A Stayzia collection
Marbella Villas with Private Pool
Every villa in this collection has its own pool — no shared decks, no booking slots, no neighbours' towels. Most are heated well beyond the summer months, and all of them are houses we look after ourselves, so the water is warm when we say it will be. Prices shown are the full nightly rate; the only thing added at checkout is the cleaning fee you can see before you pay.
What to check before you book a pool villa in Marbella
The first question to ask of any private pool in southern Spain is whether it is heated, and when. Marbella's season is long — you can comfortably eat lunch outside in February — but unheated pools are only really swimmable from late May to early October. All three of our pool villas can be warm outside that window: Villa Alazán is heated from October to April as standard, and Casa Mirlo and Villa Caleta heat on request for €50 a day. If a listing elsewhere doesn't mention heating, assume there isn't any.
The second is privacy. 'Private pool' covers everything from a walled garden to a strip of terrace overlooked by twelve balconies. Our listings state plainly what surrounds each pool and the photos are taken from the angles you'd actually sit at.
Finally, think about who's coming. None of the three pools is fenced by default — we fit temporary safety fencing for €90 a stay for families with toddlers, and all three gardens are fully walled, so the street is never a worry.
When to come for pool weather
July and August are reliably hot — 30°C days, warm evenings, pool at 28°C without help. June and September are many guests' favourites: the same swimming, fewer people, and dinner reservations that don't need to be made a week out. With heating, the shoulder months stretch from March to November, and an October week in a heated pool villa costs roughly a third less than the same week in August.
Frequently asked questions
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