PROPERTY G U I D E Currencies Direct • Let’s talk currency
Sun is shining
The Costa property market is on the up.
By Kat Ashton HE summer sun has really shone on the Costa del Sol real estate market this summer. Of the five Spanish municipalities boasting the highest number of property deals so far this year, two - Malaga and Marbella - are at the heart of the Costa del Sol. Madrid, Barcelona and Sevilla make up the others. There has been a 12 per cent surge in local property sales since 2016, with Marbella and Estepona leading the march. In the first three months of this year alone, more than 1,000 properties were sold in Marbella, 97 more than in the same period last year. Sales in Marbella have consistently risen since 2013, but with few new developments taking place, most are existing homes. That said, a new €200m luxury housing estate - with 98 new homes added to Marbella’s Golden Mile by 2019 - looks certain to provide a further fillip to the town’s property market. But not to be outshone by its near neighbour, Estepona with more than 940 properties sold locally from January - March this year has recorded an impressive 50 per cent
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sales increase on 2016. Meanwhile Mijas Council has also recently revealed British property developers are set to invest hundreds of millions of euros in the Mijas Costa area over the next decade. Additionally a whopping €10 million has been spent on new development in the area and the number of approved licences for housing projects has increased. One development will see more than 100 new properties in La Cala de Mijas completed probably within months. This project is the biggest housing development in Andalucia this decade and is backed by Taylor Wimpey PLC, who built more than 300 new homes in Spain last year. Further positive figures are spelled out in Terra Meridiana’s 2017 Residential Property Market Report for the Costa del Sol which reveals that of all the homes sold nationwide in 2016, nearly one fifth were in in Andalucia. The average price for property across Spain is also rising after the huge setbacks since the 2008 recession, with 5.3 per cent increases in the first quarter. Britons remain the largest group of overseas investors in Spanish property despite the uncertainty created by the Brexit plans.
MARKET LEADERS: Malaga (top) and Marbella.