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What's life like for families in Sotogrande?

16K views 14 replies 11 participants last post by  mrypg9 
#1 ·
Hi,

We're considering relocating to Sotogrande and putting our kids in the international school there. I'd love to know what it's like to live there year-round:
1. Is the heat unbearable in the summer?
2. Are there interesting things to do beyond polo and golf, neither being occupations we fancy?
3. How's the social network... are people open to newcomers, open to families with different backgrounds?
4. Is it easy to make friends? (for kids and parents)
5. Is it easy and quick to get into Malaga for more cultural activities?
6. As I work from home, super-high-speed internet is essential for me. Is that available in Sotogrande?
7. Does anyone have any experience with the SIS? It seems like a great place to send our children but I'd love some personal experience.

Any and all insight would be most welcome.

Many thanks!
 
#2 ·
I don't live there but I've visited a few times (I had a bank account there when I first moved to Spain). It didn't strike me as a place where I could live all year round. More a golf/polo resort for the wealthy, and pretty dead out of season.

Why not live in Málaga city, which has everything you could possibly want?
 
#4 ·
The school was certainly very good - OH and worked there some time ago and we have many friends who had children there in the past. I've no reason to think it's not still good. It was particularly strong then in the performing arts - we taught music.

Sotogrande itself is not where I would choose to live - it's all golf, yachting, polo and rich people with not an awful lot else and probably pretty dead in winter but close by there are great places. Estepona just up the road is lovely for instance and has much more going on. The school runs buses up and down the coast.

Malaga city is about 1 1/2 hours and Gibraltar 20 minutes the other way by car with little usable public transport.

Like anywhere in Southern Spain it can be very hot in summer but it's on the coast so that moderates the temperature.
 
#7 ·
I live in Sotogrande with my wife and 4 kids. We came back here after 10 years in Denmark simply because we missed it so much. Lots of expats and wealthy people who are down to earth and not ostentatious. We are not wealthy. We are normal - I work in real Estate and my wife has a small takeaway. My kids go to local school but all the kids in the activities/clubs come from SIS. Nice kids. Everyone here is here because they like a life outdoors and doing things. We get our cheap dinners from a small town next door called Pueblo Nuevo de Guadiaro. Instead of east to Malaga we go to the beaches of tarifa. Every weekend we do things for cheap. Thanks!
 
#12 ·
So glad to hear that there are 'normal' people living in Sotogrande as well :). My husband is taking a job in Sotogrande - we have two kids age 10 & 12, and still looking for a place to stay and school too. I don't think kids can go to local school if they don't Spanish do they?
 
#8 ·
I live in Sotogrande and have a couple of kids that go to SIS.

1. Yes it can get a bit hot in summer, but stay out of the sun and its comfortable in the shade
2. Depends what you have in mind re: things to do. Cinema is not far away in Los Barrios (has 1 or 2 English language films on at any one time), and there are likely enough restaurants around that you can find what you like. Kids activities are a little limited - if its football then here is as good a place as any in Spain (beware FIFA article 19), but if its things like boxing or gymnastics, then its limited (SIS has some boxercise type classes and my kid loves the boxing aspect, but we have to go to Malaga for him to step it up). Another wants to do gymnastics, but can't really do that here. For adults, you have the paddle, tennis and things like that.
3/4. I would say as easy as anywhere to socialise, network, make friends (kids/adults). Its not a place they can just run out the door and all meet in the park though as its so spread out - have to drive them around to friends houses.
5. Its a bit of a hike to Malaga, but not so far that it can't be a good day-trip. Gibraltar feels a lot closer, so that's where we usually go.
6. Yes have fast internet. Fast is relative of course, but if I wanted to download a 5GB movie for example (not that I ever would of course) then it takes about 20mins or less. Speed has increased a lot over the last 5 years, and there are faster options too, but its currently as fast as I'll ever need

SIS
- the kids are happy there and its a good environment
- its an IB school, which imo is preferable to GCSEs, and academically they score an average of 34. For comparison, that would put them in the top 30 IB schools in the UK. However, many of the top IB schools in the UK are academically selective, where as SIS is not (ie the intake requirements in some of the top IB-scoring schools ensures their scores stay high). Last year a student scored the highest possible of 45 (rare), with a handful more scoring high enough to meet Oxbridge medical school requirements (38-42) if the kids wanted to aim that high, so the school can accomodate high fliers and all other levels.
- my kids are 11 and 13, and it feels like they ever get homework though. I'm sure it ramps up when they get older, but it feels like they don't do much (so not a high-pressure environment).

Hope that helps.
 
#13 ·
I live in Sotogrande and have a couple of kids that go to SIS.

1. Yes it can get a bit hot in summer, but stay out of the sun and its comfortable in the shade
2. Depends what you have in mind re: things to do. Cinema is not far away in Los Barrios (has 1 or 2 English language films on at any one time), and there are likely enough restaurants around that you can find what you like. Kids activities are a little limited - if its football then here is as good a place as any in Spain (beware FIFA article 19), but if its things like boxing or gymnastics, then its limited (SIS has some boxercise type classes and my kid loves the boxing aspect, but we have to go to Malaga for him to step it up). Another wants to do gymnastics, but can't really do that here. For adults, you have the paddle, tennis and things like that.
3/4. I would say as easy as anywhere to socialise, network, make friends (kids/adults). Its not a place they can just run out the door and all meet in the park though as its so spread out - have to drive them around to friends houses.
5. Its a bit of a hike to Malaga, but not so far that it can't be a good day-trip. Gibraltar feels a lot closer, so that's where we usually go.
6. Yes have fast internet. Fast is relative of course, but if I wanted to download a 5GB movie for example (not that I ever would of course) then it takes about 20mins or less. Speed has increased a lot over the last 5 years, and there are faster options too, but its currently as fast as I'll ever need

SIS
  • the kids are happy there and its a good environment
  • its an IB school, which imo is preferable to GCSEs, and academically they score an average of 34. For comparison, that would put them in the top 30 IB schools in the UK. However, many of the top IB schools in the UK are academically selective, where as SIS is not (ie the intake requirements in some of the top IB-scoring schools ensures their scores stay high). Last year a student scored the highest possible of 45 (rare), with a handful more scoring high enough to meet Oxbridge medical school requirements (38-42) if the kids wanted to aim that high, so the school can accomodate high fliers and all other levels.
  • my kids are 11 and 13, and it feels like they ever get homework though. I'm sure it ramps up when they get older, but it feels like they don't do much (so not a high-pressure environment).

Hope that helps.

Hi, we are moving to to Andalusia in few weeks, sudden move. Husband took a job at Sotogrande for a hotel company - and I have kids age 10 & 12. Currently we live in Osaka Japan, and the kids attend also IB school. So we are looking at SIS - and also another one in Marbella (Laude San Pedro) - but we don't know yet where we will live - never been to Spain before - so it's a bit hectic at the moment. Is it possible at get a good house in Sotogrande without it being too expensive? And if we live in Estepona, is it too far of a drive to Sotogrande or Marbella?
 
#10 ·
Hi,

We're considering relocating to Sotogrande and putting our kids in the international school there. I'd love to know what it's like to live there year-round:
1. Is the heat unbearable in the summer?
2. Are there interesting things to do beyond polo and golf, neither being occupations we fancy?
3. How's the social network... are people open to newcomers, open to families with different backgrounds?
4. Is it easy to make friends? (for kids and parents)
5. Is it easy and quick to get into Malaga for more cultural activities?
6. As I work from home, super-high-speed internet is essential for me. Is that available in Sotogrande?
7. Does anyone have any experience with the SIS? It seems like a great place to send our children but I'd love some personal experience.

Any and all insight would be most welcome.

Many thanks!
Did you move there? We're in Uk and considering a move to Sotogrande or Marbella once this pandemic is over, and need a secondary school.
 
#11 ·
Presumably everyone wishing to move permanently to anywhere in the EU after next month is aware of post-Brexit restrictions.

I have no fixed views about anywhere in Spain or the world for that matter as it ultimately comes down to personal taste and, as we know, sobre los gustos no hay disputos.
Having enough money to live the lifestyle you prefer helps too.

I'm with Alca on Sotogrande, not my preferred place of residence. Too 'Happy Valley' for me. Neither would I choose to live in Sabinillas/Duquesa. I'm not sure of the balance between Spanish and foreign residents but it's not what I'd consider a typical Spanish small town. Plenty of bars and a good immigrant community though.
If I had to move from where I am now (campo just outside Estepona) I'd go for Malaga City.
But I think that you make you own life wherever you settle and how you do so isn't entirely dependent on location. I hated living in Spain for quite a few months but I was happy in my home life, made friends and one day realised this part of Spain was my home.

P.S. Can somebody start a Tasca topic other than Covid? I'm amazed that so much can be said about it.
Like Brexit. Getting boring.:confused:
 
#14 ·
Hi mrypg9, thanks for your thoughts.

we are thinking to move to Estepona (just 10 minutes drive above estepona) and wanted to know how your experience of living there is.

we have 2 small children who would go to sorogrande school. We dont want to live in sorogrande because we need to be close to a lively town center, we cant just be satisfied with golf and polo. We thought Estepona is a good option while not being too far from the school.

are the hills above estepona a safe place to raise a family?
thanks alot for sharing your thoughts on living all year there!! Feel free to send me a private message if you prefer
 
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