Torreblanca sea-view homes with ground-floor, apartment and penthouse options
Fuengirola — Torreblanca, Costa del Sol
- 6 active units create more choice than the smaller Torreblanca sibling page
- Ground-floor, apartment and penthouse formats make privacy and terrace checks central
- 2-4 bedrooms and 82-188 m² suit buyers comparing guest use and longer stays
- Beach is listed 1.7 km away, so this is elevated Torreblanca rather than beach-front
- Pool, gym, storage, lift and gated access need a transparent annual cost estimate
- Q2 2028 completion gives planning time but keeps delivery risk in the decision
Available properties
6 properties available








Property essentials
Amenities
Location scores
Walk Score
Car dependent
Climate comfort
Very comfortable
Flight connectivity
Good
Price vs. area average
Gloval Barómetro Andalucía · 2025-Q3
Location
Beach & waterfront
Nearby services
Airports & connections

Climate & environment
Climate
Average monthly temperatures (°C)
AEMET · COÍN (18 km) · normals 1991-2020 (12 years)
Sea and swimming season
Monthly sea temperature (°C)
Open-Meteo · averages 2023-2026 (3 years)
Air quality
Average: 2025-05-02 to 2026-05-01 · Open-Meteo CAMS reanalysis · open-meteo-cams
Solar potential
Source: European Commission PVGIS-SARAH3 (2005-2023)
Investment & lifestyle
Property tax (IBI)
- IBI rate0.620% / annual
- From €365,000 estimated~€1,245/yr
- Garbage tax€155/yr
Source: Ayuntamiento de Fuengirola, Ordenanza Fiscal 2025 (2025)
Rental yield estimate
Short-term let (Airbnb-style)
7.15%
Gross yield
Long-term rental
4.60%
Gross yield
Indicative figures, gross of expenses (community fees, IBI, management, taxes typically reduce by 30–40%). Always consult a licensed financial advisor before investing.
Source: market estimates from idealista, Airbnb data and INE hotel occupancy
About Fuengirola
Tren directo a aeropuerto y Málaga. Gran comunidad internacional. Playas 7km.
More about FuengirolaSpecifications
| Primary type | Apartment |
| Bedrooms | 2–4 |
| Built area | 82–188 m² |
| Usable area | 79–167 m² |
| Terrace | 15–63 m² |
| Year built | 2025 |
| Estimated delivery | Q2 2028 |
| Energy rating | B / B |
| Available properties | 6 |
| Town | Fuengirola |
| District | Torreblanca |
| Province | Málaga |
| Postal code | 29640 |
Energy performance
B / B
High energy class: low consumption.
About Torreblanca sea-view homes with ground-floor, apartment and penthouse options
Delivery timing defines this Torreblanca option before the amenities do. The development is listed for Q2 2028 completion, with 6 active units across ground-floor homes, apartments and penthouses, 2-4 bedrooms, 2-4 bathrooms and 82-188 m². That longer runway can suit buyers who want time for funds, mortgage planning and staged payments, but it is less useful for anyone needing quick occupation in Fuengirola. The exact unit matters because the same development covers compact 2-bedroom ownership and larger 4-bedroom use.
The position is more elevated and residential than beach-front. Playa de los Boliches is listed 1.7 km away, with the input showing an 8-minute drive and 8-minute walk, while Calle Hiedra - Calle Pensamiento bus stop is 183 m away and Parque de la Reina is 619 m away. Maxi Market and Farmacia Jiménez Ortigosa are both more than 1.3 km away, and the walk score is 30. That means buyers should read the sea views and Torreblanca address alongside a likely car, taxi or planned-walk routine.
The specification gives a clear comfort brief: sea views, communal pool, gym, lift, storage and a gated community, with B ratings for consumption and emissions. The price-per-metre context sits below the area reference in the input, which may make the development interesting against other Fuengirola new-build homes. Still, the lower walk score and 1.7 km beach distance are part of the value equation, not side notes. A buyer should compare it with the nearby Torreblanca page that has fewer active units and a closer beach position, because the two options solve different problems.
Málaga airport is listed at 34 minutes and 14.8 km, so international access remains straightforward. The neighbourhood feel is likely to suit buyers who want sea-view orientation and quieter residential use more than doorstep cafés and supermarkets. The practical limit is daily convenience: restaurant count within 2 km is 24, but there are no supermarkets or pharmacies within 1 km in the input, so ordinary errands need a realistic test before reservation. For longer ownership, that test should include parking, evening arrivals and how often taxi or car use would replace walking. The 2-4 bedroom spread also means running costs should be compared per unit, not averaged across the development.
Layout & design
The plan review should start with the buyer's tolerance for vertical living and outdoor exposure. Ground-floor homes need privacy, boundary and security checks; apartments need lift, balcony and storage checks; penthouses need roof-terrace usability, shade, wind and maintenance checks. Because the development spans 82-188 m² and 2-4 bedrooms, buyers should avoid assuming that the largest home is automatically the best fit. The right answer depends on how often guests stay and how much outdoor space will actually be used.
For a car-based or mixed routine, arrival details become part of layout quality. Ask how parking connects to the lift, where shopping is unloaded, how storage is accessed and whether the route from car to home works after a late flight. With the nearest listed supermarket at 1.3 km and airport at 34 minutes, small access frictions can become regular ownership irritations if they are not checked at plan stage.
Q2 2028 also changes the legal and financial rhythm. Buyers have time to compare units, prepare currency strategy, secure mortgage advice and review contracts, but they should ask how staged payments are protected, when final specification is locked and what happens if delivery moves. The B energy ratings are useful, but running-cost expectations should still be built from orientation, glazing, heating or cooling system, community services and the actual unit's exposure.
The shared amenities need a practical use test. Pool and gym access may be valuable for longer stays and guests, while lift, storage and gated access support lock-up-and-leave ownership. Ask how many homes share the pool, what gym rules apply, where bikes or beach items can be stored, and whether community rules allow the kind of rental or guest use the buyer has in mind. Those answers can change which format in the 6-unit active supply makes sense.
Who is this for?
This development suits buyers who want Torreblanca sea views and are comfortable trading doorstep convenience for a more planned residential routine. The 6 active units and 2-4 bedroom spread give useful flexibility for couples, families and buyers expecting guests. It can also suit owners who are not in a rush, because Q2 2028 allows time for legal review, mortgage preparation, currency planning and furniture decisions before completion.
It is less suitable for buyers who want to step out to supermarkets, pharmacies and cafés without thinking about transport. The input shows no supermarket or pharmacy within 1 km and a walk score of 30, so buyers should test errands, taxis, parking and the beach route before accepting the sea-view trade-off. The development may still be a strong fit, but it is a different proposition from a more central or near-beach Fuengirola home.
For rental, start from the local fit. Sea views, pool, gym and multiple bedroom options can support interest, but the 1.7 km beach distance and lower walk score mean guest expectations need careful handling. Before counting on turnover, check tourist-licence route, community permission, management access, cleaning logistics, furnishing durability, empty weeks, tax and whether the owner wants prime summer dates for personal use.




























