Torreblanca Property Prices
What property costs in Torreblanca right now, from live listings.
What property costs in Torreblanca right now, from live listings.
01 · Snapshot
Median asking price, price per square metre and active inventory for sale in Torreblanca. EUR, public asking prices.
Source: Hometailor sale listings · n=50 · 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 Torreblanca median price per sqm. Data is refreshed daily.
02 · Budget
Half of the homes for sale in Torreblanca are priced between €310,000 and €748,750. The median is €504,500.
Source: Hometailor sale listings · n=50 · asking prices, EUR
03 · By type
Active inventory and pricing across 2 property types in Torreblanca.
| Type | Median price | €/sqm | Share | Listings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apartment | €310,000 | €4,339 | 50% | 25 | View properties |
| Villa | €1,175,000 | €4,317 | 26% | 13 | View properties |
Source: Hometailor sale listings · n=38 · median asking prices, active listings only
The median asking price in Torreblanca is €505k, and most homes for sale sit between €310k and €749k.
Torreblanca's residential market in July 2026 shows 50 properties listed at a median price of €505k and €3,958 per square metre, positioning the neighbourhood in the middle tier of Costa del Sol coastal markets. The average transaction value sits at €597k, pulled upward by a tail of larger detached homes, while the per-square-metre rate places Torreblanca above more densely built stretches such as Torrequebrada and Torremuelle, yet below hillside enclaves like Benalmadena Pueblo and the beachfront at El Faro. This is a market defined by proximity to the coast without commanding the premium attached to either elevation or immediate seafront access.
The price distribution spans from €175k to €1.9M, with the middle half of stock clustered between €310k and €749k. That range reflects a bifurcated inventory: the lower quartile comprises smaller apartments and older townhouses, while the upper end is anchored by standalone villas with private pools and larger plots. The gap between the first and third quartiles is wide enough to suggest that Torreblanca serves two distinct buyer profiles rather than a single homogeneous segment. The floor and ceiling prices indicate that entry-level stock exists for buyers willing to accept older finishes or reduced space, while the top end remains accessible compared to neighbouring markets where detached homes routinely exceed two million euros.
Apartments account for 50% of available stock and carry a median price of €310k at €4,339 per square metre, making them the dominant format and the natural entry point for most buyers. Villas represent 26% of listings, with a median of €1.18M and a per-square-metre rate of €4,317, a modest premium over apartments that reflects land value rather than construction quality. Penthouses and townhouses together make up the remaining quarter of inventory, at 12% and 12% respectively. The apartment segment skews toward two- and three-bedroom layouts in low-rise blocks built during the expansion of the Costa del Sol in the past two decades, while the villa stock tends toward older properties on the inland side of the main coast road. Buyers prioritising budget and convenience will find the apartment market liquid and varied; those seeking detached homes will face fewer choices but lower per-unit costs than in El Faro or the pueblo.
The data snapshot offers no evidence of directional momentum, but the structure of the market suggests a degree of segmentation that may insulate different price bands from uniform pressure. The apartment segment, with its higher turnover and lower ticket price, is likely more sensitive to shifts in financing conditions and buyer sentiment, while the villa market, smaller and more bespoke, may move independently based on the preferences of a narrower cohort. The presence of lower-priced alternatives within a few kilometres means Torreblanca must compete on attributes other than price alone, whether access, amenity, or the specific character of available stock.
07 · Analysis
A deeper look at how prices in Torreblanca 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 price across 50 active listings in Torreblanca as of July 2026. The median sits at €505k, while the arithmetic mean reaches €597k. The gap between these two measures matters: median represents the midpoint of the market, where half of all properties cost more and half cost less, making it less sensitive to a handful of expensive outliers. The mean, by contrast, can be pulled upward by a small number of high-value listings. For a neighbourhood where buyers want to understand the typical transaction, the median offers a clearer anchor. These figures draw from live asking-price data and update daily, so they reflect current seller expectations rather than historical trends or completed sales.
At €505k, Torreblanca positions itself in the mid-range of Costa del Sol coastal neighbourhoods. The price per square metre of €3,958 provides a second lens: it strips out the influence of property size and allows direct comparison across different types of home. The interquartile range tells a further story. The lower quartile sits at €310k, the upper at €749k. That span captures the middle half of the market and shows considerable variation in what buyers encounter. The cheapest listing starts at €175k, the most expensive at €1.9M. This wide bracket reflects a neighbourhood where apartments, penthouses, townhouses and villas all compete for attention, each appealing to different budgets and expectations. The per-square-metre figure suggests Torreblanca attracts buyers looking for space without paying the premium commanded by some of the Costa del Sol's more exclusive enclaves.
Apartments account for 50% of available stock and carry a median asking price of €310k. The per-square-metre rate for apartments is €4,339, slightly above the neighbourhood average. This premium likely reflects the fact that many apartment listings occupy smaller footprints, and smaller units typically command higher rates per square metre even when absolute prices remain accessible. For buyers seeking entry into Torreblanca or a lock-up-and-leave base on the coast, the apartment segment offers the lowest threshold in cash terms.
Villas represent 26% of listings and sit at the opposite end of the spectrum. The median villa asks €1.18M, more than three times the apartment median, yet the per-square-metre rate of €4,317 is only marginally higher than that of apartments. This narrower gap per square metre indicates that villa buyers are paying primarily for scale, land and privacy rather than a dramatic jump in construction quality or location prestige. The villa segment caters to buyers who prioritise outdoor space, separation from neighbours and room for families or long-term residence.
Penthouses make up 12% of the market, and townhouses account for 12%. Both segments occupy the middle ground in terms of price and lifestyle, bridging the gap between compact apartments and detached villas. Penthouses typically offer terrace space and views without the maintenance burden of a garden, while townhouses provide multi-level living and often a small private patio or courtyard. Neither segment dominates the Torreblanca inventory, but their presence adds variety for buyers who find pure apartments too limiting and standalone villas either unnecessary or beyond budget.
Torreblanca sits within a cluster of neighbourhoods along this stretch of the Costa del Sol, and its per-square-metre pricing falls in the middle of the local hierarchy. Torrequebrada, Torremuelle and Arroyo de la Miel all register lower per-square-metre rates, meaning buyers can acquire more space for the same outlay or pay less for a comparable property. These areas tend to attract budget-conscious buyers or those prioritising size and practicality over specific location attributes.
In the other direction, El Faro and Benalmadena Pueblo command higher per-square-metre prices. El Faro benefits from direct seafront access and a reputation for quieter, more established residential streets. Benalmadena Pueblo occupies elevated ground inland, offering views, a traditional village centre and a different aesthetic from the beachside developments. Buyers willing to pay the premium in those neighbourhoods are often seeking either frontline coastal position or the character of a hillside setting. Torreblanca, by contrast, offers a middle path: close to the coast without the highest seafront premiums, and more accessible than the elevated pueblo while still within easy reach of beaches, transport links and amenities.
The spread between €310k and €749k underscores the importance of defining what type of property matters most. A buyer focused on apartments will encounter a market centered well below the neighbourhood median, while someone searching for a villa should expect to operate in the upper half of the range or beyond. The type mix also signals that Torreblanca serves multiple buyer profiles simultaneously: retirees seeking low-maintenance apartments, families wanting villas with gardens, and investors targeting rental yield from penthouses or townhouses.
One limitation must be acknowledged. These figures represent asking prices, not completed transaction prices. Sellers in any market set initial asking levels based on aspiration, comparable listings and agent advice, but final sale prices often settle lower after negotiation. The gap between asking and achieved price varies by property type, season and individual seller motivation. Buyers should treat these numbers as a starting point for understanding the market structure rather than a precise guide to what they will pay. The data shows where the market is positioned in July 2026, but it cannot predict how much room exists for negotiation on any given property or whether a particular listing has been priced optimistically or conservatively.