Andalusia Country Club Homes: HOA, Prices & Buyer Guide

Andalusia at coral mountain clubhouse

An MLS-backed look at Andalusia Country Club homes, floor plans, HOA costs, memberships and the lot characteristics that shape value in La Quinta.

Last Updated: July 10, 2026 | Time To Read: 20 minutes | Author: Mark Miller | Category: Real Estate

Andalusia at Coral Mountain clubhouse and sports courts
Aerial view of the Andalusia at Coral Mountain clubhouse surrounded by palm trees, tennis courts and pickleball courts in La Quinta, California. The image highlights the community’s Spanish-inspired architecture and recreation-focused club lifestyle.

Andalusia at Coral Mountain is a guard-gated luxury community in South La Quinta, known for its dramatic Santa Rosa Mountain setting, low-density design and refined country club lifestyle.

Homes range from streamlined original floor plans to larger semi-custom and custom estates, with meaningful differences in lot size, architecture, casitas, renovations and outdoor living.

The $1,317 monthly HOA payment includes a Social/Sport membership with access to tennis, pickleball, bocce ball, fitness facilities, the pool and spa, restaurant, trails and dog park.

Golf membership is separate from the included Social/Sport membership, providing access to Andalusia’s private Rees Jones-designed course and golf-focused club experience.

Andalusia is best suited to buyers who value privacy, mountain and golf-course views, extensive amenities and a quieter location near Coral Mountain and Lake Cahuilla.

Andalusia Community Profile

Category Community Profile
Property type Detached single-family homes
General construction period Approximately 2005 through current new construction
Common home size About 2,300 to more than 5,500 square feet
Typical configuration Three to five bedrooms; most have four or five bathrooms
Common lot size Approximately 10,000 to 19,000 square feet, with select half-acre and oversized parcels
Typical middle-of-market home Roughly 3,700 square feet on a lot near 14,000 square feet
Monthly HOA dues $1,317
Annual HOA cost $15,804
Included membership Social/Sport Membership
Included amenities Tennis, pickleball, bocce ball, fitness center, community pool and spa, restaurant access, hiking and biking trails, and dog park
Golf Separate membership, initiation fee, and monthly dues
Common property features Private pools and spas, courtyards, casitas, outdoor kitchens, fairway views, lakes, and mountain views

Andalusia at Coral Mountain is a gated luxury country-club community in south La Quinta, positioned against the Santa Rosa and Coral Mountains. The approximately 552-acre community is planned for about 500 detached homes and is organized around an 18-hole Rees Jones-designed golf course, lakes, landscaped open space, and private club amenities. Development began in the mid-2000s and has continued through multiple architectural generations, resulting in a combination of established estate homes, remodeled residences, later-phase homes, and contemporary new construction.


Andalusia is best understood as a lifestyle community rather than simply a collection of golf-course homes. The Social/Sport Membership included with homeownership gives residents access to a substantial amenity program without requiring them to become golf members. Golf privileges are handled separately.

Floor Plans of Andalusia Country Club

Andalusia Country Club’s residential offering spans 19 recognizable production and semi-custom floor-plan families across three generations. Homes range from approximately 2,300 to more than 5,100 square feet, creating options from efficient three-bedroom retreats to expansive four-bedroom estates with multiple living areas.


Although each generation has its own architectural character, the plans share a consistent focus on single-level living, private courtyards, generous covered patios and strong indoor-outdoor flow. Casitas are common throughout the community and included in every current new-construction plan, providing private accommodations for guests, family members or a home office.


The original collection emphasizes traditional Spanish and Mediterranean architecture with more formal rooms and substantial courtyards. Later estate plans introduced larger great rooms, taller disappearing glass doors and more independent guest accommodations. Andalusia’s current collection carries that same lifestyle forward through cleaner contemporary interiors, more efficient layouts and three exterior styles: Spanish Transitional, Modern Mediterranean and Desert Contemporary.


Because Andalusia homes were designed for extensive customization, completed residences may differ from their published plans. Casita additions, converted garage bays, reversed layouts, expanded rooms and owner renovations can change the final square footage, bedroom count and overall functionality.

Complete Floor Plan Guide

Every Standard Andalusia Floor Plan, Organized by Generation

Andalusia’s resale market contains 19 recognizable production and semi-custom plan families across three generations, plus one-off custom homes. The tables below separate the original residences, the former named estate collection and the seven plans currently offered for new construction.

200 Series 2 plans · 2,315–2,634 sq. ft. Typical homesite: about 7,700 sq. ft.
300 Series 3 plans · 3,333–4,038 sq. ft. Typical homesite: about 11,700 sq. ft.
400 Series 2 plans · 4,426–5,090 sq. ft. Typical homesite: about 13,500 sq. ft.

Current New-Construction Collection

Seven Sunrise Company plans actively marketed as of July 10, 2026.

Current
Floor Plan Approx. Living Area Beds / Baths Casita & Garage What Distinguishes It
Plan 201 200 Series View official floor plan 2,315 sq. ft. 3 / 3½ Private 1-bedroom casita; 2-car plus golf-cart garage The smallest current plan, with two bedrooms in the main residence, an open great room, courtyard and covered patio.
Plan 202 200 Series View official floor plan 2,634 sq. ft. 3 / 3½ Private 1-bedroom casita; 2-car plus golf-cart garage Adds an office/bedroom flex space, a broader great-room sitting area and more extensive pocket-door options.
Plan 301 300 Series View official floor plan 3,333 sq. ft. 4 / 4½ Private 1-bedroom casita; 2-car plus golf-cart garage The smallest current four-bedroom plan, with an office option, hobby area, wet bar and great-room veranda.
Plan 302 300 Series View official floor plan 3,696 sq. ft. 4 / 4½ Casita with sitting area; 2-car plus golf-cart garage A balanced mid-size plan with a bedroom/den option, hobby area, wet bar, veranda and a more defined casita sitting room.
Plan 303 300 Series View official floor plan 4,038 sq. ft. 4 / 4½ Casita with sitting area; 2-car plus golf-cart garage The largest 300 Series plan, with an expanded casita, two verandas, hobby space and a bedroom/den option.
Plan 401 400 Series View official floor plan 4,426 sq. ft. 4 / 4½ Suite-style casita with living room; 3-car garage Moves into full estate scale with three verandas, two main-house guest suites, a wet bar and a substantially larger casita.
Plan 402 400 Series View official floor plan 5,090 sq. ft. 4 / 4½ Casita with sitting area; 3-car garage The flagship current plan, with a junior-primary suite, office/bedroom flex room, large veranda and expanded primary and casita sitting areas.

Former Named and Estate Collection

Primarily built from the mid-2010s into the early 2020s and now usually encountered as resales.

Earlier Collection
Floor Plan Approx. Living Area Beds / Baths Casita & Garage What Distinguishes It
Agave Plan 21 · later Plan 321 3,280 sq. ft. 4 / 4½ Private 1-bedroom casita; 3-car garage The smallest of this generation, with a flowing great room, large glass openings and substantial covered outdoor living.
Cypress Plan 22 · later Plan 322 3,560 sq. ft. 4 / 4½ Private 1-bedroom casita; 3-car garage An entertaining-focused plan known for its wet bar, open great room and glass on multiple sides to frame courtyard and fairway views.
Larkspur Plan 23 · later Plan 323 3,612–3,634 sq. ft. 4 / 4½ Private 1-bedroom casita; 3-car garage The largest compact plan in this collection, with mitered corner glass, an oversized courtyard and strong indoor-outdoor sightlines.
Greystone Plan 24 / 24R · later Plan 424 About 4,184 sq. ft. 4 / 4½ Private 1-bedroom casita; 3-car garage The entry estate plan, with 12-foot disappearing doors, a generous courtyard and broad great-room-to-patio connection.
Coralstone Plan 25 / 25R · later Plan 425 4,331–4,502 sq. ft. 4 / 4½ Private 1-bedroom casita; 3-car garage A larger estate layout with an especially deep covered-patio program; later Plan 425 versions expanded the published footprint.
Santa Rosa Plan 26 / 26R / 26B · later Plan 426 About 5,131 sq. ft. 4 / 4½ Casita with sitting area; 3-car garage The largest former production plan, with estate-scale entertaining rooms, extensive covered patios and a two-room casita.

Original Andalusia Residences

Mostly built from 2005 through 2007 and encountered in the resale market.

Original Collection
Floor Plan Observed Living Area Typical Beds / Baths Casita & Garage What Distinguishes It
Plan 1 — Almeria Almeria is also a street name inside Andalusia About 2,754–3,177 sq. ft. 3 / 3½
or 4 / 4½ with added casita
Optional or builder-added detached guest suite; garage capacity varies by version The smallest original plan and the one with the widest variation between base and casita-conversion versions.
Plan 2 — Baena About 3,023–3,108 sq. ft. 3 / 3½ Typically 3-car; a detached casita is not the plan’s defining configuration A compact three-bedroom layout with a private courtyard, formal dining/den flexibility and strong great-room flow.
Plan 3 — Cordoba About 3,546–3,710 sq. ft. 3 / 3½ Often two primary-style suites in the main residence plus a detached two-room casita; usually 3-car A guest-friendly arrangement with two substantial main-house suites and more independence in the casita.
Plan 4 — Duquesa About 3,890–3,933 sq. ft.
Some expansions exceed 4,000 sq. ft.
4 / 4½ Attached two-room guest suite is common; usually 3-car The first original plan to move decisively into four-bedroom estate scale, with larger entertaining areas.
Plan 5 — Estrella About 4,314–4,366 sq. ft. 4 / 4½ Detached guest suite is common, sometimes with its own garage bay; typically 3-car total A substantial original estate plan with greater guest separation, courtyard presence and larger formal and informal spaces.
Plan 6 — FiñanaCommonly written as Finana in MLS listings About 5,089–5,117 sq. ft. 4 + office / 4½ Attached guest suite is common; typically 3-car The largest original production plan, with expansive courtyards and the broadest mix of formal, informal and guest living space.
How to read the tables: Bedroom and bathroom counts include the casita when one is part of the plan. Andalusia homes were offered with structural options and extensive customization, so completed residences may differ in square footage, bedroom count, garage capacity and room use. Reversed plans, elevation suffixes, converted garages, enclosed patios, additions and one-off custom estates do not represent separate standard floor plans.

Casitas and Guest Accommodations

Casitas are one of Andalusia’s defining residential features. Many homes include a detached guest suite entered from the courtyard rather than through the main residence.


Casita configurations vary considerably. Some contain only a bedroom and bathroom. Others function as private guest apartments with a sitting room, fireplace, kitchenette, beverage refrigerator, microwave, or separate outdoor entrance. Certain plans use the casita as the third or fourth bedroom, while others provide three bedrooms in the main residence plus the casita.


The distinction matters because a four-bedroom listing may not mean four bedrooms under one roof. A detached casita can be ideal for extended-stay guests, adult family members, a private office, or a caregiver, but it creates a different living arrangement from an attached bedroom.


Some original homes also converted garage space into a casita, office, gym, or hobby room. As a result, two examples of the same plan may have different bedroom counts and garage capacity.

Lots, Views, and Micro-Location

Lot position is one of the largest value variables inside Andalusia. Square footage alone does not explain the price difference between two otherwise similar homes.


South and Southwest Orientation

South- and southwest-facing rear yards are frequently among the most sought-after because they can frame the Santa Rosa and Coral Mountains beyond the golf course. These lots may also capture long fairway views, lakes, waterfalls, and desert sunsets.


The trade-off is stronger afternoon sunlight and greater summer heat exposure. Deep covered patios, exterior shades, mature landscaping, pool placement, and the quality of the outdoor cooling strategy become especially important on western orientations.


North and Northeast Orientation

North-facing homes may look toward the Chocolate Mountains or across broad fairway corridors. These orientations can provide softer afternoon conditions and a more shaded outdoor-living environment, although the mountain composition differs from the classic south-facing Santa Rosa view.


Fairway, Green, and Tee Locations

Not all golf frontage produces the same experience.


A home overlooking the middle of a long fairway can have greater visual depth and fewer golfers stopping directly behind the residence. A green-side home may offer dramatic landscaping and lake views but can experience more concentrated player activity. Tee-box locations can create attractive open space but may bring voices, carts, and repeated play from one location.


The position of the cart path also matters. A path directly behind the outdoor-living area can reduce privacy compared with one located across the fairway.


Lake and Water-Feature Lots

Lake frontage adds reflection, movement, wildlife, and separation from the course. The strongest view lots often combine water, multiple fairways, and a mountain backdrop rather than offering only one of those elements.


Elevated Lots

Several homes sit above the course rather than directly level with it. Elevation can improve privacy, widen sightlines, reduce the visual presence of golfers, and create stronger lake and mountain views.


End Lots, Greenbelts, and No-Neighbor Sides

End lots and homes adjoining greenbelts can feel considerably more private. A no-neighbor side can also create additional windows, courtyard openness, and broader views. These locations often receive premiums even when they are not the largest lots.


Interior and Perimeter Locations

Interior homes are surrounded by the established community and generally feel more insulated from surrounding roads or future phases. Perimeter homes can provide open views and fewer immediate neighbors, but the character of the adjacent land may evolve as Andalusia and the broader Coral Mountain area continue to develop.

Outdoor Living

Private outdoor living is central to Andalusia’s real estate. Most resale homes include a private pool and spa, and many have substantial covered patios, fire features, built-in barbecues, outdoor kitchens, water features, putting greens, heaters, televisions, and multiple seating areas.


The quality of the outdoor space can be more important than the pool’s mere presence. Factors that separate the strongest outdoor environments include:

  • The amount of usable covered space
  • The relationship between the pool and the view
  • Privacy from neighboring patios and golfers
  • Sun exposure at different times of day
  • Outdoor kitchen placement
  • Mature landscaping that does not obstruct the view
  • Direct access from the great room and primary suite
  • The ability to open major interior rooms to the patio

Newer homes frequently use broad pocketing or disappearing glass doors. Original homes may have narrower openings unless they have been structurally remodeled.

HOA Dues and the Included Social/Sport Membership

The monthly HOA dues are $1,317, equal to $15,804 per year.


The fee includes the Social/Sport Membership and access to:

  • Tennis
  • Pickleball
  • Bocce ball
  • Fitness center
  • Community pool and spa
  • Community restaurant
  • Hiking and biking trails
  • Dog park

Restaurant access is part of the club experience, while meals, beverages, private events, and personal club spending are separate from the HOA dues.


The included Social/Sport Membership is an important distinction because Andalusia can support a complete country-club lifestyle for residents who do not play golf. Tennis, pickleball, fitness, dining, trails, the pool, and the social calendar can be used independently of a golf membership.


The value of the HOA package is therefore connected to actual amenity use. A household that regularly uses the Sports Club, restaurant, racquet facilities, trails, pool, and community events will experience the cost differently from an owner who wants only a private residence behind gates.

Golf Membership

Golf privileges are not included in the $1,317 monthly HOA dues. Golf membership has its own initiation requirement and ongoing dues.


A home may overlook the golf course without providing the owner with golf privileges. The residence and the golf membership should therefore be viewed as two separate purchasing decisions:

  1. The home establishes ownership and access to the included Social/Sport program.
  2. The golf membership establishes regular access to the Rees Jones course and golf-related club facilities.

For golfers, the separate membership cost is part of the true Andalusia ownership budget. For non-golfers, the Social/Sport structure allows ownership without paying for a golf program that will not be used.


  • Resident golf initiation: $60,000 nonrefundable
  • Resident golf dues: $2,240 per month
  • Sports Club initiation: No fee for homeowners
  • Sports Club dues component: $563 per month, included within the HOA dues

The Andalusia Lifestyle

Andalusia offers a more secluded setting than communities located immediately along Highway 111. The environment is oriented toward the private club, golf course, mountain views, outdoor recreation, and at-home entertaining.


Daily life within the gates can include fitness, racquet sports, bocce, dining, walking, cycling, dog-park visits, club events, golf-cart transportation, and gatherings at private homes. The social rhythm is generally strongest during the desert’s fall-through-spring season, while summers are quieter.


Off-site shopping, major dining districts, medical services, and most errands require driving. This is not an urban or walk-to-retail community. Its appeal comes from privacy, scenery, space, and the concentration of amenities inside the gates.


Proximity to the Sports Club and restaurant can be desirable for residents who expect frequent use. Homes deeper inside the community may provide more privacy and a quieter residential setting. Gate proximity creates faster entry and exit but may bring more passing vehicle activity.

Tennis and pickleball courts at Andalusia in La Quinta
Aerial view of Andalusia’s extensive racquet-sports complex, featuring multiple tennis and pickleball courts surrounded by palm trees and nearby homes.

Street and Phase Patterns

Street names provide a rough indication of a home’s development period and product family, although they are not absolute.


Aracena, Mijas, Carboneras, and Carmona contain a large concentration of original mid-2000s homes. These streets include many Almeria, Baena, Cordoba, Duquesa, Estrella, and Finana plans.


Jerez and Andalusia contain a mixture of original residences and later-generation homes. Because of that mix, neighboring properties may differ substantially in age, architecture, and value.


Seville and Ronda are commonly associated with larger later-generation estate homes, including Greystone, Coralstone, and Santa Rosa plans.


Marbella and Almeria include a concentration of newer and Signature Home designs, including some of the community’s smaller contemporary residences.


A street’s reputation should never replace analysis of the specific lot. Premium and secondary locations can exist on the same street depending on elevation, course position, view direction, adjoining homes, lake exposure, and proximity to undeveloped land.

Furnished and Turnkey Homes

Designer-furnished and turnkey offerings are common in Andalusia because many properties are seasonal residences. Furniture packages may include custom indoor pieces, outdoor furniture, televisions, electronics, artwork, accessories, linens, kitchenware, and occasionally a golf cart.


Furnishings can materially influence the perceived value of a residence. A coherent designer package can make an older home feel more current, while dated furnishings can obscure the quality of the architecture. The value of personal property should be considered separately from the underlying value of the home, lot, view, and permanent improvements.


A furnished home is particularly attractive for a seasonal owner seeking immediate use, while an unfurnished residence provides greater freedom to establish a new design direction.

The Andalusia Market

Andalusia is a relatively low-volume luxury market. A small number of transactions can materially change monthly or quarterly averages, especially when one large estate or new home closes.


From early 2024 through spring 2026, recorded closed prices ranged from approximately $1.66 million to $5.7 million, with a median near $2.9 million. Recent sold prices per square foot ranged from the mid-$500s to more than $1,000, with the middle of the market around the high-$700s per square foot.


Those figures are useful for orientation but should not be treated as a single valuation formula. Andalusia prices are driven by several overlapping tiers.

Relative Entry Tier

The lower end of the community usually consists of smaller original homes, less dramatic orientations, homes with older interiors, or properties requiring a meaningful renovation. These residences can provide access to the full Social/Sport lifestyle at a lower acquisition price.

Core Luxury Tier

The center of the market includes approximately 3,300- to 4,400-square-foot homes with attractive fairway or mountain positioning, private casitas, upgraded outdoor living, and either well-maintained traditional interiors or substantial remodeling.

Estate and Premium-View Tier

The upper tier includes 5,000-square-foot residences, large later-generation homes, new construction, half-acre lots, double-fairway views, substantial lake frontage, south-facing mountain panoramas, no-neighbor positions, and comprehensive designer renovations.


A smaller new home on a premier lot can outperform a much larger original home on a less desirable location. Price per square foot is therefore a secondary metric rather than the primary way to compare Andalusia properties.

The Most Important Value Drivers

The strongest Andalusia valuations usually reflect a combination of the following:


View composition: Mountain, lake, and golf views together are generally stronger than a single fairway view.


Orientation: South and southwest mountain orientations are often favored, although shaded eastern and northern exposures have their own advantages.


Elevation and privacy: Homes positioned above the course, away from cart paths, or beside greenbelts tend to feel more private.


Plan and functionality: Casita design, bedroom placement, office space, great-room proportions, garage capacity, and indoor-outdoor flow all affect usability.


Renovation level: Fully remodeled homes compete in a different category from cosmetically updated or original residences.


Outdoor execution: Pool design, patio depth, landscaping, outdoor kitchen, fire features, and view preservation materially influence value.


Construction generation: Contemporary homes may command higher prices per square foot, while established homes may provide larger lots, mature landscaping, and more substantial footprints.


Furnishing package: High-quality turnkey furnishings can increase appeal for seasonal buyers.


Adjacency: End lots, no-neighbor sides, greenbelts, lakes, and multiple fairways can create premiums.

New Construction Versus Established Resales

Newer Andalusia homes generally offer more contemporary architecture, current appliances, efficient mechanical systems, simplified finishes, larger openings, and less immediate remodeling work. Some also incorporate solar power and newer home-automation systems.


Established resales may offer larger mature landscaping, proven view corridors, substantial courtyards, deeper lots, and original estate plans that are no longer being built. A remodeled original Finana, Estrella, or Duquesa can provide a scale and character that differs significantly from newer Signature Home inventory.


New-construction pockets may also feel less mature while neighboring lots are completed. Established sections generally provide a clearer picture of the final streetscape, landscaping, privacy, and neighboring architecture.

Rental Positioning

Andalusia is best approached as an owner-use, seasonal-residence, or longer-term luxury-home community rather than as a short-term-vacation-rental investment.


La Quinta’s short-term-rental framework generally restricts new permits, and Andalusia should not be confused with the separately named Club at Coral Mountain. A nightly-rental income strategy should not be assumed to accompany the purchase of an Andalusia home.


The community’s principal value proposition is private ownership, club participation, recreation, social activity, golf-course surroundings, and long-term luxury positioning.

Ongoing Development and the Broader Coral Mountain Area

Andalusia contains both mature original sections and newer phases. Additional homes have continued to be built well beyond the community’s initial 2005–2007 construction period.


The broader Coral Mountain area west of Madison Street is also evolving. Open land visible today may ultimately become residential, commercial, recreational, or landscaped development. This is most relevant to perimeter properties and homes whose privacy or open-land views depend on neighboring undeveloped parcels.


An interior fairway home has a different long-term setting from a perimeter home facing future phases. Neither is automatically better: an edge lot may offer greater present-day openness, while an interior lot provides a more established and predictable environment.

The Best Fit for Andalusia

Andalusia is particularly well suited to households seeking:

  • A detached luxury residence with substantial indoor-outdoor living
  • Mountain, lake, or private golf-course views
  • A Social/Sport club lifestyle without mandatory golf participation
  • Tennis, pickleball, bocce, fitness, dining, trails, pool access, and organized social activity
  • A private casita for guests, family, or office use
  • A seasonal residence with the possibility of purchasing furnished
  • A quieter south La Quinta setting away from major commercial corridors
  • A choice between established Mediterranean estates and contemporary newer homes

It is less aligned with buyers prioritizing minimal monthly community costs, urban walkability, nightly rental income, or a lifestyle largely disconnected from the club.

Andalusia-Specific Buying Framework

The clearest way to compare homes in Andalusia is to make the decisions in the following order:


  1. Choose the desired membership experience. Determine whether the included Social/Sport lifestyle is sufficient or whether golf membership will be part of ownership.
  2. Select a housing generation. Decide between original Mediterranean architecture, a fully remodeled original residence, a later estate plan, or contemporary newer construction.
  3. Prioritize the lot before minor interior differences. Orientation, elevation, privacy, cart-path position, lake frontage, and mountain composition are difficult or impossible to change.
  4. Choose the appropriate casita arrangement. Distinguish between a simple guest bedroom and a fully independent two-room guest suite.
  5. Classify the home’s condition accurately. Original, cosmetically updated, fully remodeled, and new homes belong in different value categories.
  6. Evaluate outdoor living as part of the floor plan. Pool placement, patio depth, sun exposure, views, and access from the interior are central to how an Andalusia home functions.
  7. Choose between amenity proximity and residential privacy. Homes near the Sports Club and restaurant offer convenience; deeper interior locations may feel quieter.
  8. Understand the full community budget. The baseline HOA obligation is $1,317 per month, while golf membership and personal club spending are separate.
  9. Consider the surrounding phase. Mature interior streets, active construction areas, and perimeter locations each create a different ownership experience.

Final Perspective

Andalusia at Coral Mountain is not a uniform subdivision. It is a layered private-club community containing multiple generations of homes, six original production plans, later estate designs, smaller contemporary Signature Homes, remodeled residences, and continuing new construction.


The most successful purchase is rarely determined by square footage alone. The defining factors are the home’s plan, construction generation, casita arrangement, renovation quality, outdoor-living design, orientation, elevation, lake and fairway relationship, mountain view, privacy, and proximity to the club.


The $1,317 monthly HOA dues provide a meaningful Social/Sport lifestyle that includes tennis, pickleball, bocce, fitness, a community pool and spa, restaurant access, trails, and a dog park. Golf remains a separate membership decision. That structure makes Andalusia attractive to golfers and non-golfers alike, provided the community amenities and private-club setting are central to the intended lifestyle.

FAQ

Is Andalusia Country Club age-restricted?

No. Andalusia is not a 55-plus community and does not have an age restriction. It is a guard-gated luxury community open to households of all ages.

What does the $1,317 monthly HOA payment include?

The $1,317 monthly HOA payment includes the homeowner’s Sports Club membership, tennis, pickleball, bocce ball, fitness facilities, the community pool and spa, restaurant access, hiking and biking trails, and the dog park. Meals, beverages and other personal club charges are separate.

Is golf membership required at Andalusia?

No. Every homeowner receives a Sports Club membership through the HOA, but golf membership is optional and purchased separately. A home may overlook the golf course without including golf privileges.

What are Andalusia’s current golf initiation fee and monthly dues?

For 2026, the standard Resident Golf Membership has a $60,000 nonrefundable initiation fee and monthly dues of $2,240. Andalusia also offers Premier and Young Professional programs with different introductory costs and qualification requirements.

How do original Andalusia homes differ from newer Signature Homes?

Original homes generally feature larger Mediterranean or Tuscan floor plans, mature landscaping, courtyards, traditional finishes and substantial casitas. Newer Signature Homes typically offer more contemporary architecture, open great rooms, larger glass openings, updated mechanical systems and more efficient floor plans. Remodeled original homes can combine the scale and established lots of the earlier residences with contemporary interiors.

Mark Miller Real Estate Agent Coachella Valley

Mark Miller, Real Estate Agent

I specialize exclusively in residential real estate throughout California’s Coachella Valley. With over a decade of experience selling homes across the Valley, I bring deep hyper-local knowledge, disciplined execution, and a long-term strategic mindset to every transaction.


I am the sole owner and creator of Desert Oasis Insider and Bloom - Home Search Engine, two proprietary brands I built to serve the Coachella Valley at a higher level. Desert Oasis Insider is my digital media and education platform, created to educate locals, residents, and visitors through in-depth community insight, visual storytelling, and market context. Bloom - Home Search Engine is my real estate platform, built to help serious buyers explore neighborhoods, country clubs, lifestyle communities, and available homes with far more clarity than generic search portals provide.


For sellers, I leverage both brands—along with advanced digital strategy, professional media production, and intelligent distribution—to generate greater exposure for my listings and command stronger market attention. Together, these platforms also create direct contact with home buyers actively seeking a home purchase in the Coachella Valley. My approach is precise, data-driven, and rooted in long-term client success.


442-234-3325 | MarkMillerCA@gmail.com

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