather than crowding each other. Most homes are two and three bedrooms, generally somewhere between 90 and 150 square metres of interior, and almost every one comes with the things that make this kind of community work day to day: a covered parking space, a storeroom, and a proper terrace. Ground-floor homes tend to add a private garden; the top floors are penthouses with rooftop solariums reached by an internal staircase, and from the higher ones you can see the sea and, on a clear day, the Moroccan coast.
It is a gated community with a barrier, a guardhouse and round-the-clock security, and the pools are shared across the phases rather than pinned to one block, which is part of why families and part-time owners settle here. The buyers we meet split fairly evenly between people wanting a lock-up-and-leave holiday base near the golf and the beach, and those after a steady long-let or holiday-rental income. For a two-bed you'd typically expect the mid-to-high €200,000s upward, with three-beds and sea-view penthouses climbing well beyond that depending on phase, floor and outlook. We'll always tell you which units are priced ahead of what their position and condition justify, and why.
Casares del Sol's quiet golf country — low-rise Andalusian homes around the Casares Golf course, Blue Flag sand below, the white village of Casares in the hills behind.
This is the green, unhurried end of the Costa del Sol — the Casares Costa, west of Estepona, where the coastline opens up and the building heights drop. Casares del Sol and the surrounding Casares Golf community were laid out in traditional Andalusian style, terracotta roofs and nothing above a couple of storeys, wrapped around communal pools and tropical gardens. The nine-hole Casares Golf course gives the area its name and its rhythm, and the Finca Cortesín estate, host of the 2023 Solheim Cup, sits just up the road. It feels a world away from the busier resort strips, yet Puerto Banús is under half an hour by car.
Who lives in Casares del Sol - Casares Golf
The mix here is genuinely international and relaxed: Northern European second-home owners — British, Scandinavian, Belgian and Dutch in particular — alongside a steady core of permanent residents who've decided this calmer corner suits them better than the bustle around Marbella. Golfers come for the course on the doorstep; families and retirees come for space, gardens and sea air without resort-town prices. A fair number of owners let their homes to holidaymakers and winter golfers, so there is a sensible buy-to-let case too. What you won't find is a party crowd — evenings here are a glass of wine on the terrace, not a night out in Banús.
Architecture & property types
Villas dominate the picture across Casares Golf and Casares del Sol — generally detached or semi-detached homes with private plots, pools and golf or sea views — and they set the tone for the area. Beneath them sits a healthy run of apartments and penthouses, the penthouses often carrying the rooftop solariums this part of the coast does so well, plus ground-floor apartments and ground-floor duplexes that open straight onto a garden terrace, ideal if you'd rather skip stairs and lifts. The look is consistent and traditional: terracotta roofs, whitewashed walls, marble or tiled floors, fitted wardrobes and generous terraces, set in gated, well-tended communities with pools, lawns and, in many cases, gym and security. Build quality is solid, and because nothing is high-rise, the developments keep their light and their privacy.
Price expectations
The Casares Costa offers some of the better value on this side of the Costa del Sol, which is a large part of its appeal. As a rough guide, two- and three-bedroom apartments and ground-floor homes typically run from the low-to-mid €200,000s up towards the €400,000s, depending on size, condition and view, with penthouses carrying a premium for that roof terrace. Villas span a much wider band — from roughly the high €400,000s for something modest into the low millions for the larger golf-front or sea-view homes — and the very top end near Finca Cortesín reaches well beyond that. Those are typical ranges, not a promise, and some homes here do come to market over-priced; we'll always tell you which ones and why before you fall for the view.
Beaches, golf & daily life
The Blue Flag beaches of the Casares Costa are roughly a kilometre and a half away — close enough to walk on a good day — with the La Sal chiringuito and Playa Ancha for long sandy strolls and a seafood lunch. Sabinillas and the marina at La Duquesa are about five minutes by car for restaurants, shops and a weekly market, while Estepona town, with its old quarter, is around ten kilometres east. Golf is everywhere: Casares Golf and Doña Julia on the doorstep, Finca Cortesín and the Sotogrande courses a short drive on. And the historic white village of Casares itself, with its hilltop castle and plaza, is fifteen minutes up into the Sierra Bermeja.
Schools & getting around
For families, the international schools sit in the surrounding towns rather than the village itself, with options around Estepona and San Pedro and the well-regarded Sotogrande International School all within a manageable run. The L-77 bus links Casares with Manilva, Sabinillas, Estepona, San Pedro and Marbella. Gibraltar airport is around thirty minutes by car for European flights, and Málaga airport sits about an hour east on the AP-7.
How we work in Casares del Sol - Casares Golf
We treat this corner of the coast as home, not just a postcode on a portal, so when we walk you round a Casares Golf villa or a Casares del Sol penthouse we'll point out the things the brochure won't: the orientation, the community fees, which phase has the best gardens and which terraces get the afternoon sun rather than the wind off the water. We sell honestly — if a home is asking too much, or the view it's priced for disappears the day the next plot is built on, you'll hear it from us first. Twenty years here means we know the lawyers, the surveyors and the community administrators worth trusting, and we'll stay alongside you long after the keys change hands. If you're weighing up a move to the Casares Costa and want a straight, local opinion on what's really worth buying, drop us a line.