Two coastlines, two markets, one decision. This guide goes beyond headline prices to show the full financial picture: absolute rental income, total cost of ownership, tax burden over time and realistic capital gains — so you can make the right choice for your specific budget and objectives.
The Costa Blanca looks cheaper at first glance, and it is. But cheaper entry price and better value are not the same thing. This article builds the complete financial case for both coastlines — including the factors that comparable guides routinely omit — so the international buyer can make a genuinely informed decision.
The Costa del Sol stretches 150 km along the province of Málaga in Andalusia. Its core markets — Marbella, Estepona, Fuengirola, Benalmádena and Málaga city — attract buyers from over 80 nationalities, with a strong premium and luxury segment. Málaga Airport connects directly to over 100 international destinations and the AVE high-speed train reaches Madrid in under two hours.
The Costa Blanca stretches 200 km along the province of Alicante in the Valencian Community. Its range is exceptionally wide: from premium Jávea and Altea in the north to very accessible Torrevieja and Orihuela Costa in the south. Alicante Airport connects to over 100 primarily European destinations. Alicante has no direct AVE link to Madrid (2.5–3 hours by conventional train).
The most important structural difference: the Costa del Sol is a globally diversified market (80+ buyer nationalities, year-round tourism, established tech economy in Málaga). The Costa Blanca is a regionally concentrated market — excellent liquidity in the entry segment but more dependent on UK and Dutch buyers and more sensitive to economic cycles and currency movements.
| Budget | Costa del Sol — what you get | Costa Blanca — what you get |
|---|---|---|
| €150,000–250,000 | Studio or 1-bed in Fuengirola, Torremolinos or Benalmádena town — limited rental appeal, weak appreciation | 2-bed apartment with pool near Torrevieja or Orihuela Costa; adequate for rental income |
| €250,000–400,000 | 2-bed apartment in San Pedro, Estepona entry or Fuengirola beachside — decent rental demand | 3-bed villa with pool in Orihuela Costa or 2-bed sea-view apartment in Altea/Moraira |
| €400,000–700,000 | 2–3 bed apartment in Estepona, Nueva AndalucÃa or Benalmádena sea-view — strong rental and resale demand | Quality villa in Jávea, Altea or Moraira — top of Costa Blanca premium market |
| €700,000–1,500,000 | 3-bed sea-view villa or penthouse in Marbella, Estepona hills or BenahavÃs — prime market access | Exceptional villa in Jávea or Altea — ceiling of Costa Blanca premium; limited stock above €1.5M |
| €1,500,000+ | Marbella Golden Mile, Sierra Blanca, BenahavÃs — global prime market, unlimited ceiling | Very limited stock; essentially no comparable offer above €2M |
The Costa Blanca delivers more physical space per euro — particularly below €400,000. Above €700,000 the Costa del Sol offers a substantially deeper market, stronger resale demand and access to a global buyer pool the Costa Blanca cannot replicate.
Most comparisons focus only on the ITP difference at the point of purchase. This is the smallest part of the tax story. The complete picture — covering purchase, ownership and transfer — changes the analysis significantly, particularly for buyers above €500,000.
| Purchase price | Costa del Sol ITP (7%) | Costa Blanca ITP (10%) | Saving on Costa del Sol |
|---|---|---|---|
| €250,000 | €17,500 | €25,000 | €7,500 |
| €400,000 | €28,000 | €40,000 | €12,000 |
| €700,000 | €49,000 | €70,000 | €21,000 |
| €1,200,000 | €84,000 | €120,000 | €36,000 |
The ITP saving alone does not offset the price gap for buyers below €400k — because at that budget you are comparing different assets in different locations. Above €700k, where you are comparing equivalent assets, the €21,000–36,000 saving is meaningful but still not the main tax story.
This is where Andalusia’s structural advantage becomes financially decisive. Wealth tax applies to assets above a threshold — and critically, non-residents have a lower threshold than residents.
| Scenario | Costa del Sol (Andalusia) | Costa Blanca (Val. Community) | Annual saving CdS — 10-yr saving |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-resident, property €400k | €0 (abolished) | €0 (below €500k NR threshold) | €0 — €0 |
| Non-resident, property €700k | €0 (abolished) | ~€500–750/yr (0.25% on €200k excess) | ~€625/yr — ~€6,250 |
| Non-resident, property €1,000,000 | €0 (abolished) | ~€2,500–3,500/yr (~0.5% on €500k excess) | ~€3,000/yr — ~€30,000 |
| Non-resident, property €2,000,000 | €0 (abolished) | ~€12,000–18,000/yr (progressive up to 3.12%) | ~€15,000/yr — ~€150,000 |
Important: for non-resident buyers below €500,000 the wealth tax advantage is zero — the Costa Blanca non-resident threshold (€500k) protects lower-budget buyers. The wealth tax argument only becomes financially significant above €700,000. Above €1,000,000 it is decisive.
This is routinely the most underestimated tax factor. Both coastlines offer relief for direct family transfers, but the difference is substantial when real numbers are applied.
| Scenario (parent → child) | Costa del Sol — tax payable | Costa Blanca — tax payable | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Property value €300,000 | ~€0 (99% Andalusian relief) | ~€5,000–12,000 (75% relief applied) | ~€5,000–12,000 |
| Property value €700,000 | ~€0 (99% Andalusian relief) | ~€18,000–35,000 (effective rate ~5–7%) | ~€18,000–35,000 |
| Property value €1,500,000 | ~€0 (99% Andalusian relief) | ~€60,000–120,000 (effective rate ~7–12%) | ~€60,000–120,000 |
| Property value €3,000,000 | ~€0 (99% Andalusian relief) | ~€200,000–360,000 (effective rate ~10–15%) | ~€200,000–360,000 |
Note: inheritance tax figures for the Valencian Community are indicative and depend on the beneficiary’s pre-existing assets, family relationship and applicable reductions. They can be significantly higher if the heir already has significant wealth. Andalusia’s 99% relief makes the effective tax virtually zero for direct family regardless of asset size.
Gross yield percentage is the most commonly misused metric in property comparisons. A higher percentage yield on a cheaper asset can produce less absolute income, shorter seasons and lower-quality tenants. Here is the complete picture.
| Market / property | Purchase price | Gross yield % | Annual income € | Active season |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CB — Torrevieja 2-bed apt | €130,000 | 7% | €9,100 | 6–7 months |
| CdS — Fuengirola 2-bed apt | €280,000 | 5.5% | €15,400 | 10–11 months |
| CB — Jávea 3-bed villa | €500,000 | 5% | €25,000 | 7–8 months |
| CdS — Estepona 3-bed apt | €550,000 | 5.5% | €30,250 | 11–12 months |
| CB — Altea villa (top end) | €900,000 | 4.5% | €40,500 | 7–8 months |
| CdS — Marbella 3-bed penthouse | €900,000 | 5% | €45,000 | 11–12 months |
Three conclusions jump out of this table. First, even when the Costa Blanca’s yield percentage is higher, the Costa del Sol generates significantly more absolute income on comparable purchase prices — because higher absolute rents per night more than compensate for the 1–2 percentage point difference. Second, the Costa del Sol’s 10–12 month active season versus 6–8 months on the Costa Blanca is not a minor detail: it is the difference between needing a management company to fill 150 days versus 300 days, with all the operational complexity that entails. Third, for the very lowest budgets (below €200k) the Costa Blanca does produce more income in absolute terms simply because there is no comparable Costa del Sol entry point.
Yield % tells you the return relative to the price paid. It says nothing about how much cash you actually receive, how consistently you receive it, or how easy it is to find the next tenant. On the Costa del Sol, off-season demand from golfers, digital nomads and long-stay professionals keeps occupancy high year-round. On the Costa Blanca, income is concentrated in a shorter window and the tenant profile is more price-sensitive.
The Costa Blanca’s premium north (Jávea, Altea, Moraira) has recorded appreciation of 10–15% in 2023–2025 — higher in percentage terms than the Costa del Sol’s 8–12% in the same period. This sounds better. It is not necessarily better in practice, for one reason: the base is much lower.
| Market / property | Purchase price | Appreciation % (annual) | Gain per year € | 5-year gain € |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CB — Torrevieja apartment | €150,000 | 8% | €12,000 | ~€72,000 |
| CdS — Fuengirola apartment | €280,000 | 9% | €25,200 | ~€151,000 |
| CB — Jávea villa (premium) | €550,000 | 12% | €66,000 | ~€396,000 |
| CdS — Estepona apartment | €550,000 | 10% | €55,000 | ~€330,000 |
| CB — Altea villa | €900,000 | 10% | €90,000 | ~€540,000 |
| CdS — Marbella apartment | €900,000 | 10% | €90,000 | ~€540,000 |
At equivalent price points (€550k and €900k), the appreciation gap between the two coastlines is small. The important caveat is volatility and liquidity risk: the Costa del Sol’s premium market has proven more resilient in downturns (2008–2013, COVID) than the Costa Blanca’s mid-market, which saw sharper corrections and longer recovery periods. Appreciation percentages are useless if you cannot find a buyer when you want to sell.
This is the calculation almost no comparison article runs. Here is the complete 10-year financial picture for a representative property at each budget level, combining purchase costs, annual taxes, rental income and capital gain.
| Item | Costa del Sol — Fuengirola 2-bed | Costa Blanca — Orihuela Costa villa |
|---|---|---|
| Purchase price | €400,000 | €400,000 |
| ITP + AJD + costs | €37,600 (9.4%) | €50,600 (12.7%) |
| Wealth tax (10 yrs) | €0 | €0 (below €500k NR threshold) |
| Gross rental income (10 yrs) | +€154,000 (5.5% × 10 yrs, inflated) | +€112,000 (6% × 10 yrs — shorter season) |
| Capital gain at sale (9% avg) | +€380,000 (est.) | +€320,000 (est. 8% avg — higher volatility) |
| Inheritance tax saving (vs CB) | +€15,000–30,000 (est. on transfer) | €0 reference |
| Net financial advantage CdS (10 yr) | ~€75,000–100,000 ahead on the Costa del Sol over 10 years at this budget | |
| Item | Costa del Sol — Marbella/Estepona apt | Costa Blanca — Jávea/Altea villa |
|---|---|---|
| Purchase price | €1,000,000 | €1,000,000 |
| ITP + AJD + costs | €89,000 (8.9%) | €122,000 (12.2%) |
| Wealth tax (10 yrs) | €0 | ~€30,000 (~€3,000/yr on €500k excess) |
| Gross rental income (10 yrs) | +€550,000 (5.5% × 10 yrs) | +€450,000 (4.5% × 10 yrs — shorter season) |
| Capital gain at sale (10% avg) | +€1,000,000+ (est.) | +€900,000 (est. — lower liquidity ceiling) |
| Inheritance tax saving (vs CB) | +€50,000–120,000 (est. on transfer) | €0 reference |
| Net financial advantage CdS (10 yr) | ~€250,000–350,000 ahead on the Costa del Sol over 10 years at this budget | |
| Factor | Costa del Sol | Costa Blanca | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Entry price (below €400k) | Limited options; studio/1-bed only in most areas | 3-bed villa or quality apartment available | Costa Blanca ✓ |
| Entry price (above €600k) | Deep market; prime locations available | Ceiling approaching; limited stock above €1.5M | Costa del Sol ✓ |
| ITP purchase tax | 7% — saves €12–36k vs Costa Blanca at equivalent prices | 10% — 3 points higher | Costa del Sol ✓ |
| Wealth tax (below €500k) | €0 (abolished) | €0 (NR threshold €500k — exempt) | Tie |
| Wealth tax (above €700k) | €0 (abolished) | €500–15,000+/yr depending on value | Costa del Sol ✓✓ |
| Inheritance tax (direct family) | ~€0 (99% Andalusian relief — any value) | 75% relief — effective cost €5k–360k depending on value | Costa del Sol ✓✓ |
| Rental yield % (gross) | 4–6.5% typical | 4–8% typical (higher % on lower base) | Costa Blanca % ✓ |
| Rental income absolute € (same price) | Higher — premium rents, longer season | Lower — seasonal concentration, budget tenant | Costa del Sol ✓ |
| Rental season length | 10–12 months (golf + nomads + tourism) | 6–8 months (seasonal concentration) | Costa del Sol ✓✓ |
| Capital appreciation % (recent) | 8–12% prime segment | 10–15% premium north (Jávea/Altea) | Costa Blanca % ✓ |
| Capital gain absolute € (same price) | Similar or superior — higher base × similar % | Similar in premium north; lower elsewhere | Similar above €600k |
| Market liquidity / resale speed | 3–6 months prime; 80+ buyer nationalities | Fast in entry segment; slow above €800k | Costa del Sol ✓ |
| Downturn resilience | Historically more resilient — diversified demand | Greater volatility — UK/NL market dependent | Costa del Sol ✓ |
| Air connectivity (intercontinental) | Superior — Latam, Middle East, US routes; AVE to Madrid <2h | Good European; no AVE; 2.5–3h to Madrid | Costa del Sol ✓ |
| Lifestyle / infrastructure | Michelin dining, 100+ golf courses, international schools, beach clubs, year-round social scene | Authentic, quieter, excellent nature, good gastronomy — less dense luxury infrastructure | CdS (premium) / CB (tranquillity) |
| Latin American citizenship path | 2 years to Spanish citizenship via Ibero-American route | Same (national, not regional) — but Marbella community significantly larger | Tie (national law) |
The right market depends on three variables: budget, primary objective and whether you hold long-term or plan to sell within five years. Here is the honest breakdown.
Choose Costa Blanca if your budget is firmly below €350,000 AND your primary objective is maximum space or lifestyle quality for the budget AND you do not have significant other Spanish assets (wealth tax threshold not relevant). The Costa Blanca genuinely wins on space per euro below this threshold. Ideal profiles: British and Dutch buyers seeking an affordable second home; budget-constrained buyers for whom the Costa del Sol offers nothing compelling at entry price points.
Choose Costa del Sol if your budget is above €400,000. At this level and above, the total financial picture — purchase tax saving, longer rental season, higher absolute rental income, stronger resale liquidity and growing inheritance/wealth tax advantage — consistently favours Andalusia. The gap widens with every €100,000 of additional budget. Ideal profiles: all buyers above €500k; high-net-worth owners for whom wealth and inheritance tax are material; Latin American buyers with a relocation strategy; buyers who prioritise capital preservation and exit liquidity.
The €350,000–500,000 grey zone: This is the only range where the decision is genuinely close. At these prices, the Costa Blanca offers more physical property but the Costa del Sol offers better rental demand, a longer season and a 3-point ITP saving. The deciding factor should be your primary use: if pure space and lifestyle are the priority, Costa Blanca. If rental income and long-term capital preservation matter more, Costa del Sol — particularly Fuengirola, Benalmádena or Estepona where this budget buys a well-located 2-bed apartment with real rental appeal.
More information: Property Buyer Taxes in Spain Guide 2026 – BK Realty Group
Because percentage yield is calculated on the purchase price, not on your bank account. A 7% yield on €130,000 = €9,100/year. A 5.5% yield on €280,000 = €15,400/year. The Costa del Sol property at the same budget generates 69% more cash annually — with a 10–11 month season versus 6–7. Additionally, the Costa del Sol tenant profile commands higher nightly or monthly rates, meaning income is less dependent on peak weeks. The percentage metric is useful when comparing properties of the same price in the same market. When comparing different markets at different price points it can be actively misleading.
For non-residents buying below €500,000 on the Costa Blanca, the answer is technically no — the non-resident threshold provides exemption. However, two caveats apply: first, if your total Spanish assets (including other properties, bank accounts or investments) exceed €500,000, the threshold applies to the combined total, not each asset individually. Second, as properties appreciate, a €420,000 property bought today can exceed the threshold within a few years of ownership. Planning ahead matters.
Yes. For inheritance tax in Spain, the legislation applied is that of the autonomous community where the property is located — not where the heir or the deceased was resident. This means that a non-resident British or American owner of a property in Marbella passes it to their children under Andalusian rules (99% relief, essentially zero tax), while the same property in Jávea falls under Valencian rules (75% relief, with meaningful residual tax on higher values). This is a structural, not temporary, difference and applies to non-residents fully.
The Costa del Sol’s premium segment has a demonstrated track record of faster recovery and shallower corrections. During 2008–2013, prime Marbella fell less than coastal Alicante in percentage terms and recovered faster. The reason is market diversification: when UK buyers retreat, German, American, Latin American and Middle Eastern demand continues. The Costa Blanca’s mid-market is more exposed to single-nationality demand concentration — particularly British and Dutch — which correlates more with sterling and euro exchange rates and those specific economies. This does not mean the Costa Blanca is a bad market; it means it carries more concentration risk for investors who may need to exit in a downturn.
Yes, on both coastlines Spanish banks lend to non-residents, typically at 60–70% LTV of the appraisal value. The conditions are broadly similar. The practical difference is that lenders are more familiar with the Costa del Sol’s valuation benchmarks — particularly in Marbella and Estepona — due to higher transaction volumes, which can make the appraisal process smoother and the LTV slightly more favourable. Mortgage pre-approval before beginning the search is advisable in either market.
Sources: Registradores de España — Property Registry Statistics · Instituto Nacional de EstadÃstica (INE) · Idealista Research · Spanish Tax Agency (AEAT) · BK Realty Group. Data compiled May 2026.