Commuters face a major headache on the Malaga to Fuengirola rail corridor as the rail operator prepares for a six-month service suspension. Adif, hardly anyone’s favourite name in the Costa del Sol following the Adamuz catastrophe and the supporting wall that collapsed, leaving the high-speed train out of service for 2 months, has announced the works beginning the end of 2027.
Adif forecasts indicate the C1 line will remain closed between the capital and Torremolinos for at least five and a half months, covering the final quarter of 2027 and the first quarter of 2028.
This revelation comes from the Capacity Restrictions Catalogue published by the public company and updated on March 31.
Track duplication and tunnel repairs behind the extended closure
Essential works centre on doubling the line over the Campamento Benítez to Plaza Mayor section, covering nearly three kilometres.
Other interventions include station improvements and repairs to the tunnel under the Guadalmedina River together with airport tunnel upgrades.
Planners intend full coordination with platform extensions at Malaga Central Station, although specific details on which platforms and their new lengths stay undetermined so far.
Frequency improvements depend on the second phase of duplication
Government pledges suggest reduced intervals from the existing 20 minutes to 15 minutes once complete. Adif technical reports and those from the transport ministry led by Óscar Puente stress the necessity of a further track doubling between Carvajal and Benalmadena to deliver promised improvements.
Project work on the initial 2.8-kilometre section, approved in March 2025 for 18 months of drafting, targets completion by September 2026, yet the second phase shows no progress two years after Puente’s January 2024 commitment.
Renfe readies bus services for passengers during shutdown
Public service obligation status means that Renfe has to provide substitute transport options for affected travellers. This will no doubt come in the form of extra bus services.
Company officials say it is still too early for finalised plans, but the recent launch of a dedicated bus subsidiary will support numerous alternative arrangements anticipated in the coming years for the high-volume Costa del Sol route, which serves thousands of daily passengers in a key tourist and residential zone.
C2 line faces separate nine-month interruption
Parallel catalogue entries forecast a nine-month closure of the C2 line between Gobantes and Cartama.
Two distinct operations involve tunnel treatments from Gobantes to El Chorro plus reinforcement of six bridges between Las Mellizas and Cartama.
These actions will be confirmed around the final quarter of this year and the third quarter of 2027, effectively isolating the Guadalhorce Valley from the capital.