Málaga is no longer the city you fly through to reach a resort. It is the destination. A UNESCO-listed old town, a coastline that stretches east and west, a tech corridor drawing international companies, and a lifestyle
Málaga is no longer the city you fly through to reach a resort. It is the destination. A UNESCO-listed old town, a coastline that stretches east and west, a tech corridor drawing international companies, and a lifestyle that European cities cannot replicate at any price. Luxury property in Málaga means something different here: not gated compounds removed from life, but addresses woven into one of Europe's most alive cities.
The numbers tell part of the story. Málaga airport connects directly to over 130 destinations. The city ranks consistently among Europe's most liveable for quality of life, sunshine hours, and cost relative to northern capitals. But the numbers miss what matters: the sensation of arriving somewhere that has its own momentum, its own culture, its own gravitational pull.
International buyers, particularly from the Netherlands, the UK, Scandinavia, and the Gulf States, have recognised Málaga as a market that combines lifestyle with long-term capital logic. Supply of quality residential property in prime locations remains structurally constrained. Demand from international buyers, digital nomads, and corporate relocations keeps growing. The result is a market where the right property at the right position continues to appreciate.
The city divides into distinct submarkets. The historic centre and Soho attract buyers who want to be inside the city's cultural life, walking distance from the Picasso Museum, the Pompidou, and the port. Pedregalejo and El Palo, the old fishermen's quarters to the east, offer protected neighbourhood character and a scarcity of new supply that keeps values firm. The western corridor towards Torremolinos and Fuengirola delivers newer product at more accessible entry points, with the Cercanías train connecting the whole arc to the city centre in under twenty minutes.
Luxury apartments in Málaga city start from around 500.000 euros for quality product in a good position. Penthouses with sea views and rooftop terraces range from 800.000 to several million. The top of the market, represented in my portfolio by Octavia, reaches 6.45 million for positions that cannot be replicated.
The Costa del Sol earns its name. Málaga consistently records over 300 days of sun annually.
Málaga airport connects Europe, the Gulf, and North America, making access effortless year-round.
The Cercanías rail line integrates the entire coastal arc, from the airport through Torremolinos to Fuengirola.
Buying luxury property in Málaga as a foreigner is straightforward when the sequence is correct. You need an NIE number, a Spanish bank account, and independent legal representation before any commitment is made. The full process from first viewing to key handover typically takes between eight and sixteen weeks for existing properties, and longer for new builds where the construction is still ongoing.
Budget 12 to 14 percent above the asking price for all acquisition costs: 7 percent transfer tax on resale properties, 10 percent IVA on new builds, plus notary, registration and legal fees. This is the number that surprises buyers who work without a local advisor.
Aluma Real Estate is a luxury property advisory based in Málaga, operated by Thomas te Raaij and backed by the Baerz & Co international network. My role is simple: I represent the buyer, not the seller. That means I select only properties that meet the standard I would apply to my own family, I negotiate with the full picture of what comparable properties have actually sold for, and I coordinate the legal and logistical process in your language.
All consultations are free. My fee is covered by the standard market commission, meaning you pay no more by working with a buyer's advisor than you would buying directly. The difference is entirely on the quality of the outcome.
Free consultation, no obligations. I work for you, not the seller.