El Faro Property Prices
What property costs in El Faro right now, from live listings.
What property costs in El Faro right now, from live listings.
01 · Snapshot
Median asking price, price per square metre and active inventory for sale in El Faro. EUR, public asking prices.
Source: Hometailor sale listings · n=29 · asking prices, EUR
Figures come from active sale listings with a valid asking price and built size. We lead with the median because it is not skewed by a handful of prime homes. Setting premiums compare each segment to the El Faro median price per sqm. Data is refreshed daily.
02 · Budget
Half of the homes for sale in El Faro are priced between €435,000 and €799,950. The median is €532,000.
Source: Hometailor sale listings · n=29 · asking prices, EUR
03 · By type
Active inventory and pricing across 2 property types in El Faro.
| Type | Median price | €/sqm | Share | Listings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apartment | €442,000 | €4,575 | 48% | 14 | View properties |
| Villa | €749,475 | €4,109 | 48% | 14 | View properties |
Source: Hometailor sale listings · n=28 · median asking prices, active listings only
06 · Value nearby
Want the same coast for less? These places are a short drive from El Faro and cost less per square metre.
Source: Hometailor sale listings · straight-line distance · median €/sqm vs El Faro
The median asking price in El Faro is €532k, and most homes for sale sit between €435k and €800k.
El Faro's residential market in July 2026 presents 29 properties at a median price of €532k and a square-metre valuation of €4,400. This positions the neighbourhood in the mid-range of Costa del Sol coastal offerings: more accessible than Benalmadena Pueblo and Benalmadena Costa to the immediate vicinity, yet commanding a premium over neighbouring Torreblanca, Torrequebrada, and Torremuelle. The median sits comfortably below the mean of €817k, indicating that while the bulk of stock clusters in the sub-million bracket, a minority of higher-value properties pulls the average upward.
The price distribution reveals a market with considerable range. The lower quartile opens at €435k, while the upper quartile reaches €800k, a span that reflects both entry-level coastal apartments and larger detached homes. The floor of €250k marks the threshold for buyers seeking the most compact or dated units, while the ceiling of €3.67M captures a small cohort of premium villas or seafront penthouses. This breadth suggests El Faro accommodates both first-time coastal buyers and those seeking more substantial properties, though the interquartile range indicates that half the market sits within a relatively tight band between the lower and upper quartiles.
Property type composition is almost evenly split: apartments account for 48% of available stock and villas for 48%, with penthouses making up the remaining 3%. Apartments carry a median price of €442k and trade at €4,575 per square metre, while villas sit at a median of €749k and €4,109 per square metre. The lower per-square-metre cost for villas reflects the typical dynamic in which larger floor plans dilute unit pricing, even as absolute prices rise. For buyers prioritising space and privacy, the villa segment offers better value on a square-metre basis, though the entry price is nearly double that of the typical apartment. The apartment stock, meanwhile, serves those seeking lower capital outlay or lock-up-and-leave convenience, with pricing that remains competitive against similar coastal enclaves.
The data snapshot offers no evidence of momentum or direction, only structure. El Faro's pricing sits between more affordable neighbouring markets and the premium tiers immediately adjacent, suggesting it occupies a middle band within the Benalmadena corridor. The near-parity between apartment and villa inventory implies the neighbourhood has developed with both density and detached housing, rather than skewing heavily toward one typology. For investors, the interquartile concentration indicates that liquidity, if it exists, likely centres on properties priced between €435k and €800k, while the upper tail remains thin. The villa segment's per-square-metre discount may appeal to buyers seeking larger footprints, though the absolute price gap means the two segments serve distinct capital bases.
07 · Analysis
A deeper look at how prices in El Faro are calculated, what moves them, and how to read the numbers above. Figures update daily; the analysis is refreshed when the market moves materially.
The figures in this analysis reflect the median asking prices of properties actively listed for sale in El Faro as of July 2026. The median represents the midpoint of the market: half of all properties are priced above it, half below. This measure is more robust than the mean when a small number of high-value listings can distort the picture. In El Faro, the median stands at €532k, while the mean reaches €817k, a gap that indicates the presence of several premium-priced properties pulling the average upward. All data derive from live listings and update daily, meaning they capture seller expectations rather than completed transaction prices.
The median asking price of €532k positions El Faro in the mid-to-upper segment of the Costa del Sol market. At €4,400 per square metre, the neighbourhood reflects pricing typical of established coastal areas with proximity to amenities and the sea. The interquartile range runs from €435k at the lower quartile to €800k at the upper, a span that reveals a market serving both compact apartment buyers and those seeking larger detached homes. The floor of €250k and ceiling of €3.67M mark the extremes, with the latter representing a small number of high-specification properties that widen the overall range. With 29 active listings, the sample is modest but sufficient to identify the neighbourhood's pricing structure. The gap between median and mean suggests that while the typical property sits just above half a million euros, a subset of villas and larger units commands substantially more.
Apartments account for roughly 48% of the active stock and carry a median asking price of €442k. At €4,575 per square metre, flats in El Faro price slightly above the neighbourhood average, a pattern often seen where apartment stock skews toward modern complexes or units with sea views. The per-square-metre premium suggests that buyers are paying for location, amenity access, or both, rather than simply floor area. Apartments in this bracket typically serve owner-occupiers and long-term investors rather than the budget end of the market.
Villas represent about 48% of listings and show a median of €749k, nearly double the apartment median. Priced at €4,109 per square metre, detached homes trade at a per-unit discount compared to apartments, a common inversion in coastal markets where larger plots and older construction offset the appeal of private outdoor space. The villa segment in El Faro spans a wide range, from older townhouse-style properties to contemporary builds with pools and gardens. The lower per-square-metre cost reflects the fact that buyers are purchasing land and privacy, not just enclosed living area.
A small fraction of the stock, around 3%, consists of penthouses, though the limited count means this segment does not define the neighbourhood's character. The dominance of apartments and villas in near-equal measure indicates a mixed residential profile, with neither type monopolising supply.
El Faro sits in the middle of a pricing gradient along this stretch of the Costa del Sol. To the immediate surroundings, Torreblanca, Torrequebrada, and Torremuelle all register lower per-square-metre asking prices, positioning El Faro as a step up in cost within the local cluster. These neighbouring areas tend to offer similar coastal access but may feature older stock, fewer communal facilities, or less favourable topography. Buyers willing to move a short distance can find more accessible entry points without leaving the broader Benalmadena municipality.
In the opposite direction, Benalmadena Pueblo and Benalmadena Costa command higher per-square-metre prices. The former benefits from hillside views, a historic village centre, and a reputation for charm; the latter from beachfront proximity and a concentration of dining and leisure infrastructure. El Faro's pricing reflects its position between these poles: more expensive than the utilitarian residential pockets to the west, less so than the premium coastal and elevated zones to the east and north. For buyers prioritising value per square metre over postcode prestige, this intermediate position can be an advantage.
The interquartile spread from €435k to €800k signals that El Faro accommodates a range of budgets within a single neighbourhood, though the lower bound still sits above entry-level coastal pricing. Buyers at the lower quartile will likely be looking at smaller apartments or older villas requiring refurbishment, while those at the upper quartile gain access to modern builds, larger plots, or premium finishes. The near-parity in apartment and villa stock means choice is available in both categories, though the villa median of €749k will exclude buyers constrained to the lower half of the market.
It is important to remember that these figures represent asking prices, not sold prices. Sellers in coastal markets often list optimistically, and the gap between ask and final sale can be significant, particularly for properties that have sat on the market for months. The median and quartiles provide a snapshot of seller sentiment, not a guarantee of transaction value. Buyers should treat these numbers as a starting point for negotiation rather than a fixed benchmark. The modest listing count of 29 also means that a handful of new instructions or withdrawals can shift the median noticeably from month to month, so tracking the data over several updates is prudent before drawing firm conclusions about value.