Nueva Andalucia's Golf Valley town houses — gated, walkable, built around the fairways.
Town houses here are the practical middle ground between an apartment and a villa, and most of them sit inside established gated communities woven through the Golf Valley. You'll find them clustered around the courses — Aloha Pueblo and Aloha Real near Aloha Golf, El Naranjal and Los Naranjos, La Alzambra and Los Altos de Aloha — usually arranged over two or three floors with a private terrace, a patch of garden, and a shared pool kept by the community. Many are within a short walk of Aloha and the Centro Plaza shops, which is part of why families settle on them.
Expect two to four bedrooms, the larger semi-detached ones living almost like small villas with their own plot. The mix runs from classic whitewashed Andalusian terraces to fully reworked contemporary homes, so condition and finish vary widely on the same street — and we'll always tell you which ones are priced ahead of what they actually offer. As a rough guide, a two-bedroom in a well-kept community generally starts in the mid-€400,000s, while a larger three- or four-bed in a sought-after enclave typically runs into the €800,000s and beyond, occasionally past €1.3m for the best-positioned, frontline-golf homes. Buyers tend to be families wanting space without villa upkeep, and golfers after a lock-up-and-leave base close to the first tee.
Marbella's Golf Valley — quiet streets, three championship courses, family life.
Nueva Andalucía sits in the natural bowl behind Puerto Banús, bordered by the Sierra Blanca mountains to the north and the AP-7 to the south. The neighbourhood was master-planned in the early 1970s around the three golf courses that still anchor it: Aloha to the east, Las Brisas at the centre and Los Naranjos to the west. Forty years later, the trees have matured, the streets are quiet, and the area has settled into being one of Marbella's most desirable family addresses.
Who lives in Nueva Andalucía
The neighbourhood skews international and family-led — Dutch, Belgian, Scandinavian, British and increasingly Middle-Eastern owners. Many are full-time residents, often with children at Aloha College or Swans International School (both inside the neighbourhood). The pace is calm: a working pueblo at Aloha with a Saturday market, a handful of restaurants and the Centro Plaza shopping centre on the southern edge. It's the kind of place where you do the morning school run by bike.
Architecture & villa types
You'll find three broad villa generations here. The Andalusian-style 1980s villas on big plots, often with terracotta roofs and beamed ceilings — beautiful bones, frequently in need of renovation. The 'transition' 1990s and 2000s villas that updated the layout but kept some traditional language. And the contemporary new-builds of the last decade — open-plan, oversized glazing, infinity pools, often architect-led. Plot sizes run from around 1,000 m² in the lower neighbourhoods to 3,000 m²+ in Las Brisas and La Cerquilla.
Price expectations
Entry is around €1.8M for an older 3-to-4-bed villa needing some work. €3M to €6M is the most active band, where you'd expect a 4-to-5-bed modern family villa with a pool and views over the Golf Valley. Above €8M you're typically into frontline-golf positions or recent architectural new-builds in Las Brisas. The top of the market runs to €15M and beyond. Per square metre, Nueva Andalucía has appreciated roughly 8–10% a year over the last five years.
Lifestyle, schools & getting around
The neighbourhood is built for low-key, day-to-day living rather than marina nightlife. Aloha College is the largest international school inside Nueva Andalucía, with the British curriculum and consistent Russell Group outcomes; Swans International is just on the edge. The Centro Plaza and El Corte Inglés are minutes away, the marina is 5 minutes by car, and Málaga airport is a comfortable 45-minute drive. The beach at Puerto Banús is 7–9 minutes — close enough to be casual, far enough to be quiet.
How we work in Nueva Andalucía
We know this neighbourhood street by street. Several of our properties never reach the open market — they're shared first with our newsletter and the families we already represent. If you'd like a private list of off-market villas in Nueva Andalucía, just drop us a line.