- Designer
- Javier Arana
- Year opened
- 1975
- Holes
- 18
- Par
- 72
- Course type
- parkland
- Access
- private
Aloha Golf Club sits at the heart of Nueva Andalucía's so-called Golf Valley, and it carries the kind of pedigree that competitors spend decades trying to assemble. Designed by Javier Arana, one of Spain's most respected course architects, it opened in 1975 and has remained a fixture of championship golf on the Costa del Sol ever since. Members and visitors come for the layout itself, but also for the sense that they're playing on a course with genuine tournament history rather than a recently minted resort track.
The course is a classic parkland 18, playing to a par of 72 over 6,235 metres. A course rating of 72.9 and a slope of 132 tell you what the scorecard alone doesn't: this is a thinking player's layout, demanding accuracy off the tee and judgement on approach shots, rather than brute distance. Arana's routing uses the natural fall of the land between the mountains and the coast, with mature trees framing fairways that have settled into their lines over half a century of play.
Aloha's tournament record explains a great deal about its standing. The club hosted the Spanish Amateur Championship in 1978, then went on to stage the Open de Andalucía on the PGA European Tour in 2007, 2008 and 2012. The Ladies Spanish Open followed in 2016 and 2019, and the Staysure Marbella Legends arrived in 2025. Few courses in southern Spain can point to that breadth of professional and amateur championship pedigree, across men's, women's and senior tours.
Practice facilities match the standard of the main course. The driving range runs to roughly 300 metres, with two putting greens and a chipping area complete with bunkers for short-game work. A private par-3 practice course gives members somewhere to play a quick loop or warm up properly before a competitive round, which is unusual even among the better clubs in the area. The clubhouse holds a restaurant, bar, pro shop and locker rooms with sauna, and the terrace looks directly over the course, which makes it a natural meeting point at the end of the day.
Access is the point on which prospective buyers in the surrounding area tend to ask the most questions. Aloha is a private members' club, so play is structured around member tee times and guest arrangements rather than open public booking. Visitor green fees sit in the region of 110 to 175 euros depending on season and conditions. Dress code is straightforward: proper golf attire and soft spikes only, in line with the standards you'd expect of a club of this calibre.
For anyone weighing up property within walking or short driving distance, Aloha's presence does two things at once. It anchors the wider Nueva Andalucía golf district, where several courses cluster within a few minutes of each other, and it sets a benchmark for the kind of resident the area attracts. Homes positioned near the course tend to hold their character because the surrounding land use is fixed by the golf footprint itself, which limits the speculative building that has reshaped other parts of the municipality.
The practical effect for a buyer is straightforward. A property within the Aloha catchment offers genuine walk-to-tee access for a serious golfer, proximity to Puerto Banús and the coast for everyone else in the household, and a setting that has been settled and matured for fifty years. That combination of championship pedigree, restricted private access and a stable parkland environment is what gives addresses near Aloha their enduring appeal on the Marbella market.
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