Insights/Costa Blanca vs Marbella: Which Is Right for Your Property Purchase?
Costa Blanca vs Marbella: Which Is Right for Your Property Purchase?

Buying Guide · 12 min read

Costa Blanca vs Marbella: Which Is Right for Your Property Purchase?

31 May 2026 · Hansson & Hertzell

Both coasts attract international buyers — but they are very different markets. Here is an honest comparison of price, lifestyle, buyer profile, rental yields, and long-term prospects.

The Costa Blanca and the Costa del Sol — with Marbella at its heart — are Spain's two most popular destinations for international property buyers. Both offer sunshine, good connections, and a large existing expat community. But they serve different buyers at different price points with different lifestyle priorities.

This is not a question of which is better. It is a question of which suits you.

Price: A Fundamental Difference

Marbella / Costa del Sol: Entry-level apartments in Estepona start around €250,000–€350,000. Marbella itself starts around €400,000 for a 2-bedroom apartment in a reasonable location, rising to €700,000–€1.5M+ for modern villas in Nueva Andalucía and Sierra Blanca. La Zagaleta and other elite gated communities begin at €3M+. The Golden Mile and Puerto Banús represent the most expensive real estate in Spain outside central Madrid and Barcelona.

Costa Blanca: Entry-level 2-bedroom apartments in Torrevieja and Orihuela Costa start at €100,000–€180,000. Good-quality villas with pools in Jávea, Moraira, and Altea: €350,000–€800,000. The northern Costa Blanca (Jávea, Moraira) is the most expensive sub-market and can reach €1.5M–€3M+ for premium sea-view properties. Even so, equivalent spec buys significantly more on the Costa Blanca than in Marbella.

The price gap is real: For the same budget, the Costa Blanca typically delivers a larger property, more modern build quality (relative to the price point), and more space — both indoor and outdoor.

Lifestyle: Glamour vs Authenticity

Marbella is aspirational. Puerto Banús, the Marbella Club, the Golden Mile — these are genuinely international luxury experiences. The restaurants are excellent, the nightlife is significant, the shopping is sophisticated. It attracts a global wealthy class: Saudi and Gulf royalty, Russian and Eastern European money, Latin American business families, global footballers and celebrities. The aspiration is part of the product.

The downside: it is a performance. Much of Marbella caters to people who want to be seen. Outside peak season, the town is much quieter — even some premium restaurants close in winter. Traffic on the N-340 is gridlocked in summer. Property prices reflect the image as much as the reality.

Costa Blanca is more understated. The northern part (Jávea, Moraira, Altea) attracts affluent northern Europeans — Scandinavians, Dutch, Germans, British — who want quality of life without performance. Good restaurants, excellent local food markets, hiking, sailing, and golf. A genuine year-round community. The southern part (Torrevieja, Orihuela Costa) is more mass-market, with a very large British and Northern European expat population.

The Costa Blanca does not have Marbella's glamour. It has something different: a real quality of life that does not require money to access.

Climate

Both coasts have excellent Mediterranean climates, but there are differences:

Costa del Sol (Marbella): The Sierra Nevada mountain range creates a microclimate that traps warmth. Marbella has more rain than the Costa Blanca (590mm/year vs 300mm/year for the southern Costa Blanca), more cloud in winter, and can be cold when the wind comes off the mountains. It is genuinely warm even in winter.

Costa Blanca: The southern Costa Blanca (Torrevieja, Guardamar) is one of the sunniest places in Europe — 320+ days of sun per year, very low rainfall (some years under 200mm). The northern Costa Blanca is slightly less extreme but still exceptional. The microclimate is often cited as the driest and sunniest in continental Europe.

For pure sunshine hours, the Costa Blanca (particularly the south) wins. For warmth and rain-free winters, Marbella is competitive.

Rental Market and Yields

Marbella: High peak season rents — a 3-bedroom villa in prime Marbella can command €5,000–€15,000/week in July–August. But the season is concentrated (June–September), vacancy in winter is high, management costs are significant, and the luxury rental market is competitive. Gross yields of 3–5% are typical for premium properties. Entry costs are high.

Costa Blanca: The rental market is less glamorous but more consistent. A good property near the beach in Jávea or Moraira can achieve €1,500–€4,000/week in peak season. Gross yields in the 4–6% range are achievable for well-located properties with pools. The season is extending — October and May–June are increasingly strong rental months. Entry costs are lower, which helps yield calculation.

For yield-focused investors, the Costa Blanca often outperforms Marbella on a percentage basis, even if absolute rental income is lower. For capital appreciation play on a luxury product, Marbella has historically been stronger.

Infrastructure and Connectivity

Marbella: Served by Málaga Airport — one of Spain's best connected airports, with year-round direct flights to most major European cities. Journey time to Marbella: 45–60 minutes. Excellent road network. High-speed rail (AVE) to Málaga from Madrid (2.5 hours) being extended towards Marbella but not yet complete.

Costa Blanca: Alicante Airport — very well connected, particularly to northern Europe (Scandinavia, Netherlands, Germany, UK). Ryan Air, easyJet, Vueling, TUI, and others serve it year-round. Journey time from airport to the coast: 20–60 minutes depending on location. Valencia Airport (90 minutes from Jávea) provides additional options. Road network is excellent; AVE from Alicante to Madrid takes 2.5 hours.

Neither coast has poor connectivity. The edge depends on which specific European cities you need direct flights to.

Healthcare

Both coasts have good private healthcare options. Alicante, Benidorm, and the surrounding area have strong private hospital infrastructure (Hospital Vithas, Hospital HLA Vinalopó). Marbella has Hospital Quirónsalud Marbella — one of Spain's top private hospitals.

For serious medical care, proximity to a major city (Alicante or Málaga) matters more than the coast you choose.

Which Buyer Suits Which Coast?

Choose the Costa Blanca if:

  • Your budget is €150,000–€800,000 and you want maximum value
  • You want a genuine year-round community with strong Scandinavian and Northern European character
  • You prioritise sunshine hours and dry climate above all else
  • You want solid rental income at a realistic price point
  • You want quality of life over status

Choose Marbella if:

  • Your budget is €500,000+ and luxury positioning matters to you
  • You are buying partly for image, network, and aspirational lifestyle
  • You want the best short-term rental premium income in absolute terms
  • You have strong Latin American, Gulf, or Russian network ties (as Marbella serves these markets heavily)
  • Málaga airport connectivity specifically serves you better than Alicante

Hansson & Hertzell's View

We specialise in the Costa Blanca and are honest that we are not the experts on Marbella's nuances. What we can say from years of working with buyers across both considerations: clients who move to the Costa Blanca are, on balance, more consistently satisfied with their quality of daily life. Marbella attracts buyers looking for the best of everything — and for those whose budget supports that, it delivers. But many buyers come to the Costa Blanca having started their search in Marbella and find the value, community, and lifestyle here more compelling than they expected.

The comparison is worth making yourself. Visit both. Spend time in each. The right choice will usually be obvious after a week in each location.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Costa Blanca cheaper than Marbella?
Yes, significantly. Entry-level apartments in the Costa Blanca start at €100,000–€180,000, versus €250,000–€400,000+ in Marbella. For equivalent budgets, you typically get a larger, more modern property on the Costa Blanca.
Which has better weather — Costa Blanca or Marbella?
The southern Costa Blanca (Torrevieja area) gets 320+ days of sunshine per year with very low rainfall — one of Europe's driest microclimates. Marbella is warmer on average in winter but receives more rain (590mm vs 300mm/year). For pure sunshine hours, the Costa Blanca south wins.
Which is better for rental income — Costa Blanca or Marbella?
Marbella commands higher absolute rents for luxury properties. The Costa Blanca typically offers better gross yields (4–6% vs 3–5%) because entry prices are lower. Marbella's season is more concentrated in peak summer; the Costa Blanca season is extending year-round.
Are there more British buyers on the Costa Blanca or Marbella?
Both coasts have large British communities. The Costa Blanca, particularly the south around Torrevieja and Orihuela Costa, has one of the highest concentrations of British expatriates in Spain. Marbella's international mix is broader — significant Gulf, Russian/Eastern European, and Latin American buyer populations alongside British buyers.
Which has better airport connections?
Both coasts are well connected. Málaga Airport (Marbella) has more total flights and year-round connections to more European cities. Alicante Airport (Costa Blanca) has excellent connections particularly to northern Europe — Scandinavia, Netherlands, Germany, UK. For most northern European buyers, Alicante serves as well as Málaga.
Which coast is better for golf?
Marbella has the edge in sheer number and prestige of golf courses — over 70 courses within an hour, including some of Spain's most famous (La Cañada, Valderrama for the wider area). The Costa Blanca has 20+ courses, including La Manga Club (Murcia) and Alicante Golf. Serious golfers often give Marbella the edge; recreational golfers are well served on both coasts.
Is Marbella safer than the Costa Blanca?
Both are safe destinations by international standards. The Costa Blanca's crime rate is very low for a Mediterranean tourist destination. Marbella has its own well-documented issues with certain segments of its real estate market (historical links to money laundering requiring careful due diligence) — nothing that should concern a legitimate buyer using a good lawyer.
Which coast has a better expat community for Scandinavians?
The Costa Blanca, and specifically the northern towns of Jávea, Moraira, and Altea, have a disproportionately large Scandinavian presence. Swedish and Norwegian buyers are extremely well established here, with Scandinavian restaurants, social clubs, and networks. Marbella has Scandinavian buyers but a smaller proportional presence.
Can I get a better return on investment on the Costa Blanca vs Marbella?
It depends on your definition of return. Costa Blanca offers better yield (rental income relative to purchase price) at most price points. Marbella has historically offered stronger capital appreciation on premium properties — the luxury segment commands a brand premium. For income-focused investors, Costa Blanca; for capital appreciation on premium assets, both have merit.
What is the lifestyle difference between northern and southern Costa Blanca?
The northern Costa Blanca (Jávea, Moraira, Altea, Calpe) is quieter, more upscale, and more Scandinavian/Dutch/German in character. The southern coast (Torrevieja, Orihuela Costa) is more British, more affordable, more built-up, and busier with package tourism. Two quite different environments within the same broad destination.
Is the Costa Blanca or Marbella better for year-round living?
Both work well year-round, but the Costa Blanca's southern area has the edge in winter sunshine. Marbella can feel more "alive" year-round in terms of restaurants and social life in its core. The northern Costa Blanca quiets significantly in winter — which appeals to some buyers and not others.
Are there luxury properties on the Costa Blanca comparable to Marbella?
Yes, particularly in Jávea, Moraira, and the Altea hills — where €1M–€3M+ villas exist with sea views, infinity pools, and high-specification finishes. However, the Costa Blanca does not replicate Marbella's ultra-premium €5M–€20M+ segment. For true luxury at the top end, Marbella has more inventory.
How do healthcare standards compare between the two coasts?
Both coasts have good private hospital infrastructure. Hospital Quirónsalud Marbella is one of Spain's top private hospitals. Alicante has several strong private hospitals (Vithas, HLA Vinalopó). For routine medical care, both are excellent. For complex specialist care, Alicante and Málaga (the nearest major cities) offer comparable resources.
Should I visit both coasts before deciding?
Absolutely, if your budget could work for either. The lifestyle difference is felt rather than described — spend a few days in Marbella and a few in the northern Costa Blanca and you will usually have a clear sense of which environment suits you better. The two coasts attract quite different personalities.
Does Hansson & Hertzell operate in Marbella?
No. We specialise exclusively in the Costa Blanca, from Dénia in the north to Pilar de la Horadada in the south. We can give an honest comparative view but are not the right agents for a Marbella purchase. For Costa Blanca, we are your team.
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