Published by: Cenk Akarçay Last Updated: Download Brochure (PDF)
View of Palma Cathedral La Seu and the Mediterranean Sea

Mallorca

The largest of the Balearic Islands, a Mediterranean contradiction squeezed between the Tramuntana mountains and turquoise bays

Continent
Europe
Country
🇪🇸 Spain
Population
920k
Currency
Euro (EUR)
Language
Spanish, Catalan, Mallorquí, English, German
Time Difference
TR +2 hours
Plug Type
Type F (230V, 50Hz)
Best Months
May, June, September
4.5
Overall
4.7
Kids
4.3
Food
4.2
Nightlife
3.8
Shopping
$$$
Budget
Flight Ticket
Best price for Mallorca
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Must-See Places

Ranked by interestingness score, based on real experience

12
Sa Calobra Road (Ma-2141)
Google: 4.7 (7.2K) Tripadvisor: 4.6 (16K)

Sa Calobra Road (Ma-2141)

In Tramuntana, there is a 12km winding road leading down to the sea – a bend that turns on itself a full 360 degrees, called the 'tie knot' (Nus de sa Corbata). It was called 'one of the most beautiful driving roads in the world' in Top Gear. At the end of the road, Sa Calobra bay and Torrent de Pareis canyon — a dry stream bed flowing into the sea between two high rocks. Summer afternoon traffic is crazy, leave at 9am. Those without a car can arrive by boat from Port de Sóller.

Hours
24 hours
Price
Free
Open in Google Maps
Sources (1)
Valldemossa
Google: 4.6 (19K) Tripadvisor: 4.8 (272)

Valldemossa

Located on the outskirts of Tramuntana, it is Mallorca's most photogenic village with its ivy-covered stone houses and pebbled streets. In the winter of 1838, Chopin and her lover, the writer George Sand, stayed here for three months — in the rooms of the abandoned Real Cartuja monastery. Chopin composed the 'Raindrop' prelude that winter. The monastery has been converted into a museum, and Chopin's piano and handwritings are exhibited. There are small bakeries on every corner of the streets where you can eat 'coca de patata' (potato buns).

Hours
Monastery 09:30 - 18:30
Price
Village free / Monastery 9.50 EUR
Open in Google Maps
Sources (1)
Es Trenc
Google: 4.6 (13K) Tripadvisor: 4.6 (16K)

Es Trenc

A 2 km long strip of white sand on the south coast - under protection, with dunes and maquis behind, turquoise water with a Caribbean consistency in front. No hotels, no concrete; just a few chiringuitos (beach bars) and salt pools (Salines d'Es Trenc — Mallorcan salt is produced here). There is a nudist beach section, a separate family section. 10 minute walk from the parking lot to the sand. If the wind blows, the sand will be blown away, so enjoy the sea before the sea rises.

Hours
24 hours
Price
Free (parking 8 EUR)
Open in Google Maps
Sources (1)
Serra de Tramuntana
Google: 4.8 (15K) Tripadvisor: 4.3 (4.8K)

Serra de Tramuntana

The UNESCO World Heritage mountain range forms the northwestern spine of the island — 90 km long, with the highest point Puig Major at 1,445 m. The olive trees are centuries old, the stone terraces are a Moorish heritage, the villages (Valldemossa, Deià, Fornalutx) are like open-air museums. The Ma-10 road is considered one of the most beautiful driving routes in the world — winding, steep, with sea views. A cyclists' paradise, where hikers traverse the entire range on the GR-221 'Dry Stone Trail'. Vehicle is required.

Hours
24 hours
Price
Free
Open in Google Maps
Sources (1)
Palma Cathedral (La Seu)
Google: 4.7 (48K) Tripadvisor: 4.2 (6.5K)

Palma Cathedral (La Seu)

A 14th-century Gothic cathedral standing on the shores of the Mediterranean Sea — its stones so playful with light that locals call it 'the sun etched in stone'. Antoni Gaudí revised the interior design at the beginning of the 20th century, and the lighting and baldachin are his touches. Twice a year (February 2 and November 11), the sun shines through the west rose window and falls right into another rose window on the opposite wall — creating an eight-fold flower of light. Go early in the morning, the light coming from the sea makes colors pop on the windows.

Hours
10:00 - 18:15 (Sun closed)
Price
10 EUR
Open in Google Maps
Sources (1)
Caves of Drach (Coves del Drac)
Google: 4.5 (29K) Tripadvisor: 4.3 (1K)

Caves of Drach (Coves del Drac)

1,200 meter long underground cave in Porto Cristo, in the east of the island. It contains one of the largest underground lakes in the world — Lake Martel, 115 meters long. During the tour, the lights are dimmed and a five-minute concert with classical music — live quartet, Mendelssohn, Caccini — is performed on a small boat floating on the lake. You can't decide whether it is impressive or touristic, but it is sure to leave a mark. Then you can ride on the lake, open sea at the exit.

Hours
Tour times are 10:00, 11:00, 12:00, 14:00, 15:00, 16:00
Price
17 EUR adult, 9 EUR (4-12 years old)
Open in Google Maps
Sources (1)
Bellver Castle (Castell de Bellver)
Google: 4.5 (22K) Tripadvisor: 4.3 (4.8K)

Bellver Castle (Castell de Bellver)

On the hill above Palma is the 14th-century circular castle — one of the first circular castles in Europe. Its name means 'beautiful view' in Catalan, and it really is: from the upper terrace between the four towers, the bay of Palma, the cathedral and the Tramuntana mountains are in one frame. The climb through the pine forest takes half an hour, go early in the morning, the shade is cool. There's a small history museum inside, but the real deal is the view.

Hours
10:00 - 19:00 (Sun 10:00 - 15:00)
Price
4 EUR
Open in Google Maps
Sources (1)
Sóller and the Historical Wooden Train
Google: 4.6 (13K) Tripadvisor: 4.1 (7K)

Sóller and the Historical Wooden Train

A charming town built among orange groves on the other side of Tramuntana. The 1912 wooden train from Palma to Sóller - nicknamed the 'orange express' - travels 27 km in one hour, passing through 13 tunnels, trudging through the mountain landscape. From Sóller, continue by tram to Port de Sóller — also from 1913, with an open car. When you land at the port, drink the fresh orange juice on the beach and go for a walk to the Es Faro lighthouse.

Hours
Train 5 times a day, first at 10:10 and last at 18:30 (according to the season)
Price
Train 25 EUR (round trip), tram 7 EUR
Open in Google Maps
Sources (1)
Cala Mondragó Natural Park
Google: 4.7 (17K) Tripadvisor: 3.9 (764)

Cala Mondragó Natural Park

In the southeast of the island, a protected national park — two turquoise bays (S'Amarador and Cala Mondragó) and a pine forest hiking trail between them. The water is so clear that you can count the star fish at a depth of three meters. No development, no hotels, just sand, pine and sea. Go early in the morning, the German-speaking crowd comes in the afternoon. Sun lounger and umbrella rental costs 18-20 EUR per day, but a towel on the sand is enough.

Hours
24 hours
Price
Free (parking 8 EUR)
Open in Google Maps
Sources (1)
Cap de Formentor
Google: 4.7 (24K) Tripadvisor: 3.7 (2.2K)

Cap de Formentor

At the northern tip of the island, 384-metre cliffs drop perpendicularly into the sea – the point Mallorca calls 'where the wind meets'. The 20 km road starting from Pollença is an engineering poem: winding, narrow, right next to the cliff, sea view angle is 270 degrees. In the middle of the road is the Mirador es Colomer terrace — where, when the sun sets, the turquoise water rumbles with purple-orange reflections. Far de Formentor (lighthouse) is at the end of the road. In the summer months, personal vehicle entry is prohibited in the afternoon, buses are mandatory.

Hours
24 hours
Price
Free (summer afternoon bus 5 EUR)
Open in Google Maps
Sources (1)
Deia
Google: 4.7 (9.8K) Tripadvisor: 3.5 (500)

Deia

Perhaps the most romantic village in Tramuntana — ochre-coloured stone houses, ivy walls, steep streets overlooking the sea. Poet Robert Graves lived and is buried here; The cemetery of the small village church is on a terrace overlooking the sea. It has been a shelter for artists and musicians for decades. Cala Deià has a small pebbly bay, the fishing tavern Ca's Patró March was the location of the filming of the TV series 'Night Manager'. Go in the evening, the sunset orange color engulfs everything.

Hours
24 hours
Price
Free
Open in Google Maps
Sources (1)
Palma Old Town + Arab Baths (Banys Àrabs)
Google: 4.2 (6.8K) Tripadvisor: 3.4 (1K)

Palma Old Town + Arab Baths (Banys Àrabs)

The old city starts behind the cathedral, narrow streets, stone courtyards, citrus-scented squares. The Arab Baths (Banys Àrabs) date from the 10th century, from the Moorish period — two domed rooms in a small garden, with columns taken from different civilizations. It can be visited in half an hour, but it is the only concrete point that touches the Mallorca of a thousand years ago. The Palau de l'Almudaina (royal palace) and the Es Baluard contemporary art museum are also in the same vicinity.

Hours
09:00 - 19:30 (hammam)
Price
3 EUR (hammam) / Streets free
Open in Google Maps
Sources (1)

3 Day Plan

What will you do from hour to hour, from morning to evening?

3
1

Landing in Palma

Cathedral, old town and shore

09:30 - 11:30
Palma Cathedral (La Seu)

Go early in the morning, the light makes colors pop on the windows. Traces of Gaudí and the rosette window.

10 EUR
11:30 - 13:00
Palma Old Town + Arab Baths

Almudaina palace surroundings, narrow streets, Banys Àrabs courtyard.

3 EUR (hammam)
13:00 - 14:30
Lunch — Stagier Bar or Bar España

Standing tapas + vermouth. Croqueta and pa amb oli are classic.

20 EUR
15:00 - 17:00
Bellver Castle

Walking through the pine forest and panorama of the Gulf of Palma.

4 EUR
17:30 - 19:00
Passeig del Born + Forn d'es Teatre

Walk along the palm tree street, buy fresh ensaimada.

5-15 EUR
20:30 - 23:00
Evening — Forn de Sant Joan

Modern Mallorcan tapas in the old bakery building. Reservation is required.

45 EUR
2

Tramuntana and Sóller

Villages, train and mountain landscape

09:00 - 10:00
Valldemossa

Stone village with ivy, Real Cartuja monastery, Chopin's piano.

9.50 EUR (monastery)
10:30 - 12:00
Deià march

Village streets and Robert Graves grave. Take the descent to Cala Deià (optional).

Free
12:30 - 13:30
Noon — Sóller square

Fresh orange juice and Mallorquí menu at a restaurant in Plaça Constitució.

20-30 EUR
14:00 - 15:30
Port de Sóller by historical tram

Landing at the harbor with the 1913 open-car tram, walking to the lighthouse.

7 EUR
16:00 - 18:00
Sa Calobra road (by vehicle)

Tie knot bend and descent into the sea. Break at Sa Calobra bay.

Fuel
20:00 - 22:30
Evening — Return to Palma, Bodega Vidrieria

Small bodega, draft vermouth and sobrasada in the old town.

20 EUR
3

Beach Day and Farewell

Turquoise bays and caves

09:00 - 13:00
Cala Mondragó or Es Trenc

Go early in the morning and get into the water before the crowds arrive. Es Trenc has a Caribbean consistency and is protected by the Mondragó national park.

8 EUR (parking)
13:30 - 14:30
Lunch — Chiringuito (beach bar)

Fresh fish, paella or bocadillo on the beach.

20-25 EUR
15:30 - 17:30
Caves of Drach (Porto Cristo)

Boat and classical music concert on the underground lake. Logically, it is on the way back to the road.

17 EUR
18:00 - 19:30
Cap de Formentor (if time permitting) or Mercat de l'Olivar

If you have the strength to go north, sunset in Formentor; If not, return to Palma and have farewell tapas upstairs at the market.

Free / 15 EUR
20:30 - 23:00
Farewell dinner — Can Manolo or the coast around Pacha

Beach dinner at caldereta de langosta or Paseo Marítimo in Port d'Andratx.

60 EUR

7 Day Plan

One week holiday plan with sightseeing tours

7
1

Landing in Palma

Cathedral and old town

10:00 - 12:00
Palma Cathedral

La Seu — Gothic cathedral with a Gaudí touch.

10 EUR
12:30 - 14:00
Lunch — Bar España

Classic Palma tapas since 1929.

18 EUR
14:30 - 17:00
Old town + Almudaina Palace

Narrow streets, royal palace, Banys Àrabs.

10 EUR
17:30 - 19:00
Passeig del Born walk

Main street with palm trees, boutiques.

Free
20:30 - 23:00
Evening — Forn de Sant Joan

Modern Mallorcan tapas, quiet table upstairs.

45 EUR
2

The Other Side of Palma

Castle, museum and shore

09:30 - 11:30
Bellver Castle

14th century castle with a circular plan + the bay of Palma.

4 EUR
12:00 - 13:30
Es Baluard contemporary art museum

Old bastion, contemporary Mediterranean art.

8 EUR
13:30 - 14:30
Lunch — Mercat de l'Olivar upstairs

Tapas from the fresh products of the market.

20 EUR
15:00 - 17:30
Walk around Paseo Marítimo + Pacha

Walking along the coast, marina, modern Palma.

Free
18:30 - 20:00
Tito's roof terrace — sunset cocktail

Cocktail on the outdoor terrace overlooking the bay.

15 EUR
21:00 - 23:00
Evening — Stagier Bar + street walk

Standing tapas + Palma old town night vibe.

20 EUR
3

Valldemossa and Deià

Tramuntana villages

09:00 - 11:30
Valldemossa + Real Cartuja

Chopin's piano, monastery garden, stone streets.

9.50 EUR
12:00 - 13:30
Lunch — Terrace in Valldemossa

Bocadillo + coca de patata with olive oil in the village square.

20 EUR
14:00 - 16:00
Village of Deià + Tomb of Robert Graves

Okra houses, Cala Deià pathway.

Free
16:30 - 18:30
Mirador de Sa Forada

The rocky protrusion above the sea is the best spot to watch the sunset.

Free
20:00 - 22:30
Evening — dinner at Sóller or Deià

Fresh fish of the day at the village restaurant.

40 EUR
4

Sóller, Train and Sa Calobra

Historical transportation and legendary road

08:30 - 10:00
Palma → Sóller historic train

1912 wooden train, 13 tunnels, mountain views.

16 EUR (one way)
10:00 - 11:30
Sóller square + Modernist church

Plaça Constitució is the work of the architect who was a student of Gaudí.

Free
12:00 - 13:30
Port de Sóller by tram

1913 tram with open carriage, sea.

7 EUR
13:30 - 15:00
Lunch — Port de Sóller fishing port

Fresh fish or paella in the port.

35 EUR
15:30 - 18:30
Sa Calobra (by car or boat)

Tie knot bend + Torrent de Pareis canyon.

20 EUR (boat)
20:00 - 22:00
Evening — night in Sóller

Quiet dinner in the village vineyards.

30 EUR
5

Cap de Formentor and the North

Rocky cape and Pollença

09:00 - 11:00
Pollença + Calvari Stairs

365 steps, view of Tramuntana from the chapel at the top.

Free
11:30 - 13:00
Cap de Formentor + Mirador es Colomer

The top of the winding road, panoramic terrace on the rocks.

Free (summer afternoon bus)
13:30 - 15:00
Lunch — Port de Pollença

Fish restaurant on the harbor shore.

30 EUR
15:30 - 18:00
Cala Formentor beach

Shallow turquoise bay with pine trees. Family friendly.

Free
20:00 - 22:00
Evening — Alcúdia old town

Dinner at the walled medieval city.

35 EUR
6

Southern Beaches

Es Trenc and Mondragó

09:00 - 12:30
Es Trenc beach

2 km of white sand, turquoise water. Caribbean feeling.

8 EUR (parking)
13:00 - 14:30
Lunch — Es Trenc chiringuito

Bocadillo + sangria at the beach bar.

20 EUR
15:00 - 17:30
Cala Mondragó national park

S'Amarador + Cala Mondragó bays, pine forest walk.

Free
18:00 - 19:30
Santanyí village

Market on Saturday, yellow sandstone houses, boutique shops.

Variable
20:30 - 22:30
Evening — Cala d'Or or Porto Petro

Fish at the harborside restaurant.

40 EUR
7

Caves, Inca and Veda

Underground, leather and final flavors

09:30 - 11:30
Caves of Drach (Porto Cristo)

Martel Lake, classical music concert, boat tour.

17 EUR
12:00 - 13:00
Porto Cristo port

Small fishing port, walk on the beach.

Free
13:30 - 14:30
Lunch — Restaurant on the Inca road

Traditional Mallorquí menu — frit mallorquí or tumbet.

25 EUR
15:00 - 17:00
Inca — leather outlets

Camper, Munper, Lottusse. Bag and shoes.

Variable
17:30 - 18:30
Mercat de l'Olivar farewell shopping

Sobrasada, olive oil, hierbas liqueur as gifts.

30 EUR
20:00 - 23:00
Farewell dinner — Can Manolo (Port d'Andratx)

Caldereta de langosta or fresh fish of the day.

80 EUR

What to Eat and Drink?

From local classics to hype places

7
Daica (Llubí) Premium
Google: 4.8 (380) Tripadvisor: 4.6 (1.1K)

Daica (Llubí)

A small stone house with one Michelin star, in the village of Llubí, in the middle of the island. Chef Andrea Stengel works with the island's harvest — whatever the season yields is on the plate. The tasting menu offers 8-10 courses, each with a story from a corner of Mallorca. The venue has a capacity of six tables, reservations must be made weeks in advance. 35 minutes drive from Palma. A perfect escape for a dinner in the village vineyards.

Price
95-130 EUR (tasting menu)
Cuisine
Modern Mallorca / Fine Dining
Open in Google Maps
Sources (1)
Forn de Sant Joan Current Hype
Google: 4.6 (1.8K) Tripadvisor: 4.4 (3.3K)

Forn de Sant Joan

Modern Mallorcan tapas within the stone walls of a former 17th-century bakery in Palma's old town. Iberico ham croquettes, sobrasada tartare, freshly ground octopus. It is a three-storey venue, the upper floor is intimate and quiet. The wine list is mainly from local producers from Mallorca — Binissalem and Pla i Llevant region. Reservations are a must, especially in the evening.

Price
35-55 EUR
Cuisine
Modern Mallorca / Tapas
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Sources (1)
Bar España Local Classic
Google: 4.4 (2.1K) Tripadvisor: 4.6 (2.1K)

Bar España

A classic Palma tapas bar, open since 1929 — tiled walls, marble counter, jamón-hung ceiling. Pa amb oli (tomato bread with olive oil) and gambas al ajillo (garlic shrimp) are mandatory orders. Tourists do not come, local people eat every meal — when this happens, the price and taste balance is automatically corrected.

Price
10-20 EUR
Cuisine
Classic Tapas
Open in Google Maps
Sources (1)
Stagier Bar Local Classic
Google: 4.5 (820) Tripadvisor: 4.6 (200)

Stagier Bar

Stand-up tapas bar in the center of Palma — vermouth and small plates at the lined counter. Croquetas are legendary, patatas bravas are like home. If you want to learn the one vermouth + two tapa routine that local civil servants drink here during their lunch break, this is the school. Closed from 13:00 to 16:00, then reopens at 19:00 — siesta rule applies.

Price
15-25 EUR
Cuisine
Tapas / Vermutería
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Sources (1)
Can Manolo Premium
Google: 4.4 (1.2K) Tripadvisor: 4.5 (900)

Can Manolo

Simple restaurant in Port d'Andratx overlooking the fishing port — white linens, local clientele, menu heavy on Mallorquí. Paella de marisco (seafood paella) and fresh fish of the day — it doesn't take six hours from sea to plate. Caldereta de langosta (lobster stew) is Mallorca's classic luxury dish, this place is one that does it well. It's expensive but it deserves it.

Price
50-90 EUR
Cuisine
Mallorquí Fish / Paella
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Sources (1)
Forn d'es Teatre Current Hype
Google: 4.3 (3.4K) Tripadvisor: 4.4 (3.3K)

Forn d'es Teatre

Historic bakery next to the theater in the center of Palma, operating since the 1700s. It produces ensaimada — Mallorca's signature dessert, spirally shaped, layered with lard (saïm), topped with powdered sugar. He comes out fresh in the morning, without any hangover. The larger ones come in boxes as souvenirs — if you see tiny boxes being passed around on the plane, one of them is returning from Mallorca.

Price
2-15 EUR
Cuisine
Oven / Ensaimada
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Sources (1)
Bodega Vidrieria Local Classic
Google: 4.5 (1.4K) Tripadvisor: 4.2 (406)

Bodega Vidrieria

A tiny bodega in Palma's old town—one counter, five tables, barrel-rimmed glass holders hanging on the walls. Vermouth de la casa from cask, three EUR. Tomato and sardine tapas are classic, sobrasada bruschetta is local. It fills up early in the evening, there will be a queue outside. As you sit and eat pa amb oli for an hour, you get to know both Palma and the grandfathers who have been drinking it for years.

Price
12-25 EUR
Cuisine
Bodega / Classic Tapas
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Sources (1)

Nightlife

Entertainment from evening to morning

5
Pacha Mallorca Premium
Google: 4.0 (5.4K) Tripadvisor: 4.8 (1.3K)

Pacha Mallorca

Island branch of the Pacha brand since 1973 — one of the oldest electronic clubs in the world. On Paseo Marítimo, by the sea. International DJ line-up on Friday-Saturday nights, prices accordingly: entrance 30-60 EUR, cocktail 18-25 EUR. There is a dress code, sneakers are difficult to enter. Expensive version of fun — go in for a one-time experience, then land in Magaluf.

Price
Entrance 30-60 EUR, cocktail 18-25 EUR
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Sources (1)
Casino Mallorca Premium
Google: 4.0 (1.7K) Tripadvisor: 4.8 (1.3K)

Casino Mallorca

In Porto Pi, next to the luxury hotel complex — roulette, blackjack, poker tables and machines. There are dinner + casino packages. Smart casual dress code, ID required (passport for outside the EU). Come for the atmosphere rather than the gambling — even having a glass on the terrace overlooking the sea and watching the gaming tables from afar is an evening's show.

Price
Entry is free, gameplay is variable
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Sources (1)
BCM Planet Dance (Magaluf) Current Hype
Google: 3.9 (8.2K) Tripadvisor: 4.6 (1.1K)

BCM Planet Dance (Magaluf)

The huge 5,000-capacity club in the heart of Magaluf — where British holidaymakers crash in all week for the night. Three different tracks, laser shows, foam parties, international DJ visits. The polar opposite of Pacha: cheap, loud, crowded, British teenagers who don't remember what they did on the way back. You need to see this once again.

Price
Entrance 15-30 EUR, drink 7-12 EUR
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Sources (1)
Tito's Palma Current Hype
Google: 4.0 (3.1K) Tripadvisor: 4.5 (933)

Tito's Palma

Palma's legendary club, open since 1923 — Frank Sinatra and Ray Charles performed here. Today it is more about electronic music, but the seven-storey building, open roof terrace and sea-facing dance floor are original. Drinking cocktails on the roof and watching the Gulf of Palma on summer evenings is a program in itself.

Price
Entrance 20-35 EUR, cocktail 12-18 EUR
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Sources (1)
Daiquiri Beach Club (Cala Major) Local Classic
Google: 4.2 (980) Tripadvisor: 3.2 (496)

Daiquiri Beach Club (Cala Major)

On Cala Major beach, sun lounger-sea-cocktail trio during the day, DJ sets and dancing at the bar in the evening. Sunset session is famous — sunset at 20:00, cocktails are discounted, everyone is on the terrace overlooking the sea. In the summer there are weekly theme parties (White Party, Latin Night). Mix of locals + tourists, prices are more reasonable than Pacha.

Price
Sunbed 25 EUR, cocktail 10-15 EUR
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Sources (1)

Shopping Guide

Gift, local, premium

5
Avinguda Jaume III
Google: 4.4 (5.8K) Tripadvisor: 4.6 (16K)

Avinguda Jaume III

Palma's other main shopping axis runs parallel to Passeig del Born. Spanish mid-segment brands such as Zara, Mango, Massimo Dutti + El Corte Inglés. The street where locals shop daily — less crowded with tourists. In the evening, the storefronts are bright and pleasant for walking.

Price
Middle-upper segment
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Sources (1)
Mercat de l'Olivar
Google: 4.5 (8.9K) Tripadvisor: 4.5 (1.1K)

Mercat de l'Olivar

Palma's largest local market has been around since 1951. Ground floor fish, meat, vegetables, fruit — this is where you see calamari and octopus from the dry dock in the morning. Upstairs are tapas bars and delicatessens — they serve freshly cut jamón Iberico right on a plate and serve it with a glass of wine. The liveliest time is between 09:00 - 14:00 in the morning.

Price
Entrance free, tapas 10-20 EUR
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Sources (1)
Inca — Leather Outlets
Google: 4.2 (3.4K) Tripadvisor: 4.6 (16K)

Inca — Leather Outlets

In the middle of the island, the town of Inca has been manufacturing leather for centuries. Camper (internationally known brand) was born here. Munper, Lottusse, Camper outlets are around the town. Bags, shoes, jackets — quality is high, prices are 30-40% more affordable than in Palma. On Thursdays, a large open-air market is held in Inca, two birds with one stone.

Price
Variable
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Sources (1)
Passeig del Born
Google: 4.6 (12K) Tripadvisor: 4.3 (2.4K)

Passeig del Born

Palma's Champs-Élysées — palm-lined pedestrian street, cobblestones, a median in the middle. Luxury brands (Louis Vuitton, Hermès, Loewe), independent boutiques and historical cafes coexist. Strolling under the plateaus in the warm afternoon, restaurant tables open for evening aperitivo. It's a place where you can walk even if you don't shop.

Price
Luxury segment
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Sources (1)
Porto Pi Centro
Google: 4.1 (14K) Tripadvisor: 3.8 (568)

Porto Pi Centro

Modern three-storey shopping mall overlooking the sea, west of Palma. H&M, Zara, Mango, FNAC, lots of restaurants and cinemas. It's a good alternative if the weather gets bad or you need to spend hours with the kids. Parking is free, 15 minutes from the center by bus.

Price
Variable
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Sources (1)

City Guide

When to go, how to get there, city transportation, accommodation, budget and practical tips.

About

Mallorca is the largest of the Balearic Islands — 3,640 km² in area, 920 thousand inhabitants, and more than 12 million tourists per year. These numbers can give the wrong impression: one thinks of drunken British teenagers on the beaches of Magaluf or the joke of Germany's 17th state. That face of Mallorca is real, but only a part of it. The real story of the island is elsewhere: the olive terraces of the Tramuntana mountains, the ocher houses of Deià, the steep cliffs of Cap de Formentor and the turquoise waters of Es Trenc that resemble the Caribbean.

We can say that there are two Mallorcas. First southwest coast of Mallorca — Magaluf, Palmanova, Santa Ponsa. All-inclusive hotel complexes, neon bars, foam parties. An overseas extension for British holidaymakers "to avoid feeling like they've left home"; Germany also does the same work around Playa de Palma (Bierstrasse legend). Second Mallorca — northwest coast and inner island — UNESCO World Heritage mountain range, century-old farmhouses, boutique winemakers, Chopin's monastery, Robert Graves' tomb. On the same island, 50 km apart.

The capital of Palma de Mallorca is about 420 thousand people. The Gothic cathedral La Seu is erected by the sea, Gaudí revised the interior design at the beginning of the 20th century. The old town has a different Mediterranean character than Seville, Granada and Barcelona — quieter, less touristy, more casual. You can try one of the most expensive clubs in the world with an entrance fee of 60 EUR for one night in Pacha Palma, then go to Magaluf the next day and spend the same night for 15 EUR — experiencing this contrast once means understanding Mallorca.

On the food side, Mallorquí cuisine combines land and sea. Sobrasada (soft sausage with paprika - the most popular product of the island), tumbet (potato-eggplant-tomato casserole), frit mallorquí (pan with offal), pa amb oli (tomato bread with olive oil), caldereta de langosta (lobster casserole, the centerpiece of the luxury table) are the classics. Ensaimada — a spiral-shaped brioche layered with lard — is Mallorca's signature dessert, and everyone grabs their box and boards the plane. Hierbas liqueur (anise + mountain herbs) is drunk as an after-dinner ritual, neat or with ice.

When to Go

Mallorca has a typical Mediterranean climate — mild winters, hot summers. Smart tourists choose mid-season.

Period Weather (daytime) Sea Density Otel Fiyatı Notes
January-February 8 / 16° 14° Low Low Many tourist hotels are closed; Atmosphere of Sant Sebastià (January)
March 10 / 18° 15° Low Low Spring is opening, cyclists are coming
April 12 / 21° 16° Medium Medium Blooming almond trees, ideal hiking season
May 15 / 24° 18° Medium-High Medium-High The most beautiful month — the sea is a little cool but everything is in bloom
June 18 / 28° 21° High High Summer is starting, the sea is getting warmer, the crowd is increasing
July 21 / 31° 24° Very High Very High Holiday peak; hotel is difficult, beaches are full
August 22 / 32° 25° Very High Very High The hottest and most crowded; inner island can see 38°C
September 19 / 28° 24° High High The sea is still warm, the crowds are thinning — the best choice
October 16 / 24° 22° Medium Medium Autumn harvest festivals, swimming until mid-October
November 12 / 19° 19° Low Low The rainy season begins, sea temperature drops
December 9 / 16° 16° Low Low Christmas markets, exploring tranquil Palma

Our general recommendation is May-June and September-October. May is for flower fields, September-October is for a holiday without crowds while the sea is still warm. If you are going to go in July-August — you will, because it is a school holiday with kids — make your hotel and car reservations 4-6 months in advance, prices will be at their highest. The January Sant Sebastià festival is a special experience for those who want to see the real character of Mallorca — but some coastal hotels are closed in winter, so you have to stay in Palma.

How to get there

Mallorca's only airport, Palma de Mallorca Airport (PMI), is 8 km east of the center of Palma. One of the busiest airports in the Mediterranean — one takeoff and landing every minute during the summer months.

Flights from Türkiye:

There are no direct flights to Mallorca from Türkiye. Mandatory transfer:

Exit Transfer Duration Airline
Istanbul (IST) - PMI Madrid (MAD) 6-8 hours Iberia + THY
Istanbul (IST) - PMI Barcelona (BCN) 5-7 hours Vueling + THY
Istanbul (IST) - PMI Frankfurt / Munich 7-9 hours Lufthansa + THY
Istanbul (SAW) - PMI Rome / Milan 7-10 hours Pegasus + ITA Airways

The most reasonable route is Istanbul → Barcelona → Palma. The flight from Barcelona to Palma is 50 minutes, Vueling offers 10+ flights per day, prices are 40-80 EUR. Total ticket average is between 280-380 EUR. Prices exceed 500 EUR during the summer high season — buy early.

Alternative: Some tour operators offer Istanbul-Palma charter flights between May and October. It can be more affordable if you come as part of a holiday package.

From airport to city:

  • A1 Bus: 25-30 min, Plaça d'Espanya (Palma centre), 5 EUR. The most practical. 24 hour service.
  • A2 Bus: Playa de Palma + S'Arenal beaches — budget hotels on this line.
  • Taxi: 20-25 min, 25-30 EUR flat rate to Palma centre.
  • Car Rental: All major companies within the airport (Hertz, Avis, Europcar, Sixt). 40-60 EUR per day in summer season, 20-30 EUR in winter. Condition — it is very difficult to visit the island without a vehicle.

Urban Transportation

For Mallorca, we need to talk about "intra-island transportation" rather than "urban transportation". Palma is compact and walkable, but a car is required for the Tramuntana, Es Trenc, Drach caves.

Car rental: Let's even say it again — a must for an island trip. You visited one village by public transportation, and when you went to the second one, it took half a day. In summer 45-65 EUR per day (small segment), compact 60-80 EUR. Early booking gets a 30-40% discount. Parking costs 5-10 EUR per day on some beaches; Paid blue zones are common in village squares (1.20-1.80 EUR per hour).

Bus (TIB): There is a bus network throughout the island, but it is sparse. From Palma it is reasonable to reach centers such as Sóller, Valldemossa, Pollença, Andratx; but it dries up on beaches and villages. Single ticket 3-7 EUR depending on distance.

Train: Palma - Inca - Manacor / Sa Pobla lines. Sóller train is a separate category (touristic and historical). Limited for active use.

Historical Tram: Sóller-Port de Sóller line from 1913, with open wagons. It's more of a touristic experience than practical transportation.

EMT (Palma urban): City buses are common. Single ticket 2 EUR, 10-pack card 9 EUR. Prefer walking within Palma — the center is around 1 km², you should walk.

Cycling: Mallorca is one of the cycling paradises of the world — the Tramuntana roads are the winter camp of professional teams. If you are a hobby rider, recommend the flat south (around Es Trenc), the mountains are too much for the inexperienced rider.

Accommodation Regions

In Mallorca, the choice of location determines the type of holiday. Don't make bad choices:

  • Palma (center): City enjoyment, restaurants, museums, nightlife. The beach is far (5 km from Cala Major). Ideal for city lovers, couples, short stays.
  • Port d'Andratx: Luxury boutique hotels, marina, quiet. Expensive but aesthetic. Couples and premium accommodation.
  • Sóller / Port de Sóller: Tramuntana is ideal for a mountain holiday. Calm, nature, gastronomy. Family friendly, romantic for couples.
  • Pollença / Port de Pollença: Up north, more "classic English family holiday" feel. Shallow shores, family-friendly beaches (Cala Formentor). Premium holiday.
  • Alcúdia: Family-friendly beaches (Platja d'Alcúdia is long and shallow), Roman ruins, lots of all-inclusive options. It makes the most sense for families with children.
  • Cala d'Or / Santanyí: Southeast — Close to Mondragó, Drach caves. It's a quiet, boutique, German-speaking retiree crowd.
  • Magaluf / Palmanova: Teenage party holiday. All-inclusive cheap hotels. Those who want family or peace do not stay here.
  • Playa de Palma / S'Arenal: Bierstrasse is a busy place for German holidaymakers. Budget-oriented party holiday.

Our advice: if it's your first Mallorca holiday, choose two regions — 3 days Palma, 4 days Tramuntana (Sóller or Port de Pollença). If you try to tour the island from one place, you will get tired.

Budget Plan

Mallorca is an expensive destination — if you're coming from Türkiye, be prepared, especially during high season. But you can reduce it by half by choosing the season and region.

Budget Style Accommodation Food Activity/Transportation Total (2 people/7 days)
Economic (3* hotel low season, street food + one restaurant) 500 EUR 280 EUR 250 EUR ~1.030 EUR
Moderate (4* hotel or boutique agroturismo, mixed) 1,000 EUR 500 EUR 400 EUR ~1,900 EUR
Comfort (4-5* hotel, fresh fish + tapas, rental car) 1,800 EUR 800 EUR 550 EUR ~3.150 EUR
Luxury (Cap Rocat, Belmond La Residencia, Michelin) 4,500 EUR+ 1.500 EUR+ 800 EUR+ ~6,800 EUR+

Practical items: Espresso 1.80-2.50 EUR, cerveza (beer) 3-5 EUR, tapas portion 5-12 EUR, paella for two 35-50 EUR, ensaimada 2-4 EUR, fresh orange juice 4 EUR at Sóller, beach sun lounger + umbrella 18-25 EUR per day, parking at the beach 6-10 EUR, rental car 280-450 EUR per week (depending on the season), gasoline 1.55-1.70 EUR/litre.

All-inclusive packages: Packages offered by German/English-oriented operators in the Magaluf, Alcúdia, Cala d'Or region can range between 1,200-2,000 EUR for 2 people for 7 nights. Is it practical? Yes, if you are going to stay in the beach-hotel-bar triangle. But if you want to see the real character of Mallorca, keep your hotel and car separate.

Practical Tips

Season selection: May-June and September-October. Avoid July-August if you can — expensive, crowded, hot.

A vehicle is required: We say it again and again because every year someone comes and regrets saying "I'll travel by bus". Make a reservation 4-6 months in advance during the summer season, prices change by half.

Water: Mallorca's tap water is drinkable (especially in Palma). But few like the taste, most tourists prefer bottled water — an economical 5-liter bottle costs 1-2 EUR.

Beach items: Sunbed prices on hotel beaches are high (25-40 EUR per day). Take a towel + umbrella to public beaches, it's economical. Lidl and Carrefour are common on the island, you can buy beach equipment cheaply.

Cap de Formentor summer access: In July-August, in the afternoon (usually between 10:00-19:00) by personal vehicle, the road to Formentor is closed, bus/taxi only. Check this rule — it may change yearly.

Siesta: Restaurants may be closed between 14:00-20:00. Lunch runs from 13:00 to 15:30, dinner does not start until 20:30. A little late for the Turkish palate, but adapt to it.

Tip: Tipping is not mandatory in Spain, but 5-10% is appreciated. If the restaurant does not write "servicio incluido" on the bill, rounding up 1-2 EUR is sufficient.

Fresh water warning: Mallorca is an island experiencing water shortage. Keep shower times short in hotels and homes — some municipalities are urging water conservation during the summer months.

Scam warning: In Magaluf and Playa de Palma, it is common for some bars to dilute alcoholic beverages (especially places advertising "cheap menus"). Choose big brands like Pacha, Tito's, BCM, and stay away from small side street bars.

Travel Guide with Children

Mallorca is one of the European classics of family holidays. Shallow-shored beaches, quiet villages, amusement parks and caves — there's plenty of content for kids.

Recommendations by Age Group

  • 0-3 years: The shallow shores of Cala Formentor and Platja d'Alcúdia are ideal for babies — the water is knee-deep for long distances. Palma's pedestrian streets are stroller-friendly. Mercat de l'Olivar has kid-friendly tables upstairs.

  • 4-7 years: The underground boat tour of the Drach Caves fascinates children. Marineland (Costa d'en Blanes) has a dolphin show — ethics are questionable, we'll leave it up to your family to decide. Sóller train is perceived as adventure. The water in Mondragó national park is shallow and clear.

  • 8-12 years: Western Water Park (Magaluf) and Aqualand (S'Arenal) are the largest water parks in the Mediterranean - the favorite of this age group. Palma Aquarium (the largest aquarium in the Mediterranean) is educational and entertaining. A game of hide and seek is being played among the towers of Bellver Castle.

  • Ages 13+: Sa Calobra and Torrent de Pareis canyon hiking for adventure enthusiasts. Cap de Formentor cliff view is for those who are interested in photography. Snorkeling is great at Cala Mondragó — the water is so clear you can count the fish.

Top 5 Kid-Friendly Activities

  1. Drach Caves — Boat on the underground lake + classical music concert. Children remember it like a fairy tale.

  2. Cala Formentor beach — Pine trees, shallow turquoise water, ideal for sand castle building. Toilets, ice cream parlour, plenty of shade.

  3. Sóller train + tram — 1912 wooden train + 1913 open car tram. Kids love the transition from the train to the mountain tunnel.

  4. Palma Aquarium — The deepest aquarium in Europe (8.5 m) is located here. Sharks, rays, tropical fish.

  5. Western Water Park (Magaluf) — Mallorca's classic water park. Wild West themed slides, wave pool, children's sections. Full day program.

Practical Information

  • Baby stroller: Palma central pedestrian areas are OK. The villages of Tramuntana (Deià, Valldemossa) are paved and sloped — prefer carriers.

  • Children's menu: Most restaurants offer "menú infantil" — paella or pasta + drink + dessert, in the range of 8-12 EUR. Hamburgers and pizza are on every corner.

  • Baby products: Mercadona, Lidl, Carrefour are common on the island. There is no problem with diapers, formula and special products.

  • Pharmacy (Farmacia): On every corner with a green cross sign. There is a guard system on Saturday afternoon and Sunday, written on the door.

Warnings

  • Children getting lost is a common problem on large beaches like Es Trenc — set a meeting point.
  • Traffic on Tramuntana roads is narrow and winding, motion sickness may occur — take breaks on long journeys.
  • There are no railings on the Cap de Formentor terrace, it is close to the cliff — be careful with small children.
  • The tour in Drach Caves lasts 1 hour and there are dark parts — children under the age of 4 may be uneasy.
  • Summer afternoons (13:00-16:00) are very hot, do not plan non-sea activities; Sunscreen, hat and water are mandatory for the child.

Local Label and Culture Notes

Mallorcans (Mallorquí) speak Mallorquí, a local dialect of Spanish + Catalan. They're a little uneasy about the history of tourist migration to the island — complaints of "too many tourists" have been common in recent years. If you act respectfully, communication is warm; There are some prejudices created by British/German holidaymakers in the past, but seeing Turkish tourists is a new and generally intriguing situation for them.

Greetings: A Spanish greeting (hola, buenos días) is sufficient. If you try Mallorquí ("bon dia") they'll be delighted — trying to be local is appreciated. Handshake in formal situations, two cheek kisses in intimate situations (woman-woman, woman-man; man-man shaking hands).

Restaurant rules: Sit down for dinner early and you'll find it empty — locals don't come to eat until 9 p.m. Cutlery is ready on the table. The waiter does not bring the bill automatically, you have to ask for it ("la cuenta, por favor"). Tip is appreciated at 5-10%.

Is siesta real? In villages, yes — shops may be closed between 14:00-17:00, restaurants close between 16:00-19:30. In Palma city centre, siesta is less effective, tourist attractions keep it open. Be careful when making plans.

Beach tag: Toplessness (for women) is common and normal — don't be surprised. Designated nudist beaches (part of Es Trenc, part of Cala Mondragó) — pay attention to the signage. Playing loud music or leaving cigarette butts in the sand is a matter of complaint.

German is everywhere: German is written everywhere you find it, from hotel receptions to menus, from the beach to the market. It's the same way in English. If you try a few words Mallorquí you will get plus points.

"S'Arenal syndrome": The locals' term for the German-intensive Playa de Palma. His famous joke: "Mallorca is the 17th state of Germany". The islanders are not too happy about this situation — if you go outside Magaluf/S'Arenal and see the real Mallorca, you will know them better.

Vermouth time: "Vermouth" Mallorca's pre-lunch ritual — a glass of vermouth + 2-3 tapas between 12:00-14:00. Sundays are especially busy. Stagier Bar, Bodega Vidrieria are classic addresses. Try it; A culture lesson during lunch break.

FAQ

How to get to Mallorca from Türkiye? There are no direct flights. Mandatory transfer: the most practical is Istanbul → Barcelona → Palma (Vueling Barcelona-Palma 50 minutes, 10+ trips per day). There is also a transfer to Madrid, but Barcelona is shorter. Total journey is 5-8 hours, average ticket costs 280-380 EUR. In the summer high season it can exceed 500 EUR, book 4-6 months in advance.

Is it necessary to rent a car in Mallorca? If you want to see the island, yes, for sure. If you're going to visit Palma, just no — walkable and public transportation is enough. But for Tramuntana villages, Es Trenc, Cap de Formentor and Drach caves, a car is a must. You can also go by bus, but it takes half a day from one village to another. It is most practical to pick up and drop off from the airport. Make a reservation 4-6 months in advance during the summer months.

Magaluf, Palma, Sóller, Deià — which one makes sense to stay in? It varies depending on the type of holiday. Magaluf/Playa de Palma: Young party holiday, all-inclusive budget, beach-bar-hotel triangle. Palma center: City-loving, culture- and gastronomy-oriented, couple, short stay. Port d'Andratx or Port de Sóller: Luxury and quiet holiday, boutique hotel, coastal pleasure. Deià/Valldemossa: Tramuntana village holiday, romance, nature, hiking. Alcúdia: Family friendly, long shallow beach, holiday with children. The most classic recommendation: 3 days Palma + 4 days Tramuntana or north coast combination.

Which makes more sense, an all-inclusive resort or a hotel + car? Budget and style question. All-inclusive: Practical for families with children, those who want to spend time between the beach and the hotel, and those who do not speak the language. There are large German/English operators in Magaluf, Alcúdia, Cala d'Or. Packages for 2 people for 7 nights are available between 1,200-2,000 EUR. Hotel + car: Definitely the right choice for those who want to see the island, gastronomy, culture and flexible program. The budget may be a little higher, but this is the real experience of Mallorca.

Which is the most beautiful beach in Mallorca? A controversial question, but classic suggestions: Es Trenc (south, 2 km of white sand, Caribbean feel), Cala Mondragó (southeast national park, pine forest and turquoise water), Platja de Formentor (north, shallow bay with pine trees, family friendly), Cala Deià (small pebbly bay at the foot of Tramuntana, fisherman's tavern), Caló des Moro (southeast little hidden cove, Instagram favorite but crowded). The most popular candidate is Es Trenc, but Mondragó national park is preferable for its protected nature.

When and how is the Sant Sebastià fire party? The night of January 19 is the holy night of Sant Sebastià, the patron saint of Palma. All Palma squares (especially Plaça Major, Plaça d'Espanya, Plaça de Cort) are filled with fire pits — neighbors barbecue and roast sobrasada and botifarró. Around him, "demonios" (costumed devils) dance fire jumping, and the people dance with the demonios. January 20 is a public holiday, the city is closed. The city's true character comes out this evening — if you're planning a winter holiday in Palma, plan your date accordingly.

How much budget do you need for a week in Mallorca? It varies depending on the season and style. Low season (March-April, November-December) economic trip: 2 people 7 days 1,000-1,300 EUR (excluding flights, hotel and food). High season (July-August) same style: 1,800-2,300 EUR. Comfort holiday (4* hotel, fresh fish, rental car, museums) low season 2 people 7 days 2,500 EUR, high season 3,500-4,000 EUR. Luxury segment (Cap Rocat, Belmond La Residencia, Michelin star dining) easily 6,500 EUR+. Add the flight price (280-380 EUR per person).

Is Pacha Mallorca really one of the most expensive clubs in the world? It's an extremely close line. The Pacha brand was born in Ibiza in 1973, and its Mallorca branch is located by the sea on Paseo Marítimo. On Friday-Saturday nights, an international DJ lineup performs: admission 30-60 EUR, drinks 18-25 EUR, table reservations start from 1,500 EUR. Dress code is strict (sneakers barely fit). Once in Magaluf — it's the opposite experience: entrance at BCM Planet Dance is 15-30 EUR, beer 5 EUR, no dress code, the crowd is young and British. Seeing these two clubs for two nights means understanding the two poles of Mallorca.

Events

Festivals, concerts and public holidays — 2026 calendar

4

La Patrona — Mare de Déu dels Àngels (Pollença)

Festival

Aug 2, 2026

Pollença

The biggest festival of Pollença, with the representation of Moros i Cristians (Moors and Christians). In the village square, two costumed parties reenact the battle — the theater of the real pirate raid of 1550. Towards the night, the square ends with dancing and fuegos artificiales. Authentic, crowded, one of Mallorca's strongest days of tradition.

Official source →

Nit de l'Art

Culture

Sep 19, 2026

Palma (galleries, museums)

On the third Saturday night of September, all of Palma's galleries, museums and art venues are open and free until midnight. Installations are placed on the streets, performance artists appear in the squares. It's a season opener — a chance to tour Mallorca's modern art scene in one night.

Official source →

Festes de la Tardor (Autumn Harvest Festivals)

Gastronomy

Oct 10, 2026 – Nov 15, 2026

All island villages

Throughout October-November, Mallorcan villages take turns celebrating the harvest. In Inca, 'Dijous Bo' (third Thursday of November) is the biggest — the whole island flocks to the town. Local products (olive oil, almonds, grapes, sobrasada) are on the stalls. You can try different flavors by traveling from village to village — the real Mallorcan flavors are here.

Official source →

Mercats de Nadal (Christmas Markets)

Holiday

Nov 28, 2026 – Dec 31, 2026

Palma (Plaça Major, Plaça d'Espanya)

From the end of November until New Year's Eve, Palma squares are filled with Christmas markets. Plaça Major is the biggest — handmade souvenirs, mulled wine, ensaimada, and a skating rink in the city center. The mild Mediterranean winter is the +10°C version of Central European Christmas markets.

Official source →

Visa Information (Turkish Passport)

Current according to passport type

Ordinary (Burgundy)

Visa Required

Spain is a Schengen member. Visa required, 90 days stay in 180 days. Application is made through BLS International Spain Turkey.

Official application →

Special (Green)

Visa-Free — 90 days

Visa-free for up to 90 days in 180 days.

Service (Grey)

Visa-Free — 90 days

Visa-free for up to 90 days in 180 days.

Diplomatic (Black)

Visa-Free — 90 days

Visa-free due to mutual agreement.

All visa details for 4 passport types for Spain

For application links and other countries, check the Turkish Passport Visa Guide.

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