Mijas Golf Property Prices
What property costs in Mijas Golf right now, from live listings.
What property costs in Mijas Golf right now, from live listings.
01 · Snapshot
Median asking price, price per square metre and active inventory for sale in Mijas Golf. 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 Mijas Golf median price per sqm. Data is refreshed daily.
02 · Budget
Half of the homes for sale in Mijas Golf are priced between €328,750 and €1,035,000. The median is €386,500.
Source: Hometailor sale listings · n=50 · asking prices, EUR
03 · By type
Active inventory and pricing across 2 property types in Mijas Golf.
| Type | Median price | €/sqm | Share | Listings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apartment | €304,975 | €3,109 | 36% | 18 | View properties |
| Villa | €1,300,000 | €3,941 | 36% | 18 | View properties |
Source: Hometailor sale listings · n=36 · median asking prices, active listings only
The median asking price in Mijas Golf is €387k, and most homes for sale sit between €329k and €1.03M.
Mijas Golf recorded a median sale price of €387k in July 2026, with 50 properties available and an average price per square metre of €3,267. The market sits in the mid-range of Costa del Sol golf developments, offering access to fairway-adjacent living without the premium attached to frontline courses or gated resort complexes. The average transaction value of €725k suggests a mix weighted towards larger detached homes rather than compact apartments, and the gap between median and mean indicates that higher-value stock pulls the distribution upward.
The interquartile range runs from €329k at the lower quartile to €1.03M at the upper, a span that reflects genuine variety in what is available. Entry-level stock begins at €249k, typically smaller apartments or older townhouses requiring refurbishment, while the top of the range reaches €2.42M for modern villas with golf views and private pools. The width of this distribution is narrower than in mixed-use coastal towns but broader than in single-developer resort enclaves, pointing to an established neighbourhood with organic turnover rather than phased new-build releases. Buyers prepared to move above the median gain access to detached homes with land, while those constrained by budget will find the lower quartile dominated by apartments and older terraced stock.
Apartments account for 36% of available properties, with a median price of €305k and a per-square-metre cost of €3,109. Villas represent 36% of stock, priced at a median of €1.3M and €3,941 per square metre. The villa segment commands a premium of less than ten per cent per square metre over apartments, a modest gap that reflects the age and specification of much of the detached stock rather than new construction. Penthouses make up 14% of listings and townhouses 14%, rounding out a market that caters to buyers seeking space and golf access rather than beachfront proximity. For context, Las Lagunas and La Cala Hills both command higher per-square-metre prices, positioning Mijas Golf as a more accessible alternative within the broader Mijas Costa corridor.
The data supports a view of Mijas Golf as a mature, mid-market enclave with limited new supply and a buyer base split between retirees seeking low-maintenance apartments and families or investors targeting villas with rental potential. The absence of extreme outliers at the top end suggests that trophy properties have either sold or are held off-market, leaving a functional rather than aspirational inventory. The modest per-square-metre premium for villas over apartments indicates that buyers are paying for plot size and privacy rather than cutting-edge design or resort amenities. For investors, the rental appeal hinges on golf tourism and long-term lets to northern European residents, with yields likely compressed by the age of stock and competition from newer developments inland.
07 · Analysis
A deeper look at how prices in Mijas Golf 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 draw from active asking-price listings in Mijas Golf as of July 2026. The headline price is the median rather than the mean because a small number of high-value properties can pull an average upward in ways that misrepresent the typical transaction. In this market, the median sits at €387k while the mean reaches €725k, a gap that reflects the presence of premium villas at the upper end of the stock. Median values offer a clearer picture of what a buyer in the middle of the distribution will encounter. All numbers update daily as new listings appear and others are withdrawn or sold.
The median asking price of €387k positions Mijas Golf in the mid-range tier of Costa del Sol golf-adjacent residential areas. The per-square-metre rate of €3,267 reflects a market where buyers pay for proximity to fairways and a degree of seclusion without crossing into the premium coastal or hillside enclaves. The interquartile range runs from €329k at the lower quartile to €1.03M at the upper, a span wide enough to accommodate both compact apartments and detached villas within the same neighbourhood boundary. The floor of €249k and ceiling of €2.42M indicate that the market includes entry-level flats alongside substantial family homes, though the bulk of inventory clusters well below the top end. This spread suggests a mixed community rather than a single-tier development.
Apartments account for 36% of the available stock and carry a median asking price of €305k, with a per-square-metre rate of €3,109. These units typically serve as either permanent residences for downsizers or second homes for buyers who want golf access without garden maintenance. The per-square-metre figure sits just below the neighbourhood average, indicating that apartment buyers trade some space efficiency for the overall location premium.
Villas represent 36% of listings and command a median of €1.3M, priced at €3,941 per square metre. The higher absolute price reflects larger floor plans, private plots, and often direct views over the courses. The per-square-metre rate exceeds that of apartments by a modest margin, suggesting that the villa premium derives more from total size and land than from a dramatic quality gap. These properties attract families and retirees seeking standalone homes within a managed environment.
Penthouses make up 14% of the market, while townhouses account for 14%. Both segments sit between the apartment and villa tiers in terms of price and format, offering middle-ground solutions for buyers who want more space than a flat but less upkeep than a detached home.
Within the immediate surroundings, Mijas Golf prices per square metre fall below those in Las Lagunas and La Cala Hills, two areas where either denser infrastructure or elevated positions command a premium. Las Lagunas benefits from closer proximity to commercial amenities and transport links, which narrows the gap between asking prices and actual convenience. La Cala Hills occupies higher ground with broader coastal sightlines, a feature that consistently lifts per-square-metre values across the Costa del Sol. Mijas Golf itself trades some of that elevation and urban access for direct course frontage and a quieter profile, a trade-off that shows up clearly in the relative pricing. Buyers choosing this neighbourhood over its neighbours are typically prioritising golf infrastructure and a lower-density feel over walkability or sea views.
The range between €329k and €1.03M tells a buyer that Mijas Golf supports multiple budget tiers within a single postcode, but it also means that headline figures can obscure significant variation. A property at the lower quartile will likely be a smaller apartment in an older block, while one at the upper quartile may be a four-bedroom villa with a pool and garden. The type mix matters: with 36% apartments and 36% villas, the neighbourhood does not lean heavily toward either format, so a buyer's choice of property type will shape the experience as much as the location itself.
It is important to remember that these are asking prices, not completed sale prices. Sellers and agents set asks based on aspiration as much as evidence, and the final transaction often settles below the listed figure after negotiation. The gap between ask and sale can vary with market conditions, individual property condition, and the urgency of both parties. A buyer should treat these numbers as a starting point for understanding the market structure rather than a firm guide to what they will actually pay. The per-square-metre rate of €3,267 offers a useful benchmark for comparing similar properties, but it averages across different ages, specifications, and positions within the neighbourhood, so two homes at the same rate can differ substantially in quality or setting.