Bright one bedroom apartment, located in a hotel complex with tropical gardens and swimming pool just three hundred meters from the well-known beaches in the area, near to the Estepona Port and the luxurious Puerto Banus.
Has an area of 64m2 distributed in a living-dining room with a kitchenette, a double bedroom, and a bathroom.
Equipped kitchen, wooden interior carpentry, marble floor, lacquered aluminium exterior carpentry, communal WI-FI, air conditioning and heating.
From the terrace you can contemplate the sea and the mountains.
Urbanization located within walking distance of all amenities - ranging from shopping to restaurants, bars, supermarkets, pharmacies, banks, tennis club, famous golf club Santorini Hotel Villa Padierna 5 *.
The complex is perfectly adapted for the disabled or elderly.
It has a restaurant, music bar, sports room, swimming pool and spa.
High rental potential!
This apartment is for hotel management, which means that the owner has the right to enjoy it for a maximum of 2 months a year in tends of 15 days maximum in a sequence, always and when it is not in high season.
The private use of the same may be the owner or his family in the first degree of ascending or descending consanguinity.
The only expenses are: IBI and rubbish, everything else is charged by the operator.
The operator pays the owner a minimum per year.
Return on annual investment is higher than 6%.
Benahavís is a Spanish town (pueblo) and municipality in the province of Malaga.
It is a mountain village between Marbella, Estepona, and Ronda, 7 kilometers (4.3 mi) from the coast.
On the southern face of La Serranía de Ronda mountain range, Benahavís is one of the most mountainous villages on the western Costa del Sol, near the resort beaches as well as the spectacular mountains of the Serrania de Ronda.
Its terrain is traversed by the Guadalmina, Guadaiza and Guadalmansa Rivers.
Places of great natural and historic interest are to be found within its boundaries, such as El Cerro del Duque, Daidin and the Montemayor Castle.
During the late 1990s, the Junta de Andalucia constructed a dam on the site of an old marble quarry, and now for much of the year the once ever-flowing Río Guadalmina is a dried-up riverbed.