Who tends to buy here
Buyers who want rural finca life on a real working scale (1–10 hectares), with airport access and rail. Pre-retirees and small-scale agricultural buyers.
A small, agricultural Guadalhorce town. Real rural Málaga, with a daily train to the city.
Pizarra is a small market town in the central Guadalhorce valley, with the Sierra de Aguas rising to the west and the Guadalhorce river running through agricultural land to the south. The town has one of the older railway connections in the area — the line to Málaga still operates daily — and feels markedly more rural than the towns closer to the coast. Property is mostly rural fincas with citrus, olive or avocado groves, plus village houses in the historic centre. The town has a strong agricultural identity, a Saturday market, and a small but established community of foreign buyers, mainly Dutch and British, who bought in the 2000s and stayed.
Buyers who want rural finca life on a real working scale (1–10 hectares), with airport access and rail. Pre-retirees and small-scale agricultural buyers.
Most rural property here will need water-rights, septic, access and DAFO-status checks. Some plots come with productive citrus or olive harvests — we walk through the agricultural rights with the seller before any offer.
Inland Andalusia rewards local knowledge. The Glaser team walks each viewing with you — rural fincas with their water rights and DAFO status, village houses in the historic core, country plots with their access — and tells you honestly what’s worth your time. Free to you — our fee is paid by the seller.
How buying with us works →A multilingual marketing approach to Northern European buyers actively looking inland from the coast — not a mass-listing on every portal. We photograph properly, write the listing in the buyer’s language, and pre-qualify viewings. Free, written valuation. Fee only on a successful close.
Request a free valuation →30 km from airport, 32 km from the coast. Approximate population 9,500.

A photographed hilltop white village with a Moorish castle and the Caminito del Rey nearby. Tourism-lifted but still local.

Halfway between Málaga and Pizarra — close enough to commute, rural enough to feel inland.

The largest of the inland Guadalhorce towns. A real working Spanish market town with a long-established expat layer.

One of the steadier inland markets for international buyers. Real expat community without losing the Spanish character.
A 30-minute call with Maarten directly. We tell you honestly whether Pizarra fits the goal.